1. Keeston Castle is an incomplete subcircular ditched and banked enclosure, about 58m in diameter, having a second, concentric circuit, about 110m across overall; this complex lies within the south-eastern area of a larger, rather irregular, curvilinear banked enclosure, roughly 270m across, within which the ground falls away from a high-point on the western perimeter and which rests above steeper slopes on the east particularly on the south-east, where up to three lines of ramparts run along the break-in-slope, the innermost appearing to merge with the outer circuit of the concentric enclosure: a further ramparted enclosure nestles beneath the south-eastern ramparts (Nprn308800). The site has been thought to have originally been a concentric enclosure with a ditched approach linking the circuits, modified by additional banks, the southern enclosure being a late addition (James 1988 (AW28) 39).
Recorded during RCAHMW aerial reconnaissance.
J.Wiles 17.01.05
2. New cropmark detail revealed of the plough-denuded earthworks during Royal Commission aerial reconnaissance on 11th July 2018, during the 2018 drought.
T. Driver, RCAHMW, 2019.
3. Further parchmark detail was revealed from Royal Commission aerial photography during the drought summer of 2023, with new photography on 26th June 2023 (image ref: AP_2023_1942-3) and 5th JUly 2023 (image refs: AP_2023_2143-45)
T. Driver, RCAHMW, 2024