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Excavations were carried out at the moated sites of Barrow Old Hall
and Twiss Green, in Warrington, North West England, in the 1980s.
Sub-manorial estates were established at these two sites by the
fourteenth century, located near the boundaries of their
multi-moated townships. Townships with multiple moats were a
feature of parts of North West England and may have been the result
of medieval assarting and the expansion of agriculture on to fringe
or marginal areas, on the boundaries of earlier manors. It also
owed much to the unusual tenurial arrangements of the region,
whereby lords granted small estates out of their holdings, often to
family members, to construct moated homesteads. This report
presents the results of the excavations at these two small moated
sites, including evidence for possible aisled halls at both sites,
as well as a significant assemblage of medieval and early
post-medieval pottery. There is also a full account of the finding
of the remains of a timber bridge at Twiss Green and its full
reconstruction; an illustration of which was previously published
in the Shire Archaeology series book on Moated Sites in 1985. The
publication of these excavations contributes to a more
comprehensive understanding of the role and development of moated
sites in this part of North West England and completes the
outstanding analysis of moated sites excavated in the Warrington
area.
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