Wimble Toot | |
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Babcary, Somerset | |
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Coordinates | 51°02′59″N 2°37′45″W / 51.0497°N 2.6291°W |
Grid reference | grid reference ST560280 |
Type | tumulus or motte |
Wimble Toot is a burial mound or, possibly, a motte built near the village of Babcary, Somerset, England. It is a scheduled ancient monument with a list entry number of 1015279. [1]
Toot is derived from Old English tōt, meaning a lookout point. [2]
Wimble Toot is generally interpreted as a typical bowl barrow dating to the Bronze Age, [1] between 2600 and 700 BC. [3] Today the site forms a circular earthwork, 27.47 metres (90.1 ft) across and 2.74 metres (9.0 ft) high, with a ditch on the north-west and south-east sides, on the top of a ridge, overlooking a brook which runs into the River Cary and the old Roman road of the Fosse Way. [4] The site is of an undetermined age, and appears to have been a part of the Romano-British landscape. In Roman times, Wimble Toot was situated at a crossroads. [2]
An alternative interpretation is that the monument is a possible motte built between 1067 and 1069. [5] According to this view, Wimble Toot was probably built by the Norman lord Robert of Mortain to protect the River Cary and the nearby settlement of Ilchester. [6]
Today the site is a scheduled monument. [7]
Wimble Toot | |
---|---|
Babcary, Somerset | |
![]() | |
Coordinates | 51°02′59″N 2°37′45″W / 51.0497°N 2.6291°W |
Grid reference | grid reference ST560280 |
Type | tumulus or motte |
Wimble Toot is a burial mound or, possibly, a motte built near the village of Babcary, Somerset, England. It is a scheduled ancient monument with a list entry number of 1015279. [1]
Toot is derived from Old English tōt, meaning a lookout point. [2]
Wimble Toot is generally interpreted as a typical bowl barrow dating to the Bronze Age, [1] between 2600 and 700 BC. [3] Today the site forms a circular earthwork, 27.47 metres (90.1 ft) across and 2.74 metres (9.0 ft) high, with a ditch on the north-west and south-east sides, on the top of a ridge, overlooking a brook which runs into the River Cary and the old Roman road of the Fosse Way. [4] The site is of an undetermined age, and appears to have been a part of the Romano-British landscape. In Roman times, Wimble Toot was situated at a crossroads. [2]
An alternative interpretation is that the monument is a possible motte built between 1067 and 1069. [5] According to this view, Wimble Toot was probably built by the Norman lord Robert of Mortain to protect the River Cary and the nearby settlement of Ilchester. [6]
Today the site is a scheduled monument. [7]