Reasons for Designation
A nunnery was a settlement built to sustain a community of religious women.
Its main buildings were constructed to provide facilities for worship,
accommodation and subsistence. The main elements are the church and domestic
buildings arranged around a cloister. This central enclosure may be
accompanied by an outer court and gatehouse, the whole bounded by a precinct
wall, earthworks or moat. Outside the enclosure, fishponds, mills, field
systems, stock enclosures and barns may occur. The earliest English nunneries
were founded in the seventh century AD but most of these had fallen out of use
by the ninth century. A small number of these were later refounded. The tenth
century witnessed the foundation of some new houses but the majority of
medieval nunneries were established from the late 11th century onwards.
Nunneries were established by most of the major religious orders of the time,
including the Benedictines, Cistercians, Augustinians, Franciscans and
Dominicans. It is known from documentary sources that at least 153 nunneries
existed in England, of which the precise locations of only around 100 sites
are known. Few sites have been examined in detail and as a rare and poorly
understood medieval monument type all examples exhibiting survival of
archaeological remains are worthy of protection.
Medieval villages in England were marked by a 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 evolved
gradually during the past 1500 years or more.
The Craven Block local region, including the Askrigg Block, encompasses the
high moorlands south of Stainmore. Away from the `specialist nucleations' of
post-medieval date (the chlusters of houses associated with mining and the
railways), dispersed settlement includes both seasonal and permanent
farmsteads, as well as specialist sheep and cattle ranches. The latter were
normally outlying dependencies of larger settlements or estate centres
located in adjacent regions. In these upland environments, dating settlements
can be difficult.
Medieval villages were organised agricultural communities, sited at the centre
of a parish or township, that shared resources such as arable land, meadow and
woodland. Village plans varied enormously, but when they survive as earthworks
their most distinguishing features include roads and minor tracks, platforms
on which stood houses and other buildings such as barns, enclosed crofts and
small enclosed paddocks. They frequently included the parish church within
their boundaries. In the northern province of England, villages were the most
distinctive aspect of rural life, and their archaeological remains are one of
the most important sources of understanding about rural life in the five or
more centuries following the Norman Conquest.
Medieval villages were supported by a mixed system of agriculture based on
both arable and pasture. Arable cultivation usually took place in strips of
land, which were divided up amongst individual villagers. The cultivation of
these strips led to long, wide ridges, and the resultant 'ridge and furrow'
where it survives is the most obvious physical indication of medieval field
systems. The strips were laid out in groups known as furlongs defined by
terminal headlands at the plough turning-points and lateral grass balks.
Furlongs were in turn grouped into large open fields. Well preserved ridge and
furrow, especially in its original context adjacent to village earthworks, is
both an important source of information about medieval agrarian life and a
distinctive contribution to the character of the historic landscape. It is
usually now covered by the hedges or walls of subsequent field enclosure.
In addition to field systems, other medieval agricultural activities were
practised such as fish farming in special fishponds. These were artificial
pools of slow moving water in which fish were bred and stored in order to
provide a constant supply of fresh fish for consumption and trade. Fishponds
were maintained by a water management system to regulate water flow. In
ddition to the ponds there would be buildings for use by fishermen for
storing equipment or fish curing. The tradition of constructing and using
fishponds in England began during the medieval period and peaked in the 12th
century. Large and complex systems were often associated with the wealthy
sectors of society such as monastic institutions and the aristocracy. Small
and simple examples are commonly found at villages throughout England.
As part of the economic functions of the community most villages contained one
or more watermills. A watermill uses the gravitational force of water to turn
a paddled wheel which enabled the operation of varying kinds of machinery. The
wheel could be set directly into a river or stream or more commonly powered by
water fed through artificial channels. Early medieval mills could have
horizontal or vertical wheels and the former had disappeared from England by
the 12th century. The earliest mill identified thus far dates to the late 7th
century AD and by the time of the Domesday Book an estimated 6,000 were in
existence. During the medieval period mills were usually used for grinding
corn but with technological improvements their use spread to further
agricultural and industrial purposes such as tilt hammers and bellows and
textile processing.
The remains at Ellerton preserve a wide range of features associated with the
medieval period. Important remains of both the nunnery and the village and
their associated social, agricultural and economic activities survive. The
monument offers important scope for understanding the relationship between the
religious and the secular communities and the consequent impact on the wider
dales landscape.
Details
The monument includes remains of Ellerton Priory and the adjacent early
medieval village, including fishponds and field systems located on the south
bank of the River Swale 10km west of Richmond. Also included are earthwork
remains of a mill and the water management system, located on the hillside
700m to the south, which provided the water supply to the priory and its
associated industrial activities.
The monument comprises three separate areas of protection. The first area
contains the priory and the adjacent village remains, and occupies the whole
of the field west of Ellerton Abbey house and most of the field to the east as
far south as the water course extending east to west. The second area contains
the water management system, associated structures and areas of medieval
agriculture, and occupies the field north east of Juniper Gill Plantation and
part of the field to the north west. The third area contains a reservoir and
associated water channels and is located on the moor edge to the south. The
monument is also known as Ellerton Abbey although this is not the correct
name.
The medieval village of Ellerton was one of the settlements located in Lower
Swaledale mentioned in the Domesday survey of 1086. The settlement then
comprised land two leagues long and one league wide which could be worked by
two plough teams. The manor was held by Gamall and the whole was valued at 13
shillings. It is thought to have been established as early as 800-900 as an
outlying township of a wider pre-Norman territorial unit based upon Downholme
4km to the east. The irregular plan of the village is typical of pre-Conquest
settlements in the region. By the 14th century, in common with other villages
in the area it suffered a decline in fortune due to bad harvests, disease and
raids by the Scots and was eventually abandoned.
Ellerton Priory was a small Cistercian nunnery dedicated to Saint Mary.
Relatively little is known of the history of the priory but the Eaglescliffe
family, who may have been lords of Ellerton, have been suggested as founders
in around 1200. As with many Yorkshire nunneries, Ellerton was small and at
its height probably only housed thirteen nuns, and as few as five are recorded
in 1381. The priory was poor but it is known that it held land in Ellerton
manor and two properties in Walburn 6km to the west. At the Dissolution income
from rents and farms in Richmond and neighbouring villages including Bellerby
and Constable Burton was recorded. In the early 14th century the priory
suffered at the hands of Scottish raiders, specifically in November 1347 when
it was utterly despoiled. The priory was surrended to the crown on 18th August
1536 and formally dissolved the following year. After the Dissolution the site
of the priory was bought on a 21 year lease by Ralph Closeby, a member of the
royal household. In 1568 the site was sold to Percival Bowes and John Moysier
when it became part of the manor of Ellerton under the lordship of Richard
Brackenbury whose family had been former tenants of the priory. In the early
17th century the manor passed to the Drax family.
The remains of Ellerton Priory are dominated by the church, parts of which
survive as upstanding ruins, and are Listed Grade II. Recent earthwork and
geophysical surveys of the priory show that it demonstrates the usual layout
of a monastic house, with a church, orientated east to west, forming the north
range of a four-sided complex known as the cloister. The typical arrangement
of a cloister included accommodation located on the east side with direct
access to the church, the south side housed the kitchens and refectory, and
the west side stores, cellars and sometimes a guest house. The cloister lay at
the centre of an enclosure known as the inner court which contained a range of
further buildings essential for the economic and social functions of the
priory which could include an infirmary, and lodging for the prioress or
secular guests. Beyond the inner court was the precinct which housed
outbuildings and structures necessary for the economic functions of the priory
such as gardens, a bakehouse, workshops, stables and stores, as well as some
agricultural land.
The precinct was normally defined by a wall or fence. Remains of such features
survive as low earthworks or are known from survey to survive below ground.
Nunneries in contrast to male monastic houses tended to be poorer and this is
reflected in their size and use of lesser building materials such as timber or
cob, with the exception of the church which was invariably of stone
construction. This use of lesser constructional techniques is evident by the
slight nature of the earthworks.
The church lies in the centre of the inner court and measures 34.5m long by 8m
wide. It includes a rectangular aisleless, undivided nave, the chancel and the
western tower. The tower stands to a height of 14.7m and the interior is open
to the roof. The roof was replaced in the 1980s as part of a programme of
repair. The east end of the church survives to a height of 5.5m. The earliest
elements of the church date to the 13th century but the greater part belongs
to the 15th century. The church was partly remodelled in the 19th century to
turn it into a romantic Gothic ruin to be viewed from the nearby Ellerton
Abbey house, which was built c.1830. This work included the rebuilding of the
north wall of the nave, the insertion of a window into the west wall of the
tower, and raising the roof by adding battlements. There are pieces of at
least three elaborate stone coffin lids which may be dated to the late 13th
century in the church.
The cloister, lying to the south of the church, measures about 25m east to
west by 20m north to south. The inner court, surrounding the cloister,
measures about 120m east to west by 150m north to south. It is defined on the
west side by earthwork remains of buildings orientated north to south, on the
east and north sides by a slight bank and on the south side by a prominent
bank. At the north west corner of the inner court there are the remains of a
gatehouse. From here a well preserved trackway extends west, through the
adjacent village remains, and originally continued west as one of the main
routes up into Swaledale. The south side of the inner court has a further
entrance way allowing access to the precinct to the south. There are earthwork
and buried remains of further buildings within the precinct. To the west of
the gatehouse there are the remains of a small complex of structures which
have been identified as a small farmstead within the precinct. There are also
remains of agricultural features within the precinct including a block of
ridge and furrow to the south west and a wide terrace to the east.
In the field to the west of the priory, to the south of the village and
adjacent to the modern road, there are the remains of a complex of fishponds.
These include a rectangular tank 1.5m deep and measuring 10m by 20m. At the
east end there is a smaller shallower tank about 8m square and a second
smaller tank to the north. There are footings for a small building, possibly a
fish curing house, on the north side of the large tank. The whole complex is
surrounded by a low earthwork bank. The ponds were fed by water from the water
management system to the south.
The remains of Ellerton village are located in the field west of the priory.
The north side of the field inclines upwards sharply and then rises gently to
a cliff overlooking the river Swale. On the top of this slope there are the
remains of the village street extending from the west and continuing east to
the priory. Clustered around the street is an irregular arrangement of
rectangular platforms upon which buildings stood. Some of these are cut into
the south-facing slope. The building platforms measure up to 6m by 3m and
stand 1.5m in height. Some of the building remains on the top of the slope lie
within small rectangular enclosures.
In addition to the building platforms on the slope there are also terraces, up
to 7m wide which extend from the lower part of the field up to the top of the
slope. These terraces contained tracks or were used for horticulture. On the
east side of the lower part of the field there are two large rectangular
earthwork enclosures which are partly cut into the rising ground to the east.
The remainder of the lower part of the field west of the fishponds contains
linear, parallel earthworks known as ridge and furrow which form part of the
medieval field system. There is also a further block of ridge and furrow in
the north east of the field. On the hillside to the south there are also
blocks of ridge and furrow surviving as faint earthworks extending down the
slope in the field (in the second area of protection) to the east of Juniper
Gill. There is a clear terrace 4m wide which crosses the field from east to
west about 40m north of the ruined field wall which marks the south edge of
the field. It is not currently clear whether all or part of the horticultural
terraces, enclosures and ridge and furrow were associated with the village or
the priory.
On the hillside to the south are the remains of the water management system.
This system provided water to a variety of industrial and economic functions
located on the hillside. The system also provided water for the fishponds and
to the priory for uses including the kitchens and latrines. The creation of
this system included the modification of existing natural watercourses and
the construction of conduits and water channels known as leats. The main
stream in the area, Juniper Gill, was dammed just below Juniper Gill
Plantation to create a reservoir to control water flow. A leat extended across
the hillside for 80m to the west to a further natural water course from which
additional water was fed into the reservoir. A second reservoir was
constructed out of a natural hollow further up the hillside south east of
Juniper Gill Plantation. This fed two stone lined conduits which ran north
and downslope.
Remains of the reservoir on Juniper Gill survive as prominent mounds on each
side of the gill 20m below the plantation. The leat to the west survives as a
prominent earth and stone bank 2m wide on the north, downslope side, with the
channel to the south being 1.5m wide. The second reservoir (in the third area
of protection) measures 30m east to west by 17m north to south. It is formed
from a natural hollow which was originally dammed at the west end, and remains
of the earthworks supporting the sluice system still survive. At the west end
a leat 0.5m wide survives as a shallow trench extending north as far as the
field wall where it turns and extends east for 40m then joins a further
overflow leat leading north from the reservoir. The water course then
continues north below ground through the next field. The exact position of the
leat in this field or whether it survives is yet to be confirmed and hence
this section is not included in the scheduling. After 150m a single leat
emerges as an earthwork just beyond the ruined wall line where it is
identifiable as a shallow depression up to 0.5m wide extending north down the
slope. The leat continues north for a further 40m and then is breached just
beyond a wide terrace crossing the field. Here it can be seen that the leat is
composed of a stone built conduit. Further north the leat is preserved as
clear, embanked, trenches up to 1.2m wide.
Along the east side of Juniper Gill, north of the dam, are the earthworks of
a series of rectangular buildings. These are the remains of buildings which
required a regulated water flow such as mills, smithies and textile
processing. One building, identified as a mill is located about 150m north of
the plantation, and measures 6m by 3m. There are also traces of the course of
water chutes, known as launders, feeding the building. In addition to the
industrial buildings there are also remains of ancillary buildings such as
stores and workshops. Remains of at least four of these structures survive as
low earthworks up to 6m by 10m. Further structures requiring a water supply
were located on the west side of the leat lying to the east. These are
preserved as a series of four platforms cut into the slope adjacent to the
conduit; they measure up to 6m wide and 4m deep. It is thought that the
exploitation of water power at Juniper Gill pre-dates the priory and was
associated with the village. The mill building has been identified as having a
horizontal water wheel, a form of technology which had disappeared from
England by the 12th century.
Both Juniper Gill and the other water channels disappear underground to the
north as they run beneath improved fields and their exact course is unclear.
However water from these sources emerges in the south west of the field lying
west of Ellerton Abbey house and flows east through conduits which may be
medieval in origin. These water courses are still in use to provide drainage
and water for stock and are not included in the scheduling.
A number of features are excluded from the monument. These include all farm
walls, fences, gates, tree guards, stock feeding and watering facilities and
modern water conduits. However, the ground beneath these features is
included. The area enclosed by the leats and resevoir in the third area of
protection is totally excluded from the scheduling.
MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.
It includes a 2 metre boundary around the archaeological features,
considered to be essential for the monument's support and preservation.