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Conisbrough Castle - Doncaster, South Yorkshire (EH) One day at dawn in 1811, the author Sir Walter Scott saw Conisbrough Castle from the mail-coach taking him from Scotland to London. Although at that time neglected and hung about with ivy, still the cylindrical keep made such an impression on his romantic imagination that it became the backdrop to Ivanhoe, one of his most popular novels. A chapel set into one of the supporting buttresses was used for the scene in which the supposedly dead Saxon lord, Athelstane, revives. The site of the castle has now also been revived and the Norman keep, 90 feet of white ashlar, gives an immediate sense of strength and power even today.
The site, which once belonged to Harold, the last Saxon king, was given by William the Conqueror to one of his chief supporters, William de Warren. The surviving stone castle was probably built by Hamelin Plantagenet, half-brother of Henry II, between 1180 and 1190. He also built elsewhere, for example at Castle Acre in Norfolk. In 1347, the castle came into the possession of the house of York, and became royal with the family in 1461. Its survival is no doubt partly due to the fact that it was more or less ruinous by Tudor times, and thus not garrisoned in the civil war a century later. Although parts of the curtain walls and towers remain and there is a substantial part of the double-angled barbican, the centre of attraction is undoubtedly the keep, which looks solid and impregnable even today. It's circular form, splayed at the bottom and supported all round by six huge buttresses, is unique in Britain. The semi-hexagonal buttresses are solid masonry, except for the chapel, where the Norman carvings around the door, window and ribs of the vault can still be admired. The first floor entrance to the keep is now reached by a modern walkway, but was once protected by a gap between the stone stairs and the doorway. The holes for the pins which held the drawbridge that bridged the gap are still visible. Above the main doorway is a stone lintel assembled from several pieces of cut stone, a feature which is repeated over the fireplaces inside the keep. Although attractive, this is not a strong structure and so there is an arch in the masonry above the doorway to reduce the weight on the lintel. Echoing the arch is the window above and you can also see the quatrefoil chapel window, with a circle of studs.
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Site last updated
06 April 2008 |