The name 'Kimsbury' is first attested in the period 1263–84 in the forms Kynemaresburia and Kynemaresbury. These names derive from an Old English name that can be reconstructed as *Cynemǣres burh ('Cynemǣr's fortification').[2] The name Castle Godwyn seems to be later: the hillfort is referred to simply as 'Castle' in 1327, with the name 'Castle Godwyn' first being attested in 1779.[3]
History and topography
The interior has been extensively quarried and parts are now a golf course, but much remains of the ramparts.[4] Though there have been problems of erosion.[5]
The hill fort has been dated to the first century BCE[6] and is a scheduled monument.[7] Pottery, coins and other archaeological finds have been found dating from the Iron Age through to the 3rd century CE in the Roman era.[6]
The ramparts with a view of Gloucester in the distance.
Part of Painswick Golf Course inside the inner rampart
"Painswick", in Ancient and Historical Monuments in the County of Gloucester: Iron Age and Romano-British Monuments in the Gloucestershire Cotswolds (London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1976), pp. 91-94.