Wednesday, January 03, 2007

The Town Wall of Oxford

From Goulder, Chapter II

Before the Norman Conquest, Oxford was protected by earth defences reinforced by timber stongpoints. These were repaired and improved by Robert d'Oilly soon after 1066, and are mentioned in the Doomsday survey. It is probably that some, at least, of the stone wall was built about this time, the whole of it being finished by 1100.

An area of between one hundred and ten and one hundred and twenty acres was enclosed. Starting at the North Gate,[1] which joined the north side of St Michael’s tower in Cornmarket Street, the wall ran eastward a little way behind the houses which now line Broad Street to where the southern end of the Sheldonian Theatre stands. A postern pierced it at the north end of Turl Street. From there, it went north-west across Catte Street to a point just south of the octagonal chapel which is now the junior common room of Hertford College. The Smythgate spanned Catte Street. The wall continued parallel to the first part of New College Lane, running a few yards to the north of it into the grounds of New College, where a long section is still intact. The corner bastion, joining the north to the east wall, is in New College garden.

The wall went almost due south to the High Street, following the line of Long Wall Street. The East Gate[2] stood immediately east of the point where Merton Street joins High Street. Between the Smythgate and the East Gate there was apparently an outer wall some thirty-three feet beyond the main defences. From the East Gate, the wall turns west. The section beyond the corner of the street is intact. It continues until it meets the path on the north side of Merton Fields and then goes west. A fine range survives here. The wall then ran south to include St Frideswides’s Priory and on to St Aldate’s, where the South Gate[3] crossed the road just north of the point where Brewer Street comes in. This street was outside the wall, some masonry of which remains on the north side.

There was another gate—the Littlegate—where Brewer Street meets Littlegate Street. It stood immediately north of the crossing. Beyond this, the wall gets somewhat lost amongst the existing houses, but it ran west from the Littlegate to the Greyfriars’ monastery west of St Ebbe’s Church. The friary occupied both dies of the wall and had a private gate through it. The wall then curved to the north-west until it met Church Street at the place where Castle Street comes in from the north-east. Here was the West Gate,[4] after which the wall connected up with the defences of the castle.

To rejoin the wall, it is necessary to up to Castle Street into Bulwark Lane, which is the first turning on the left in that Street. The lane leads t New Road and, after crossing it, curves round the site of the outer curtain wall of the castle. The north wall joined the castle walls just past the point where Bulwark Lane turns abruptly to the right. A portion survives here, veering slightly to the east till it meets New Inn Hall Street. Here there was a postern. From this point, the wall went behind the existing houses on the north side of St Michael’s Street until it joined up with the North Gate across the Cornmarket.

Note that Church Street, ajoining Castle Street, is now an extension of Paradise Street.

[1] Demolished in 1772.
[2] Demolished in 1772.
[3] Pulled down by Wolsey when Christ Church was being built.
[4] Demolished in 1600.

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