Wallingford town defences, probably first constructed during the reign of Alfred as part of his strategy to defend Wessex against Viking attack. Mention of Wallingford is made in the Burghal Hidage, as a 'burgh', or fortified stronghold, with 2,400 hides of land. The defences originally consisted of an earthen bank and ditch with timber revetting; a stone wall may have been added in the 11th century. The line of the bank can be clearly seen, particularly the western edge running parallel with Croft Rd, and the well-preserved south-west corner. There are gaps in the fortification which may have been made during the Civil War as placements for cannon. The Norman castle was also re-fortified during this period, and subsequently pulled down.</p
This article by Heather Norris and Roger Kain illustrates some of the ways in which increasingly ela...
An excavation carried out before the redevelopment of 30 Gloucester Lane, Old Market, Bristol, in 20...
Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher. © Windgather Press 2007
Reproduced with permission of the publisher. Journal home page http://www.britarch.ac.uk/msrg/public...
Reproduced with permission of the publisher.Medieval town defences represent a somewhat neglected ar...
Wallingford Castle survives as a complex suite of multiphase earthworks, with minimal upstanding rem...
The whole range of the sites which form the Anglo-Saxon Town or its pre-cursor has been surveyed wit...
The site of Portchester Castle has a very long history. It had its beginnings as a Roman shore-fort...
The fortifications, or burhs, constructed between 910 and 915 by Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians, ac...
ADVANCES IN THE understanding of the Anglo-Saxon burh in the last 25 years, a re-assessment of the d...
Microfossils recovered from sediment used to construct a putative English Civil War defensive bastio...
The York City Walls are England\u27s longest still-standing medieval town walls, a 3.4 km (about 2 m...
The Roman town’s defences – their date, purpose, construction techniques and materials – are discuss...
Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN053478 / BLDSC - British Library Docume...
The study of Viking fortifications is a neglected subject which could reveal much to archaeologists ...
This article by Heather Norris and Roger Kain illustrates some of the ways in which increasingly ela...
An excavation carried out before the redevelopment of 30 Gloucester Lane, Old Market, Bristol, in 20...
Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher. © Windgather Press 2007
Reproduced with permission of the publisher. Journal home page http://www.britarch.ac.uk/msrg/public...
Reproduced with permission of the publisher.Medieval town defences represent a somewhat neglected ar...
Wallingford Castle survives as a complex suite of multiphase earthworks, with minimal upstanding rem...
The whole range of the sites which form the Anglo-Saxon Town or its pre-cursor has been surveyed wit...
The site of Portchester Castle has a very long history. It had its beginnings as a Roman shore-fort...
The fortifications, or burhs, constructed between 910 and 915 by Æthelflæd, Lady of the Mercians, ac...
ADVANCES IN THE understanding of the Anglo-Saxon burh in the last 25 years, a re-assessment of the d...
Microfossils recovered from sediment used to construct a putative English Civil War defensive bastio...
The York City Walls are England\u27s longest still-standing medieval town walls, a 3.4 km (about 2 m...
The Roman town’s defences – their date, purpose, construction techniques and materials – are discuss...
Available from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN053478 / BLDSC - British Library Docume...
The study of Viking fortifications is a neglected subject which could reveal much to archaeologists ...
This article by Heather Norris and Roger Kain illustrates some of the ways in which increasingly ela...
An excavation carried out before the redevelopment of 30 Gloucester Lane, Old Market, Bristol, in 20...
Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher. © Windgather Press 2007