Ernsborough

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"Tower Farm", supposed site of the ancient mansion house of Ernsborough, view from south-east
"Tower Farm", view from south-west
Old farm buildings at Tower Farm
Hill-top mound, approach to Tower Farm

Ernsborough (modern: "Irishborough") is a historic Saxon estate dating from the 9th or 11th century, situated in the parish of Swimbridge in Devon, England, about 2 miles south-east of the village of Swimbridge. It is best remembered today for having contained during the 14th century a high-status mansion house,[1] occupied by the Mules or De Moels family, closely related to Baron Moels of Somerset.

The curvi-linear shoe-shaped field boundary around today's West Irishborough Farm suggest a 9th-11th century Saxon land enclosure, pre-dating the grid-like field boundaries around it.[2] Such estates usually had a farm settlement or hamlet on the periphery, which is the site of Tower Farm on the east[2] (West Irishborough in the centre being a 19th c. development). 1888 Ordnance Survey map

The estate of Ernsborough clearly pre-dates the Norman Conquest of 1066, as is suggested by the name which is of West-Saxon origin signifying "Eagle's hill,[3] mound or burial mound (barrow)"[4] (Earnes Beorh/Beorg), or "Eagle's fortified place" (-burh/burg).[5] The West Saxons reached Devon in the 8th century, but the name may be even earlier, if deemed a translation of a Celtic name.[2] The boundary of the Saxon estate is still recognisable today in the form of a curvi-linear hedgebank, and contains or abuts three historic settlements: on the eastern side "Tower Farm", so named after 1845[6] and probably the original location of the mansion house of Ernsborough; "East Irishborough", to the immediate south-west of Tower Farm, shown on the Ordnance Survey map of 1888 but since demolished,[7] and to the west in the centre of the enclosure, the farm of "West Irishborough".[8] Such a three-settlement arrangement is common with many ancient Devonshire estates.[9][page needed]

Ernsborough is not recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086; the estate first appears in surviving records in the Pipe Rolls of 1175.[10]

Until the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 16th century, the Bishop of Exeter was the lord of the manor of Bishop's Tawton, a large manor which included the parishes of Swimbridge and Landkey. The bishop was a major landholder who was seated at the Bishop's Palace in Exeter. Thus in the absence of a manor house with a great hall in which the lord's steward could transact manorial business, a court house would have been required.[citation needed] After the Dissolution of the Monasteries the lord of the manor of Bishop's Tawton was the Earl of Bedford, later Duke of Bedford, also non-resident. In 1773 the mansion house was a ruin, with only a tower remaining.[11]

Much quarrying work and lime burning was carried out on the estate in the 19th century and prior, which has left major traces on the landscape. An unusually shaped lime-kiln survives,[12] with several flooded quarries.

Descent

References

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