Doddershall abandoned settlement

United Kingdom / England / Steeple Claydon /
 archaeological site, earthworks, invisible, abandoned settlement
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Both aerial photographs and field surveys show low earthworks in the fields to the north-east and south-west of Doddershall House, near Quainton (Ordnance Survey Grid Reference SP 72035 20121). Documentary evidence reveals that these are the remains of the village of Doddershall, which dates back to Saxon times and is recorded in Domesday Book in 1085. The village was destroyed in the years following 1495, when the lord of the manor evicted all his tenant villagers and turned the village’s open fields over to sheep farming. Its site is unscheduled and has never been excavated.

The north-eastern section of the deserted village site is already bisected by the former Great Central railway line, now used for goods trains only. The planned HS2 high-speed rail line will run parallel to this existing line, which is expected to be retained and used for access to the HS2 construction site. The twin-track line itself will be 75 metres wide, destroying a half-mile section of village earthworks. This is the minimum because road access required for construction is not yet known.

www.bucksas.org.uk/hbgprojects/hs2doddershalldesvillage...
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Coordinates:   51°52'32"N   -0°57'31"E
This article was last modified 8 years ago