Unbelievable Episode 2 Of 2023 Season
XP Deus II - Magnet Program 💥 Finds Gold & More ….
Amazing Hidden Gem Of Norfolk, Metal Detectorists Dream Location To Detect
Thickthorn Hall Estate Norfolk
#gold #history #metaldetecting
27th August NORFOLK BUTTON BOY Presents Charity Dig Event With Sunbeams Charity
Very Promising Land For Eveyone To Unearth Norfolk History. Watch out for the video coming to the channel of the day as it unfolds…
All proceeds paid directly to Sunbeams Austism Charity Bank Account
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History Background…
Domesday Book 1086 to 1199
The earliest description of Hethersett was in the Domesday Book of 1086. In the Domesday book it is referred to as Hederseta or Hederseeta
The Domesday Book lists Hethersett under three owners - Count Alan of Brittany and Godric the Steward.
The land belonging to Count Alan amounted to households involving nine villagers, 79 freemen, 12 small holders and two slaves. It included ploughland, meadowland, woodland and one mill and two churches. Livestock on his land amounted to 1 cob, five cattle, 87 sheep and 7 beehives. The tenant in chief was noted as Count Alan and the Lord was Ribald, Alan's brother. After the Norman Conquest, Count Alan numbered 592 places under his tutellige.
The land belonging to Godric The Steward included nine freemen and ploughland and meadowland. Another Godric the Steward listing featured 20 freemen and ploughland and meadowland.
Godric the Steward was a native Englishman and the steward of the Earl of East Anglia Ralph de Gael. He administered royal lands in Norfolk and Suffolk some of which were lands formerly held by Ralph before the earl's oarticipation in the Revolt of the Earls and subsequent loss of all his English landholdings. Godric also held lands in his own right including Hethersett. Godric was one of only 13 English tenants in chief listed in the Domesday Book. Godric also served William II as a steward and died around 1114.
The Domesday Book also mentions a church with its 60 acres of land, a handsome endowment: no Saxon or Norman work remains to be seen because of later rebuilding. The actual date of the first church building is not known but is obviously before 1086.
There is also mention of a second church and this presumably applies to the church of Cantley, then a separate parish, of which nothing now remains except some mounds in a pasture to the north of Cantley Farm. This small parish was amalgamated with its larger neighbour in 1397 although the church was used as a chapel until the 16th Century.
Norfolk Heritage
An Iron Age coin, pottery and a Late Iron Age or Roman terret have been recovered.
At the edge of the parish is the site of a Roman settlement. Roman building material suggesting the presence of several buildings has been recovered from the site, as well as Roman coins, pottery and metal finds. In 1985 the remains of an infant in a lead coffin were discovered on the site. A geophysical assessment in 2003 revealed a series of Roman ditches and pits on the edge of the settlement. The features are probably related to quarrying and arable farming taking place close to the Roman settlement. A Roman road is visible as a cropmark on aerial photographs, running through the parish from the Roman town of Venta Icenorum to Watton. Roman coins
Hethersett comes from the Old English meaning ‘settlement of the dwellers among the heather’, or ‘heather fold’. The site of an Early Saxon cemetery has been revealed through metal detecting, and Early Saxon brooches and other metal finds have been recovered from the site. In 1086 Hethersett was held by Count Alan and Godric the Steward, and is recorded as a large and valuable holding, with two churches and over eighty freemen. Metal detecting has also recovered a number of Late Saxon finds, including a brooch a stirrup mount, a strap end and a bridle cheek-piece. A Late Saxon brooch designed as an imitation Roman coin has also been found.
The deserted medieval village of Cantley is also mentioned in the Domesday Book, when it was held by the King.
A medieval moat in the grounds of Thickthorn Hall was the site of the manor house of Alan de Thickthorn in the 13th century. The moat was extended to form an artificial lake in the early 19th century. Medieval finds from the parish include coins, pottery and metal finds such as a pilgrim badge in the shape of a woman holding a feather and a branch.
Kett’s Oak, on the side of the main Norwich to Wymondham road, is locally reputed to be the site where Robert Kett addressed the rebels in 1549.
Thickthorn Hall is an early 19th century mansion surrounded by a small landscape park with a 19th century kitchen garden, lodges and concrete greenhouses from the 1930s. An unusual late 18th century octagonal barn stands in the grounds of the Hall.
Music Credits :My son Rio Jones - Piano Medieval Hitman - Kyle Preston
Drone Filming Rio Jones Instagram profile riofmj
Негізгі бет GOLD DISCOVERED ON ROYAL LANDS OF SIR GODRIC THE STEWARD || DREAM DETECTING LOCATION IN NORFOLK
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