Scheduled Ancient Monument: MOATED SITE AT THE OLD RECTORY (30524)
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Authority | |
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Suffix | 30524 |
Date assigned | 24 July 1998 |
Date last amended |
Description
The monument includes a moated site which is believed to be the site of the medieval rectory, located 150m south of St Margaret's Church, on the west side of the road through the village. It lies some 50m to the north east of the present Old Rectory, which is a building largely of 19th century date.
The moat, which is water-filled, ranges in width from approximately 7m to 18m and surrounds the northern, western and southern sides of the area on which the medieval buildings are thought to have stood. At some time during the 19th century it was modified as a garden water feature, and the inner edge now describes an irregular curve around the western end of this partial enclosure. The outer edge defines a more rectilinear north western angle and, according to old editions of Ordnance Survey 1:2500 maps, was at one time more regular around the south western angle also. On the north side, the moat is approximately 43m in length and issues into a narrower channel approximately 4m wide and 41m in length which extends eastwards to the road. The moat on the south side is approximately 60m in overall length and terminates at the eastern end in a short southward extension. It is possible that the moated site was always open at the eastern end and fronted directly onto the road, although a slight but distinct scarp alongside the boundary with the road defines what may have been the western edge of an infilled north-south ditch about 4m wide. The interior area, as thus defined, has maximum dimensions of around 78m east-west by 32m north-south. The ground surface of the interior is uneven and slopes to a lower level in the south western part of the enclosure.
According to a map of the Glebe dated 1834, the moat in the earlier part of the 19th century remained open and water-filled in three separate sections, with a gap around 25m wide, probably created by infilling in order to provide greater ease of access, on the south western side. The southern arm is depicted as it remains today, including the out-turning eastern end. The north western section of the moat, including most or all of the northern arm, is shown as more regular in width than now, with the inner edge following a rounded angle corresponding to that of the outer edge. The third and shortest section corresponds to the western end of the narrower channel which extends to the road on the northern side. It is likely that the outlines of infilled sections of the moat remained at least partly visible on the ground surface and were followed when the south western part was recut.
The map dated 1834 records two buildings standing on the moated site, but the Tithe Award map of 1842 shows none, and the site has remained unoccupied since that date.
The monument is one of several rectorial moated sites which survive in the different parishes which made up the manor of South Elmham and which are the subject of separate schedulings. The manor was held in the later 11th century by the Bishop of Thetford and subsequently, until the Reformation, by the Bishops of Norwich who had a country seat at the moated site of South Elmham Hall located 850m to the south west, also the subject of a separate scheduling. Other features of the medieval landscape which survive in the area include St Margaret's Green, some 750m to the south east, at the eastern end of the parish.
A timber garden structure standing on the moated site, a concrete-lined tank adjacent to the outer edge of the southern arm of the moat, a modern footbridge, paving and all fence posts are excluded from the scheduling, although the ground beneath all these features is included.
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Location
Grid reference | Centred TM 3145 8379 (105m by 58m) |
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Map sheet | TM38SW |
Civil Parish | ST MARGARET, SOUTH ELMHAM, WAVENEY, SUFFOLK |
Related Monuments/Buildings (1)
Record last edited
Dec 20 2019 3:23PM