Scheduled Monument: Medieval settlement at West Ringstead (1019393)
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Authority | Historic England |
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Date assigned | 15 January 1960 |
Date last amended | 14 December 2000 |
Description
EXTRACT FROM ENGLISH HERITAGE'S RECORD OF SCHEDULED MONUMENTS
MONUMENT: Medieval settlement at West Ringstead
PARISH: OSMINGTON
DISTRICT: WEST DORSET
COUNTY: DORSET
NATIONAL MONUMENT NO: 29091
NATIONAL GRID REFERENCE(S): SY74878163
DESCRIPTION OF THE MONUMENT
The monument includes the site of an abandoned medieval settlement, situated on the gently sloping coastal plain to the south of a natural gap in the South Dorset Ridge, overlooking Weymouth Bay to the south. The settlement and a series of earthworks which extend over about 5ha, are most likely those of the medieval village of `West Ringstead', mentioned in the Domesday survey: the settlement was bounded by a steep valley to the south west, a stream to the north and the presence of heavy clays to the south, east and north west.
The settlement includes an area of clustered house platforms in the north west of the monument, along with the church and cemetery, and further house platforms are dispersed to the east. The church, first mentioned in 1227, and the cemetery became disused following the abandonment of the settlement and the church was later converted into a cottage, which is Listed Grade II*. Most of its surviving structure is of 13th century date; this includes elements of the chancel and chancel-arch. The garden of Glebe Cottage has yielded many finds relating to the church, including masonry and human bone. To the south of the church, are a group of four house sites and associated yards. These survive as well defined earthworks up to 0.8m high and between 3m by 6m to 6m by 10m in plan. There are another four possible structures associated with this group, although these are less well defined. To the west of these structures is a road which survives as a well defined hollow way up to 1.5m deep. This is likely to have formed one of the main roads associated with the settlement and it was served by other tracks also surviving as hollow ways, for example to the north east. An additional group of building platforms survives to the east, where a series of terraces and platforms indicate the presence of more dispersed structures associated with the settlement. These include a central terrace 50m by 35m in plan, a sunken platform 60m by 30m to the south and, to the north east, an enclosure defined by banks 3m wide and about 0.5m high.
Historical sources indicate that there were originally four settlements within this parish. The Domesday Book records the presence of 19 people within the parish. The Lay Subsidy Roll of 1333 records 13 and, by 1664, only three householders are mentioned in the Hearth Tax Assessment. The settlement belonged to the estate of Milton Abbey during much of the 15th century, but in 1488 Ringstead was merged with the neighbouring parish of Osmington, on account of the poverty of both parishes. It would, therefore, appear that the settlement of West Ringstead became gradually depopulated. Following the abandonment of the settlement, a series of channels and sluices were added to the western part of the site in order to flood some former house platforms which were adopted for use as water meadows until the earlier 20th century.
The steep slope to the north supports an extensive area of well-preserved strip lynchets relating to the settlement's outer field system. Glebe Cottage, all stiles, fence posts and gates relating to modern field boundaries, the septic tank in the south east corner of the garden, the soakaway leading west from it, the linking drains between the tank and the cottage, other existing soakaways within the garden, the caravan and the concrete plinth on which it stands, and all sheds and greenhouses, are excluded from the scheduling. The ground beneath and around these features is, however, included.
ASSESSMENT OF IMPORTANCE
Medieval rural settlements in England were marked by great regional diversity in form, size and type, and the protection of their archaeological remains needs to take these differences into account. To do this, England has been divided into three broad Provinces on the basis of each area's distinctive mixture of nucleated and dispersed settlements. These can be further divided into sub-Provinces and local regions, possessing characteristics which have gradually evolved during the last 1500 years or more. This monument lies in the West Wessex sub-Province of the Central Province, an area characterised by large numbers of villages and hamlets within countrysides of great local diversity, ranging from flat marshland to hill ridges. Settlements range from large, sprawling villages to tiny hamlets, a range extended by large numbers of scattered dwellings in the extreme east and west of the sub-Province. Cultivation in open townfields was once present, but early enclosure was commonplace. The physical diversity of the landscape was, by the time of Domesday Book in 1086, linked with great variations in the balance of cleared land and woodland.
The South Dorset local region is a diverse countryside comprising the South Dorset Downs and narrow limestone ridges and clay vales which curve around the chalk escarpments. Settlement is characterised by low concentrations of scattered farmsteads, and small villages and hamlets: ancient settlements whose arable fields were, on the evidence of Domesday Book, set among substantial tracts of pasture and woodland in the 11th century.
The medieval settlement at West Ringstead survives as a series of well preserved earthworks and associated deposits. The site is notable for the quality of its earthwork survival and for the diversity in size and form of the features present. The location of the site is also significant as the siting of medieval settlements along this area of coast is generally rare. The associated geology is also significant as it offers suitable conditions for the preservation of waterlogged deposits.
SCHEDULING HISTORY
Monument included in the Schedule on 15th January 1960 as:
COUNTY/NUMBER: Dorset 490
NAME: Deserted village of Ringstead
Scheduling amended on 25th November 1999 to:
COUNTY/NUMBER: Dorset 29091
NAME: Medieval settlement at West Ringstead
The reference of this monument is now:
NATIONAL MONUMENT NUMBER: 29091
NAME: Medieval settlement at West Ringstead
SCHEDULING AFFIRMED ON 14th December 2000
Location
Grid reference | Centred SY 7486 8164 (470m by 285m) |
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External Links (1)
- View details on the National Heritage List for England (From EH UDS to Legacy x-reference)
Related Monuments/Buildings (6)
- Glebe Cottage, Ringstead, Osmington (Listed Building) (MDO47353)
- Ice House at Ringstead, Osmington (Monument) (MDO1812)
- Medieval fishpond, Ringstead, Osmington (Monument) (MWX532)
- Modern Chain Home radar station, Ringstead, Owermoigne (Monument) (MDO24568)
- Ringstead Deserted Medieval Village, Osmington (Monument) (MDO1813)
- Ringstead Old Church, Ringstead, Osmington (Monument) (MDO1810)
Record last edited
Oct 7 2024 3:32PM