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Latitude: 50.8677 / 50°52'3"N
Longitude: -0.8256 / 0°49'32"W
OS Eastings: 482738.253848
OS Northings: 108230.735854
OS Grid: SU827082
Mapcode National: GBR DGB.G2Y
Mapcode Global: FRA 965T.060
Entry Name: Devil's Ditch, section extending 900yds (820m), Lye Wood, West Stoke
Scheduled Date: 24 January 1935
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1005882
English Heritage Legacy ID: WS 86
County: West Sussex
Civil Parish: Funtington
Traditional County: Sussex
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Sussex
Church of England Parish: Funtington and West Stoke with Sennicotts
Church of England Diocese: Chichester
An 865m length of Devil’s Ditch running south-east from Lye Wood, West Stoke.
Source: Historic England
This record was the subject of a minor enhancement on 17 November 2014. The record has been generated from an "old county number" (OCN) scheduling record. These are monuments that were not reviewed under the Monuments Protection Programme and are some of our oldest designation records.
The monument includes an 865m length of Devil’s Ditch, also known as the Devil’s Dyke, a prehistoric linear boundary surviving as an earthwork and below-ground archaeological remains. It is situated on a south-facing slope near West Stoke.
The earthwork is denoted by a bank, up to 2m high, with a ditch on the north side. The ditch has become in-filled over the years but survives as a buried feature. The bank runs 660m south-east from Lye Wood, passing beyond Lye Lane, before turning sharp SSW at a right angle and continuing for a further 205m.
The Devil’s Ditch in Sussex has been documented by antiquarians since at least the 18th century. It is part of a group of linear earthworks on the gravel plain between the foot of the South Downs and Chichester Harbour. The entrenchments run from Lavant to Boxgrove and appear to enclose the area of the coastal plain to the south. It has been suggested that these marked out a high status, proto-urban tribal settlement (or ‘oppidum’) preceding the Roman invasion. The Devil’s Ditch is thought to date to the Late Iron Age (about 100 BC – AD 43) but was recut and extended in places during the medieval period. The name of the entrenchment is derived from a local tradition, which holds that the ditch was the work of the devil in an attempt to channel the sea and flood the churches of Sussex.
Source: Historic England
Linear boundaries are substantial earthwork features comprising single or multiple ditches and banks which may extend over distances varying from between less than 1km to over 10km. They survive as earthworks or as linear features visible as cropmarks on aerial photographs or as a combination of both. The evidence of excavation and study of associated monuments demonstrate that their construction often spans at least a millennium from the Middle Bronze Age, although they may have been re-used later. The scale of many linear boundaries has been taken to indicate that they were constructed by large social groups and were used to mark important boundaries in the landscape; their impressive scale displaying the corporate prestige of their builders. They would have been powerful symbols, often with religious associations, used to define and order the territorial holdings of those groups who constructed them. Linear earthworks are of considerable importance for the analysis of settlement and land use from the Bronze Age; all well preserved examples will normally merit statutory protection.
The 865m length of Devil’s Ditch running south-east from Lye Wood, West Stoke survives well. It will contain archaeological and environmental information relating to the earthwork and the landscape in which it was constructed.
Source: Historic England
Books and journals
Hamilton, S, Gregory, K, 'Updating the Sussex Iron Age' in Sussex Archaeological Collections, , Vol. 138, (2000), 63 & 66
Other
West Sussex HER 1940 - MWS3239. NMR LINEAR 34. PastScape 1065548
Source: Historic England
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