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Monument details

HER Number:TR 13 NW 3
Type of record:Monument
Name:Westenhanger Castle

Summary

Westhanger Castle, a medieval and later fortified manor house with a medieval chapel and cemetery which passed into Crown ownership in the 16th century. From the late 16th century the castle was back in private ownership with many of the buildings being taken down when the castle was sold agin in 1701. The present house was constructed in the 18th century from the remains of the 16th century crosswing of the main hall. Grade I listed building and scheduled ancient monument.


Grid Reference:TR 1230 3722
Map Sheet:TR13NW
Parish:STANFORD, SHEPWAY, KENT

Monument Types

  • HUNTING FOREST (HUNTING FOREST, Medieval to Post Medieval - 1066 AD to 1900 AD)
  • MOAT (MOAT, Medieval to Modern - 1066 AD to 2050 AD)
  • FORTIFIED MANOR HOUSE (FORTIFIED MANOR HOUSE, Medieval to Modern - 1343 AD (between) to 2050 AD (between))
  • PARK (PARK, Post Medieval - 1540 AD? to 1900 AD)
Protected Status:Scheduled Monument 1020761: WESTENHANGER CASTLE

Full description

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[TR 12333716] Westenhanger [NR] [TR 12373718]

Fair Rosamond's Tower (Remains of) [NR] Moat [NR] (1)

House, Grade I, Westenhanger Manor. Built within the ruins of a 14th century fortified mansion, rebuilt in the time of Henry VIII. Barn, Grade I, Westenhanger Manor. Large L-shaped C16th building to the north west of the house (TR 13 NW 69). (For full descriptions see list). (2)

A domestic chapel at Westenhanger, built in 1520, must have contributed largely to the gradual disuse of the parish church. One of the towers at Westenhanger is wrongly associated with and named after the Fair Rosamund. (3)

The uninhabited parts and outbuildings of Westenhanger House or Castle are scheduled as an ancient monument. (4)

At Westenhanger, Henry VIII enclosed the adjoining lands to form a park. (5)

The remains of Westenhanger, a 14th century fortified manor house as described, are in ruinous condition. (See GP's AP/62/295/1, Gateway on S.W., 295/4 "Rosamunds Tower" and east side from S., 295/6 North side from E.N.E). The moat, which lies a few feet above the flood plain of the River East Stour, is fed by a leat, extensively mutilated by the railway and now partially dry (see 25" survey). The present owners could offer no information regarding the domestic chapel or its dedication but which could possibly have been to St. John (q.v. TR 13 NW 2). Dr Urry, Archivist, Canterbury Cathedral Chapter Library, could find no documentary evidence regarding the chapel. At TR 12253722 there is an exceptionally fine 14th century tithe barn which is in excellent condition. (See GP, AO/62/295/2 Barn from SE). Adjoining the barn is a fine range of 14th century out-buildings (see GP, AO/62/295/3: Range from S.) all clearly contemporary with the manor house. For the extent of the park, see 6" illustration. The area is arable and pasture. Published survey (25" 19) revised. (6)

No change. (7)

Stanford: Westenhanger. A fortified manor house, mainly dated from 14th century with remains of a once broad and deep moat fed by a stream which rises on the hill above Stanford church. (8)

[TR 122737] Westenhanger is listed in the county check list of moated sites in Kent - December 1979. (9)

Castle or fortified house (now partly ruinous), Westenhanger Manor, Grade I, Stone Street (West side). 14th century, early and late 16th century, and late 18th century or early 19th century. Two conjoined barns at Westenhanger Manor, Grade I, Stone Street (Westside). 16th century in two periods. (For full description see list).

(10) [TR 122373] Westenhanger. Stanford included in a list of known moated sited in Kent - December 1977.

(11) Westenhanger. A fragment of a large fortified house of the 14th century. Now becoming ruinous, a large chunk of wall on the north side has recently fallen. The surviving remains appear to be c. 1385.In extent Westenhanger is exceptional - the courtyard was 130ft. across. Nothing is left of this courtyard, but a 17th century plan shows ranges round all four sides against the outer walls. The present seven-bay redbrick farmhouse built in the C18th is attached to the east wall. (12,13)

In 1540, Westenhanger, the seat of Sir Thomas Poynings, was given up to Henry VIII. Hasted (18) says that the king intended it to be a royal residence, and that he spent money completing the house and extending the park. The park was in fact extended but very little construction work took place except the building of a new drawbridge over the moat. The house had a number of owners, until it was recovered by the crown in 1566. In 1585 Elizabeth I transferred the house and estate to Thomas Smith, a farmer. The existing remains are chiefly medieval, but a fireplace and the remains of a kitchen date from the 16th century. (14)

A fine castle built in 1343 on the normal "seven towers and a gatehouse plan" by John de Kiriel. (15)

[TR 123372] Westenhanger. Quadrangular castle with round and sqare towers. Licenced 1343. (16)

In 1570, at the time of Lampard's visit, the main buildings were a moated castle and drawbridge. Hasted (18) says that the house was moated, with a drawbridge, gatehouse and portal, the arch of which sprang from six polygonal pillars, with a portcullis to it. The walls were also very high, thick and embattled, and fortified by the towers. (17-18)

Additional bibliography . (19-24,31)

Additional Information.(32). A programme of English Heritage grant aided repiars has been under taken. So far, 2003, over £600,000 has been given. (33).

Thirteen samples were taken from rafters of the conical roof of a dovecote tower. An estimated felling date of 1575 was recorded. A fourteen sample was taken from a timber during building repairs. (34-35)

From the National heritage List for England:From the National Heritage List for England:

Details
The monument includes Westenhanger Castle, a medieval and later fortified manor house situated on the southern edge of the floodplain of the River East Stour. The inner court of the castle, and its outer court adjacent to the west, are built on the site of two earlier manors, Westenhanger and Ostenhanger, into which the parish of Le Hangre had been divided at the end of the 12th century. A medieval church and cemetery also occupied the site, going out of use in the 16th century when the parish was merged with that of Stanford. Also in the 16th century the two manors were reunited, subsequently passing to the crown and being greatly enhanced for royal use. At this time the outer court was established, formal gardens were laid out and a deer park was created. From the late 16th century the castle was again in private hands, and in 1701 the property was sold and most of the buildings were subsequently taken down. The present house on the site, Westenhanger Manor, was constructed in the 18th century from the remains of a 16th century cross-wing of the main hall; it is a Grade I Listed building in residential use.

During the 14th and 15th centuries the manors of Westenhanger and Ostenhanger were held by the de Criol and Poynings families. In 1343 John de Criol was granted licence to crenellate, and to this period is attributed the construction around an earlier moated site of curtain walls, which also served as internal retaining walls for the moat. Until this date the principal buildings of the moated enclosure are believed to have been a hall and gatehouse. With the construction of the curtain walls the gatehouse on the west side of the enclosure was rebuilt, and seven further mural towers were added: four corner towers (ovoid in plan on the north west and south west, round on the north east and rectangular on the south east), and an interval tower in each of the other three walls (all rectangular). The principal building was the hall, which stood on a north-south alignment against the eastern interval tower. Standing and buried remains of all of these features survive, standing to the greatest height on the north side of the enclosure where the wall and towers have been restored. The buried remains of the hall are located adjacent to the south of the present house.

The walled enclosure is trapezoidal in plan, occupying an area of approximately 60m square and surrounded by a moat which varies in width between 10m and 14m. The moat is still partly water-filled on the south and south west sides, but has been infilled on the north west; the northern and eastern arms are now generally dry. On the northern, downhill, side the moat is retained externally by a substantial earthen bank, at the eastern end of which are the remains of an inlet leat which entered the moat from the north east. At the western end of the bank is the site of a watermill, referred to in documentary sources of the 16th century but possibly earlier in origin. No remains of the watermill are now evident above ground.

Significant alterations to the fortified manor were begun in the early 16th century by Edward Poynings, who unified the two manors; at the south end of the medieval hall he added a cross-wing which contained a first floor chapel. This building was taken down in the early 19th century, but buried remains will survive. Further works were carried out after Poynings' death in 1552-53, when the property passed to the Crown. To this period is attributed the construction of the present dovecote in the high upper storey of the north east corner tower, which contains over 400 nesting boxes of brick; beneath it was a bakehouse. The conical tiled roof of the tower, at the centre of which is a louvred flight-hole, is a modern reconstruction overlying an earlier timber roof; the whole of the tower which, with the Manor is a Listed Building Grade I, is included in the scheduling. Other alterations of the 16th century included the rebuilding of the kitchens, which formerly stood adjacent to the west of the tower, and the construction of a west range, which partly survives in the form of standing ruins. To the north end of the medieval hall was added another cross-wing, out of which the present house was later constructed.

Adaptation of the fortified manor for royal use included the enhancement of the private apartments which stood to the south of the main hall, and the layout of associated gardens to the south and west. Adjacent to the buried remains of the south range is a linear terrace, extending alongside and within the line of the moat; opposite it is another linear terrace, raised above the south side of the moat and separated from it by a retaining wall. Adjacent to the south western arm of the moat a rectangular walled garden or orchard was established, also above a retaining wall; this enclosure was visible until the 20th century and is now believed to survive as buried remains beneath the modern stabling block. Along the south side of this garden, also surviving as a buried feature, a leat connected the moat to a pond adjacent to the west, which still survives. The gardens, orchards and ponds at the manor are documented in a survey of 1559.

The walled garden and pond lie within the area of the castle's outer court, which was also established in the 16th century. To the north of the garden stood the medieval parish church, referred to in documentary sources, which went out of use in 1542 as the outer court was being laid out. The church building may have remained standing as late as the 18th century. Buried remains of the church and its associated cemetery, within which human remains have been identified, were overlain in the 20th century by timber stabling.

The principal buildings of the outer court still survive as complete standing structures. At the north western end of the outer court are a stable range and barn dated to the early and late 16th century respectively. Both buildings are Listed Grade I and are also included in the scheduling. The barn is approximately 34.5m long and 9.5m wide, aligned north-south, extending at its north end over the River East Stour where it incorporates a barrel-vaulted culvert. It is divided into three three-bay crop storage areas by two pairs of projecting wagon porches. Walls of coursed ragstone support an intact hammer-beam roof of late 16th or early 17th century date. The stable building is a two-storeyed range approximately 42.5m long and up to 7.25m-7.75m wide, aligned east-west, constructed of roughly dressed and coursed ragstone with a single buttress in the west gable wall. The roof was substantially rebuilt in the 19th and 20th centuries, but fragments of the 16th century roof structure survive at the eastern end. In its original layout there were three internal rooms of equal size, divided by timber partitions; the present layout dates to the 18th century, when a small central room was created around the principal doorway. Most of the building's original openings are in the south wall, indicating its symbolic importance as a high status structure situated on the approach to the inner court.

Architectural details in the south wall of the stable building demonstrate that it was built against the north wall of a pre-existing structure, shown on a 17th century plan extending north-south and measuring approximately 20m x 5.5m. An inventory of 1635 suggests that this range contained domestic accommodation (the `little hall' or `maids hall') and as such it may represent the reuse for service accommodation of an earlier domestic building, possibly the hall of the second medieval manor at Westenhanger. The remains of this hall are now partly overlain by modern structures. The presence of other buildings in the outer court is indicated by the same 17th century inventory, which lists a brewhouse, faulkeners hall, lime house, workshops, coal house and milk house. The remains of these features are believed to lie beneath modern stable buildings which are largely constructed on raised platforms overlying earlier deposits.

To the west and north of the outer court are the remains of the castle's water-control system, possibly the `waters' referred to in the 1559 survey. Here the natural floodplain of the River East Stour was employed to create an expanse of shallow water around the site, forming an impressive symbolic defence around the castle's principal western approach which was in keeping with its role as a high status residence. Separately from the inlet leat to the moat, which runs south eastwards from the eastern end of the monument, the river is channelled through the floodplain to the site of the watermill and then passes through the culvert at the north end of the 16th century barn. In the western part of the monument a series of channels drain the floodplain to the west of the outer court; two transverse channels with adjacent banks and trackways may indicate the points at which the floodplain was crossed in dry periods.

On the higher ground in the northern part of the monument is a series of linear ditches and banks which partly delineate platforms and enclosures; these may include features such as paddocks and animal shelters associated with the castle. This area lay within the deer park, laid out in 1542, which also had a symbolic value as viewed from the castle. The deer park is described in 1559 as being about 400 acres (approximately 162ha) in extent. The best surviving remains of the park pale are situated to the north east of the moated site, where a substantial earthen bank is constructed along the north side of the moat's inlet leat.

Westenhanger Manor, all modern buildings, fences and surfaces are excluded from the scheduling, although the ground beneath them is included.

Reasons for Designation
Fortified houses were residences belonging to some of the richest and most powerful members of society. Their design reflects a combination of domestic and military elements. In some instances, the fortifications may be cosmetic additions to an otherwise conventional high status dwelling, giving a military aspect while remaining practically indefensible. They are associated with individuals or families of high status and their ostentatious architecture often reflects a high level of expenditure. The nature of the fortification varies, but can include moats, curtain walls, a gatehouse and other towers, gunports and crenellated parapets. Their buildings normally included a hall used as communal space for domestic and administrative purposes, kitchens, service and storage areas. In later houses the owners had separate private living apartments, these often receiving particular architectural emphasis. In common with castles, some fortified houses had outer courts beyond the main defences in which stables, brew houses, granaries and barns were located. Fortified houses were constructed in the medieval period, primarily between the 15th and 16th centuries, although evidence from earlier periods, such as the increase in the number of licences to crenellate in the reigns of Edward I and Edward II, indicates that the origins of the class can be traced further back. They are found primarily in several areas of lowland England: in upland areas they are outnumbered by structures such as bastles and tower houses which fulfilled many of the same functions. As a rare monument type, with fewer than 200 identified examples, all examples exhibiting significant surviving archaeological remains are considered of national importance.

Westenhanger Castle survives well in the form of both standing and buried remains. In addition to the substantial earthwork and structural remains of the moated inner court, the survival of a complete 16th century barn and stable of the outer court is particularly rare. Buried remains of other features in the area of the outer court, including the church, cemetery, medieval hall and walled garden, have been overlain rather than cut into by later structures, and archaeological deposits will therefore survive largely intact. As a result of extensive archaeological work and historical research, these remains are quite well understood. The association of the fortified house with contemporary features, including a deer park and water-control system, provide evidence for the way in which these features functioned as high status components of the medieval and later landscape. (35-36)

The earliest reference to parkland at Westenhanger dates to a 1262 licence to empark 'Hanger'. By 1559 the park was 400 acres in size. The boundaries of the park are unknown (37)


Archaeology South - East, 1999, An archaeological evaluation (Phase III) at Westenhanger Castle (Unpublished document). SKE54560.

Archaeology South - East, 2004, An Archaeological Earthwork Survey at Westenhanger Castle (Unpublished document). SKE54561.

<1> OS 6" 1938-9 (OS Card Reference). SKE48357.

<2> MHLG Prov List Elham RD Sept 1960 46 No 17/5b (OS Card Reference). SKE47154.

<3> Arch Cant 31 1915 76 plan illus photos (G Clinch) 82-83 (TS Frampton) (OS Card Reference). SKE35011.

<4> AM Eng and Wales 1958 46 (MOW) (OS Card Reference). SKE33013.

<5> Trans RHS NS 18 1904 125-6 (AD Cheney) (OS Card Reference). SKE50665.

<6> F1 ASP 12-DEC-62 (OS Card Reference). SKE42066.

<7> F2 ASP 01-DEC-69 (OS Card Reference). SKE43070.

<8> VCH Kent 1 1908 433 (IC Gould) (OS Card Reference). SKE50908.

<9> Moated Sites Res Gp 6 1979 47 (OS Card Reference). SKE47254.

<10> DOE(HHR) Dist of Shepway Kent 15 May 1986 64-66 (OS Card Reference). SKE41057.

<11> Arch Cant 93 1977 222 (T Tatton-Brown) (OS Card Reference). SKE36151.

<12> Bldgs of Eng NE and E Kent 1983 491-492 (J Newman) (OS Card Reference). SKE37828.

<13> Archaeol Journ 86 1929 313-314 plan photo (OS Card Reference). SKE37286.

<14> Hist of the King's Works 4 1485-1660 pt 2 (Ed HM Colvin) 1982 283-285 (HM Colvin J Summerson) (OS Card Reference). SKE44040.

<15> The English Castle 1936 104 (H Braun) (OS Card Reference). SKE50339.

<16> Castellarium Anglicanum 1 1983 236 (DJ Cathcart King) (OS Card Reference). SKE38607.

<17> Archaeol Cant 17 1887 193-208 (JF Wadmore) (OS Card Reference). SKE37212.

<18> A Hist and Topo Survey of the Co of Kent 3 1778-9 232-7 (E Hasted) (OS Card Reference). SKE32813.

<19> Castles of England 1 1897 57 (JD Mackenzie) (OS Card Reference). SKE38634.

<20> Antiquaries of England and Wales 3 1787 82-87 2 1774 125-127 (F Grose) (OS Card Reference). SKE33270.

<21> A Saunter thro Kent 23 (C Igglesden) (OS Card Reference). SKE32836.

<22> Home Counties Mag 12 1910 169-173 plans (OS Card Reference). SKE44166.

<23> Dom Archit Eng 2 1859 308 (OS Card Reference). SKE41463.

<24> Some Kentish Castles (PH Ditchfield G Clinch) 1907 51-53 (SKC Sands) (OS Card Reference). SKE49504.

<25> Field report for monument TR 13 NW 3 - December, 1962 (Bibliographic reference). SKE5355.

<26> Field report for monument TR 13 NW 3 - December, 1969 (Bibliographic reference). SKE5356.

<27> NORTH SIDE OF WESTENHANGER MANOR HOUSE AT STANFORD FROM EAST NORTH EAST (Photograph). SKE2596.

<28> ROSAMUND'S TOWER AT WESTENHANGER MANOR AT STANFORD FROM SOUTH (Photograph). SKE2597.

<29> 14TH CENTURY OUTBUILDING AT WESTENHANGER MANOR FROM SOUTH (Photograph). SKE2598.

<30> GATEWAY AT REMAINS OF WESTENHANGER MANOR AT STANFORD FROM SOUTH WEST (Photograph). SKE2599.

<31> Archaeology South-East, 1998, Desk-Based Assessment and Walk-over of a site at Folkestone Racescourse, Westhanger (Unpublished document). SKE7403.

<32> Archaeology South-East, 1998, Report on Selective Archaeological Recording at Outbuildings at Westhanger Castle, Stanford (Unpublished document). SKE7404.

<33> Castle Studies Group, 2003, Castle Studies Group Newsletter 16 (Serial). SKE12008.

<34> Centre for Archaeology, 2001, Tree-Ring Analysis of Timbers From Westenhanger Castle, Stone Street, Westenhanger, Near Folkestone, Kent (Unpublished document). SKE12173.

<35> English Heritage, Register of Scheduled Monuments (Scheduling record). SKE16191.

<36> English Heritage, List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest (Map). SKE16160.

<37> Susan Pittman, 2011, Elizabethan and Jacobean Deer Parks in Kent (Monograph). SKE32115.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
---Unpublished document: Archaeology South - East. 1999. An archaeological evaluation (Phase III) at Westenhanger Castle.
---Unpublished document: Archaeology South - East. 2004. An Archaeological Earthwork Survey at Westenhanger Castle.
<1>OS Card Reference: OS 6" 1938-9.
<2>OS Card Reference: MHLG Prov List Elham RD Sept 1960 46 No 17/5b.
<3>OS Card Reference: Arch Cant 31 1915 76 plan illus photos (G Clinch) 82-83 (TS Frampton).
<4>OS Card Reference: AM Eng and Wales 1958 46 (MOW).
<5>OS Card Reference: Trans RHS NS 18 1904 125-6 (AD Cheney).
<6>OS Card Reference: F1 ASP 12-DEC-62.
<7>OS Card Reference: F2 ASP 01-DEC-69.
<8>OS Card Reference: VCH Kent 1 1908 433 (IC Gould).
<9>OS Card Reference: Moated Sites Res Gp 6 1979 47.
<10>OS Card Reference: DOE(HHR) Dist of Shepway Kent 15 May 1986 64-66.
<11>OS Card Reference: Arch Cant 93 1977 222 (T Tatton-Brown).
<12>OS Card Reference: Bldgs of Eng NE and E Kent 1983 491-492 (J Newman).
<13>OS Card Reference: Archaeol Journ 86 1929 313-314 plan photo.
<14>OS Card Reference: Hist of the King's Works 4 1485-1660 pt 2 (Ed HM Colvin) 1982 283-285 (HM Colvin J Summerson).
<15>OS Card Reference: The English Castle 1936 104 (H Braun).
<16>OS Card Reference: Castellarium Anglicanum 1 1983 236 (DJ Cathcart King).
<17>OS Card Reference: Archaeol Cant 17 1887 193-208 (JF Wadmore).
<18>OS Card Reference: A Hist and Topo Survey of the Co of Kent 3 1778-9 232-7 (E Hasted).
<19>OS Card Reference: Castles of England 1 1897 57 (JD Mackenzie).
<20>OS Card Reference: Antiquaries of England and Wales 3 1787 82-87 2 1774 125-127 (F Grose).
<21>OS Card Reference: A Saunter thro Kent 23 (C Igglesden).
<22>OS Card Reference: Home Counties Mag 12 1910 169-173 plans.
<23>OS Card Reference: Dom Archit Eng 2 1859 308.
<24>OS Card Reference: Some Kentish Castles (PH Ditchfield G Clinch) 1907 51-53 (SKC Sands).
<25>Bibliographic reference: Field report for monument TR 13 NW 3 - December, 1962.
<26>Bibliographic reference: Field report for monument TR 13 NW 3 - December, 1969.
<27>Photograph: NORTH SIDE OF WESTENHANGER MANOR HOUSE AT STANFORD FROM EAST NORTH EAST. OS62/F295/6. Black and White. Negative.
<28>Photograph: ROSAMUND'S TOWER AT WESTENHANGER MANOR AT STANFORD FROM SOUTH. OS62/F295/4. Black and White. Negative.
<29>Photograph: 14TH CENTURY OUTBUILDING AT WESTENHANGER MANOR FROM SOUTH. OS62/F295/3. Black and White. Negative.
<30>Photograph: GATEWAY AT REMAINS OF WESTENHANGER MANOR AT STANFORD FROM SOUTH WEST. OS62/F295/1. Black and White. Negative.
<31>Unpublished document: Archaeology South-East. 1998. Desk-Based Assessment and Walk-over of a site at Folkestone Racescourse, Westhanger.
<32>Unpublished document: Archaeology South-East. 1998. Report on Selective Archaeological Recording at Outbuildings at Westhanger Castle, Stanford.
<33>Serial: Castle Studies Group. 2003. Castle Studies Group Newsletter 16.
<34>Unpublished document: Centre for Archaeology. 2001. Tree-Ring Analysis of Timbers From Westenhanger Castle, Stone Street, Westenhanger, Near Folkestone, Kent.
<35>XYScheduling record: English Heritage. Register of Scheduled Monuments. [Mapped feature: #602 Castle, ]
<36>Map: English Heritage. List of Buildings of Special Architectural or Historic Interest.
<37>Monograph: Susan Pittman. 2011. Elizabethan and Jacobean Deer Parks in Kent.

Related records

TR 13 NW 285Parent of: Westenhanger Deer Park (Monument)
TR 13 NW 102Parent of: WESTENHANGER MANOR (Listed Building)
TR 13 NW 96Part of: BARNS AT WESTENHANGER MANOR (Listed Building)

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