As you can no
doubt guess from the settlement’s place-name, Bishop Middleham, a little to the
north-west of Sedgefield in Co.Durham, was once the site of the Bishop of
Durham’s residence. Though you wouldn’t know it if you went poking around the
village today.
It is, however,
likely that it existed as simply ‘Middleham’ in the 9th and 10th
centuries, as the first recorded mention is in a 1146 grant of the local church
to the Prior of Durham – and thus giving the settlement its full name. By the
time of the Boldon Book in 1183, there were 32 households collected around the
little church – and it seems the Bishop clearly had a residence there for a
good couple of hundred years during 12th-14th centuries.
Furthermore, it must have been well-favoured, as two of the said officials died
there.
The Bishop’s
manor house – for that is what it most likely was, rather than a ‘castle’ –
would have enjoyed a lofty setting, high on the promontory which extends to the
south of the present-day village and church. All substantial traces of masonry
have long since disappeared, though examinations of the existing earthworks
suggest the former presence of a strong and well-guarded affair. There is no
documentary evidence to suggest that any high status structure survived in use
beyond 1600 – and indeed the remains are so scanty that they have even been
omitted from some editions of the OS maps over the years.
Here’s how it
looked in 2007…
© Copyright OliverDixon and licensed for reuse under
this Creative CommonsLicence.
But a nice artist’s impression of it in its
heyday can be seen here
(church is to the left).
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