Scheduled Ancient Monument: MOATED SITE AND PONDS AT DENNINGTON PLACE (21303)

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Authority
Suffix 21303
Date assigned 03 May 1994
Date last amended

Description

The monument includes a moated site and an associated pond, situated on a slight east-facing hill slope near the south-western boundary of Dennington parish. The moat ditch, which measures between 10m and 15m in width, with a depth of up to 2m, encloses a trapezoidal island with maximum dimensions of 45m north-west/south-east by 40m north-east/south-west. The moat is water-logged, with areas of shallow open water, and there is an outlet from the eastern arm into an enlarged field drain. The western arm is crossed by a causeway and the part to the north of this has been infilled, although surviving as a buried feature. The exposed south side of the causeway is faced with brick. The remains of a flint and mortar revetment, partly faced with brick, can be seen on the inner face of the northern arm of the moat and some brickwork is also visible on both faces of the eastern arm, near its southern end. A narrow causeway across the eastern end of the northern arm is of recent construction, overlying earlier deposits in the moat. The central island, the surface of which is raised approximately 0.3m above the prevailing ground level, is known to have been occupied from at least the later 14th century until 1662/3, when the house was demolished, and a mid- 15th-century document includes reference to a chapel. A small-scale excavation, carried out in 1976 in the north-eastern corner of the island, discovered evidence relating to this occupation, including brick and flint walling, floors and flint cobbles, as well as finds of pottery and window glass. In the 18th century the moated enclosure was in use as a stackyard, and part of a barn and the footings of other farm buildings still stand at the western end of the island. The present house, which is situated 20m to the east of the moat, has been dated to the 16th century, although details of the interior suggest that the northern end and part of the adjacent barn may be of earlier date. Five metres to the west of the moat, and at a higher level, is a rectangular pond, aligned east-west and with dimensions of approximately 30m by 12m. The pond is fed by a ditch approximately 3m wide which leads into it from the north and is included in the scheduling. The eastern end of the pond and the western arm of the moat were formerly connected by a sluice, traces of which will survive below the ground surface. Dennington Place was at one time the seat of the Rous family, including William Rous, Chief Constable of the Hundred of Hoxne at the time of the uprising of 1381. Sir Anthony Rous, who in 1538 acquired Dennington Hall with the manor of Dennington from Sir Charles Wingfield, was the last of that family to live there and in 1608 it was acquired by the Bacon family of Shrubland Hall. Excluded from the scheduling are the remains of the post-medieval barn and adjacent structures standing at the western end of the central island, the track which gives access to the house, and all service pipes, but the ground beneath all these features is included.

External Links (2)

Sources (1)

  • Scheduling record: English Heritage. Scheduled Ancient Monument file.

Map

Location

Grid reference Centred TM 2621 6670 (110m by 95m)
Map sheet TM26NE
Civil Parish DENNINGTON, SUFFOLK COASTAL, SUFFOLK

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Record last edited

Jul 20 2012 3:37PM

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