Scheduled Monument: Section of Battery Bank on Binnegar Plain, 830m north east of Stokeford Farm (SM29078)

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Authority English Heritage
Date assigned 21 January 1999
Date last amended

Description

Summary of Monument Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details. Reasons for Designation The Battery Bank, of which this monument forms a part, is made up of a series of linear earthworks which extend discontinuously over a total distance of about 5.5km. The earthworks are aligned along the plateau dividing the rivers Piddle and Frome. Although not firmly dated, the monument is likely to be of Romano-British or early medieval date; and given the wide gaps in its alignment, demarcation is perhaps a more likely interpretation for the bank than stock control or defence. The name `Battery Bank' is likely to be a misnomer, relating to the Napoleonic period when the bank may have had a role in military training exercises. As a well preserved monument representing early medieval or earlier land division, the Battery Bank is a comparatively unusual survival, and consequently all surviving sections are considered to be of national importance. This section survives well, its location illustrating clearly the topographic setting into which the monument was placed. History Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details. Details The monument includes a section of the linear boundary known as the Battery Bank, situated on Binnegar Plain, a plateau overlooking the Piddle Valley to the north and the Frome Valley to the south. The earthwork forms part of a group of similar monuments which extend (discontinuously) for a distance of 5.5km along the natural ridge separating these valleys. The earthwork includes a linear bank, aligned east-west, composed of earth, sand and turf, with maximum dimensions of 180m in length, 10m in width and about 0.75m in height. The bank has been breached by two tracks and some sections of the bank have been partly reduced. To the north of the bank is a ditch from which material was quarried during the construction of the monument. To the east and at intermittent points, the ditch is visible as an earthwork 1.5m wide. Elsewhere, the ditch has become infilled, but will survive as a buried feature.

Map

Location

Grid reference Centred SY 8757 8786 (214m by 30m)
Civil Parish East Stoke; Dorset
District (historic) Purbeck
Unitary Authority Dorset

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Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Record last edited

Jul 21 2014 12:26PM