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Bamburgh Castle
Watch VideoDating back to 1000 BC Bamburgh is one of the longest surviving power bases in Britain. Recent excavations have uncovered valuable archaeological clues that highlight its particular significance during the dark ages. During this time the site appears to have remained a defensive fortress but also grown in importance as a centre of industry and burial site for its ruling elite.
The site was later developed by the Normans to become one of the most powerful castles of the North and had an important role in defending the country from Scottish invasions. The castle remained impregnable for three and a half centuries until it finally met its fate in June 1464 when it became the first castle to fall to gunpowder. The 'great guns' from the King Edward IV's arsenal left Bamburgh in ruins.
Major restoration work was carried out in the Victorian era and this was followed in the early 1900s with more substantial reconstruction work by Lord Armstrong - the renowned arms manufacturer who lived close-by at Cragside.
Although it is still inhabited in part by Armstrong's descendants, the rooms accessible to the public are quite magnificent. The King's Hall is a remarkable piece of Victorian restoration that is typically medieval in character and really sets the scene for other areas of the castle. In the keep, the distinctive round-headed Norman arches are still a prominent feature, as is the fabulous vaulting in the main hall. Studying the thickness of the walls here, in some places a staggering 12ft (3.6m) across, it is hardly surprising that when all else was falling into a ruinous state, this immensely strong keep managed to survive.
The History of Bamburgh Castle
Holy rockThe rocky outcrop was in use from the Iron Age, as a Celtic fortress seized by the English chieftain Ida. He surrounded it with a timber palisade which was attacked by King Penda of the kingdom of Mercia, who, the story goes, set fire to it, but failed because of the intervention of Aidan - a monk living on the nearby Farne islands who caused the wind to change direction, blowing the fire out.
Bamburgh was a sacred site with springs and a special relic - the head and right hand of the 7th-century King Oswald which was carefully preserved and apparently undecayed for hundreds of years. They were later stolen, allegedly by a monk. These stories may have some basis in fact because, in the 1960s, an archaeologist discovered a cache of Anglo-Saxon swords dating to the time of King Oswald.
Norman fortress
It was the Normans who commandeered this site for defence. In 1095, Robert of Mowbray rebelled against William Rufus and was locked in the tower at Bamburgh. To make sure he stayed there, King William built a massive castle around him and called it 'Malvoisin' - evil neighbour. The sturdy keep, measuring 69ft x 61ft x 35ft high, dates to just after this period, as does the chapel that was used by Augustinian canons. The walls of the castle, which were mostly rebuilt in the medieval period, are 12ft thick in places but are made of surprisingly small stones, the reason being that each stone had to be transported up the rock by packhorse or men.
Worms in the well
In a basement room beneath the castle is a 150ft deep well. It is older than the keep and probably dates to the Saxon period. In the ballad of the Laidley Worm, the wicked queen is supposed to have turned her stepdaughter into a loathsome worm or serpent that lives at the bottom of Bamburgh well.
Chequered history
Bamburgh Castle stood unharmed for 400 years until the time of Edward IV when it was the first castle to succumb to artillery fire during the Wars of the Roses. In 1704 it was bought by Lord Crewe, the Bishop of Durham, in a ruinous state. Later it had a myriad of uses: as a girls' school, a granary, an infirmary and as a home for shipwrecked sailors. Huge iron chains kept in the basement were used to haul up the wrecks onto the shore using shire horses - each link weighing an incredible 100lbs! In 1894, a wealthy industrialist Lord Armstrong bought the castle and began its restoration and today it is still home to the Armstrong family.
Feature supplied by Heritage magazine. About Heritage Magazine.

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