This page last updated: 14 October, 2010 16:25
Site Updates

 
Past SWAG Visits

 

Kempsey and Kempsey Common

10th April 2005

Kempsey sits by the River Severn at a fordable point and has probably been inhabited since ancient times. The surrounding area is rich in marks of enclosures, ditches and pits, and Neolithic and Bronze Age pottery has been found at Baynhall nearby to the south.

 

The spur of land on which the church sits has ramparts of an Iron Age promontory hill fort, at one time almost surrounded by marsh. A Saxon monastery and church was built here in 868 and Kempsey is mentioned in the Royal Charter of 964. It is believed that the Bishop of Worcester's Summer Palace which sat to the west of the church was within the Iron Age ramparts. By late Saxon times, Kempsey was an important Christian centre and this continued into Mediaeval times: Henry II visited, Henry III was brought here as prisoner by Simon de Montfort prior to the Battle of Evesham, and Edward I was a frequent visitor.

SWAG's walk, led by Deborah Overton, took in the Iron Age ramparts and the (possible) fishponds to the south of Hatfield Brook, before moving on to the flood plain, where World War II anti-glider defences still remain. The walk then led up from the flood plain to a housing estate where excavation had uncovered prehistoric ditches and iron scale, suggesting an Iron Age smithing site.

Google satellite image of Kempsey church - close inspection of the photograph to the west and south-west of the church will reveal the extent of the ramparts.

A short car ride took members to Kempsey Common, the site of several Bronze Age barrows. Deborah gave a short talk on the different types of round barrow and although the mounds are quite low nowadays, 20-metre circular ditches are still easily visible.

Google satellite image of Kempsey Common. Kempsey Common can be reached via Bestmans Lane.

The above is an edited version of Bruce Officer's report on the day, available in the SWAG newsletter for June 2005, issue No.94.

Further information:

The following link has been broken but may be restored at some point

  • The History of Kempsey - an interesting and quite extensive website by Andy Marshall, a resident of Hong Kong who lived in Kempsey until he was 19.

 

selection of past visits

Alcester

Little Hereford and Richard's Castle    |   Bewdley    |   Purton Hulks

Trellech    |   Guarlford    |   Wool in the Cotswolds

King Arthur's Cave    |   Clee Hill    |   Upton-upon-Severn

Kilpeck and Abbey Dore    |   Knighton    |   Wroxeter Roman City

Blackfriars Priory, Gloucester   |   Kempsey   |   St Mary's Church Kempley

Garway Church, Herefordshire

 

 

Back to previous

Home

Diary

Projects

Fieldwork

Past Visits

Opportunities in Archaeology

How to Join SWAG

Contact Us

Further Sources of Information

 

Back to Previous   |  Top of Page   |   Contact Us  |   Disclaimer  |   Home Page

www.swag-online.org.uk

©2004-12 South Worcestershire Archaeological Group