Maiden Castle, North Yorkshire

Maiden Castle, North Yorkshire
Location within North Yorkshire
General information
Town or city Grinton, North Yorkshire
Country England
Coordinates 54°22′42″N 1°58′04″W / 54.37826°N 1.967872°W
Technical details
Size 7,000 m2 (1.7 acres)


Maiden Castle is a settlement in Grinton, North Yorkshire (grid reference SE02189808) which probably dates from the Iron Age. It is listed as a Scheduled Ancient Monument.[1] The name Maiden Castle is not unique to the site and occurs in several other places in Britain and probably means a "fortification that looks impregnable" or one that has never been taken in battle.[2]

The site measures 108 by 88 m (354 by 289 ft), covering about 7,000 m2 (1.7 acres), and is pear-shaped. An avenue leading to the entrance of the settlement is a unique feature. Maiden Castle has been described as a banjo enclosure due to its shape, however this description has been disputed.[1] If it is a banjo enclosure, it would be one of just two in northern England, the other being Fremington Dykes.[1]

The only dating evidence recovered from Maiden Castle is the a "post-and-panel building" which is typologically similar to a structure discovered in Healaugh that has been dated to the late Iron Age or Romano-British periods.[1]

References

Notes
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Maiden Castle, Pastscape.org.uk, retrieved 2009-08-01
  2. Mills (1977), p. 377.
Bibliography