Houghton, Cambridgeshire (medieval village)
Houghton is a deserted medieval village located one mile to the west of present-day Brampton, Cambridgeshire.[1] Unlike many such villages which became deserted following the black death, Houghton was abandoned earlier when Henry II declared the county of Huntingdonshire a royal forest, forcing the villagers to move elsewhere to obtain food and fuel.[1] The village was discovered during work to upgrade the A14 road which commenced in 2016.[2]
Houghton began as an unenclosed Anglo-Saxon settlement in the sixth century, eventually by the ninth century consisting of around forty houses and other buildings.[1][2] By the early Norman period the village was centred to the north of the Anglo-Saxon site with more formalised plots and trackways.[1]
References[]
- ^ a b c d "Discovering Deserted Medieval Villages on the A14 Cambridge to Huntingdon Improvement Scheme". MOLA Headland Infrastructure. 2018-06-13. Retrieved 2020-11-03.
- ^ a b Hilts, Carly (2018-05-03). "A landscape revealed: Exploring 6,000 years of Cambridgeshire's past along the A14". Current Archaeology. Retrieved 2020-11-03.
- Deserted medieval villages in Cambridgeshire
- Anglo-Saxon sites in England
- Cambridgeshire geography stubs