Pandon village
Pandon village
HER Number
1390
District
Newcastle
Site Name
Pandon village
Place
Newcastle
Map Sheet
NZ26SE
Class
Domestic
Site Type: Broad
Settlement
Site Type: Specific
Village
General Period
MEDIEVAL
Specific Period
Medieval 1066 to 1540
Form of Evidence
Documentary Evidence
Description
Early commentators (Bruce - Handbook of Newcastle; and Gray Chorographia, 1649) thought that the Royal estate capital "Ad Murum" ("by the wall"), mentioned by Bede, might be Pandon (see also Pandon Hall HER 6621). Pandon was one of the three parts into which Byker was divided, and lay east of Pandon Burn. It seems probable that the earliest part of the settlement was at Stockbridge, and that reclamation, followed by development, was south towards the Tyne and east, a C14 building having been found in Byker Chare. In the second half of the C13 a quay wall had been built and abandoned south of the street today called Pandon, and in 1296 there were as many as 20 taxpayers in Pandon. In 1299 Pandon was annexed by and subsumed into Newcastle, and lost its distinct identity. The Pandon Burn formed a small harbour at high-water, inundating ground as far north as the foot of Manor Chare. During the reighn of Edward III (1327-77) a flood destroyed 140 houses and killed over 120 people. The burn was culverted in C19. Modern scholars suggest that Walbottle is more likely to be the site of "Ad Murum" (see HER 7918).
Easting
425400
Northing
564100
Grid Reference
NZ425400564100
Sources
<< HER 1390 >> A.M. Oliver, 1924, Early Newcastle Deeds, Surtees Society, Passim;
W. Gray, 1649, Chorographia Reprint of 1884, pp 4 and 12; H. Bourne, 1736, History of Newcastle, p 134, 138; J. Brand, 1789, History of Newcastle, I, pp 138-9; Brand, 1789, 2, p 383; M.H. Dodds, 1930, The Serjeanty of Byker, Northumberland County History, XIII, 157, 270-1; C. O'Brien, et al. 1989, Excavations at Newcastle Quayside: The Crown Court Site, Archaeologia Aeliana, 5, XVII, 141-205; WHD Longstaffe, 1857, Local muniments, Archaeologia Aeliana Series 2, Vol 1, p 42; J Raine, 1838, Miscellanea Biographica, Surtees Society 8, p 234; J Hodgson Hinde, 1858, History of Northumberland, part 1, p 17; RF Walker, 1976, The Origins of Newcastle upon Tyne, p 65; B Colgrave and RAB Mynors, 1969, Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English Peoples, pp 278-9 and 294-5 and 296-7; E Mackenzie, 1827, A Descriptive and Historical Account of the Town and County of Newcastle upon Tyne, p 5; CP Graves and DH Heslop, 2013, Newcastle upon Tyne - the Eye of the North, An Archaeological Assessment, pp 86-87; A Reid & Co. Ltd., 1876, Plan of Pandon Area of Newcastle, Newcastle Libraries C2 672677 00 62 / L912.2 N536, https://www.flickr.com/photos/newcastlelibraries/26207818786/in/album-72157666225808630/
W. Gray, 1649, Chorographia Reprint of 1884, pp 4 and 12; H. Bourne, 1736, History of Newcastle, p 134, 138; J. Brand, 1789, History of Newcastle, I, pp 138-9; Brand, 1789, 2, p 383; M.H. Dodds, 1930, The Serjeanty of Byker, Northumberland County History, XIII, 157, 270-1; C. O'Brien, et al. 1989, Excavations at Newcastle Quayside: The Crown Court Site, Archaeologia Aeliana, 5, XVII, 141-205; WHD Longstaffe, 1857, Local muniments, Archaeologia Aeliana Series 2, Vol 1, p 42; J Raine, 1838, Miscellanea Biographica, Surtees Society 8, p 234; J Hodgson Hinde, 1858, History of Northumberland, part 1, p 17; RF Walker, 1976, The Origins of Newcastle upon Tyne, p 65; B Colgrave and RAB Mynors, 1969, Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English Peoples, pp 278-9 and 294-5 and 296-7; E Mackenzie, 1827, A Descriptive and Historical Account of the Town and County of Newcastle upon Tyne, p 5; CP Graves and DH Heslop, 2013, Newcastle upon Tyne - the Eye of the North, An Archaeological Assessment, pp 86-87; A Reid & Co. Ltd., 1876, Plan of Pandon Area of Newcastle, Newcastle Libraries C2 672677 00 62 / L912.2 N536, https://www.flickr.com/photos/newcastlelibraries/26207818786/in/album-72157666225808630/