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significance here, but it may be noted that it stood
by the side of an early roadway which in the southern part of its course
may have joined another early road from the direction of Cooling Hill by
Gore Green somewhere westward of Tunbrick Cross. At first sight, the
identification of the barrow with Eohinga burh of the charter would seem
attractive, but it would make it difficult if not quite impossible for
the boundary of the grant to have run along any boundary of Murston, and
further there is no evidence of this land having been in the hands of
St. Andrew's Priory. The second possibility, one which has the support
of topography although it also lacks any direct connection with the
monks, is Lamb's Wood on Chilton Hills, an area immediately south of the
third milestone from Rochester on the north side of the
Rochester-Gravesend road. Through this wood the Shorne-Higham parish
boundary runs in a north-south line, and with its fine elevated position
with extensive views northward over the River, it forms like Cooling
Hill a natural boundary-mark. There are distinct traces of a disturbed
earthwork scarp on the north side of the Hills, particularly in the
gardens of the bungalows on the north side of Walmer Avenue. The scarp
presently trends southward and is lost in cultivated ground. In 1862,
however, it was much more prominent, and could be seen making a large
southern loop, and in the enclosure was a mound of some size.1
In plan it had nothing in common with a Norman motte-and-bailey, and
almost certainly could be |
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regarded as Saxon or earlier, thus providing good
evidence for the suffix of the place-name. The roadway, too, seems clear
enough, running from Cooling Hill by Gore Green in a south-westerly
direction by a track called Land Way and the forerunner of the existing
bridle-way to Higham Upshire.
If this, as we suppose, was the southern boundary of Offa's
grant, the following of the boundary of Mersc tunes fits in very easily
with the present western boundary of Higham parish which in part was
that of Murston.
Towards the north the boundary of our piece of land holds
to Bulan ham, and so into Merc fleot. Merc fleot is certainly one of the
many creeks which empty into the Thames, but the considerable
alterations which have taken place in the relative levels of land and
river here make any attempt to define the creek more exactly a matter of
difficulty. That creek which now bears the boundary of Higham parish on
the west is more likely than any other, and by a detailed investigation
of the river walls and consideration of the fact that the land was some
15 feet higher than at present, a case could probably be made out for
its existence in Saxon times.
We are left with Bulan ham, which was situated between the
fleot and the boundary of Murston. Boleham Meadow mentioned by
1 I am indebted to the
Director-General of the Ordnance Survey for permission to examine the
original field plan of the 1862 Survey. |