More information : Scarping on churchyard hill at Wednesbury (1) (area SO 988 953), traditionally ascribed to Ethelfleda (2). No evidence to attribute these earthworks to Ethelfleda. They may represent an Iron Age Hill Fort (3). No trace of defensive earthworks seen around Church Hill in 1958 (4).
The place-name Wednesbury is suggestive of a prehistoric earthwork: Wednesbury means the burh or fortified place of Woden (5a), although Gelling (5b) prefers to emphasise the pagan religious associations of the name over the defensive element. Palliser (5c) has speculated that the Saxons may have built a (pagan) temple and later a Christian church inside an earlier stronghold.
Church Hill is a flattish-topped hill lying close to the River Tame. It rises gently up from the surrounding flood plain before steepening around the summit itself and plateauing out at about 163m above OD. The hill's form and topographical location are certainly suited to it being the site of a stronghold, although if so no surface trace survives today. The west end of the summit of Church Hill is occupied by St Bartholomew's Church. Immediately to the west and north, Ethelfleda Memorial Gardens and St Mary's RC Church have been terraced into the slope. The intervening stretch of churchyard seems to have preserved the former hill profile, but no sign of an encircling rampart or ditch can be seen. Elsewhere modern development has largely obscured the original ground surface, and detailed field inspection was therefore not attempted. Such scarps as are readily visible to the rear of the properties north of St Mary's Road and south of Lover's Walk seem explicable in terms of terracing for building work rather than as defensive earthworks. (5)
There are several antiquarian accounts of earthworks around Church Hill, some of which can still be traced on the ground. Two trial trenches across one of the supposed ramparts on the west side of Ethelfleda Terrace showed that the bank here is of modern origin and that modern building is likely to have destroyed earlier features. (6) |