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High above the River Arun, in the Sussex countryside, stands Arundel Castle. It is not merely picturesque. It is political.
For nearly a thousand years, Arundel has embodied power — Norman, baronial, ducal and, at times, royal. It has been besieged, slighted, restored and reinvented. Yet it has never ceased to matter.
Few English castles combine such continuity of ownership with such proximity to national upheaval.
Norman Foundations: Conquest in Stone
Arundel’s origins lie in the immediate aftermath of the Norman Conquest. In 1067, William the Conqueror granted the lands to his loyal supporter Roger de Montgomery.
The site was strategically astute. The River Arun offered access inland, while the South Coast remained vulnerable to continental incursion. A motte and bailey fortress rose swiftly — timber first, stone later.
The Norman message was unmistakable: conquest would be enforced and observed.
By the twelfth century, Arundel had become one of England’s great earldoms. The FitzAlan family, Earls of Arundel, shaped its medieval expansion. Inner and outer wards developed. Gatehouses thickened. The keep asserted dominance over the surrounding landscape.
Siege and Survival
Arundel’s strength was tested during the First Barons’ War (1215–1217). As England fractured under the troubled reign of King John, castles became bargaining chips and military targets.
Arundel endured siege. Damage followed. Yet its structural and political importance ensured survival.
During the Hundred Years’ War, its garrison guarded the south against French threat. Knights mustered. Supplies were stored. The castle was not decorative; it was functional.
The Howard Ascendancy
In 1580, through marriage, Arundel passed to the Howard family — one of the most significant Catholic dynasties in England. The Howards were intimately entangled with Tudor politics.
The fourth Duke of Norfolk had already been executed in 1572 for involvement in plots concerning Mary, Queen of Scots. Yet the family endured.
Arundel thus became both seat and symbol of Catholic aristocratic resilience in a Protestant kingdom.
Civil War: Ruin and Reprisal
The English Civil War placed Arundel at the centre of conflict once more.
In 1643 Parliamentary forces besieged the castle for eighteen days. It fell. Significant portions were subsequently dismantled to prevent further military use.
This was not mere collateral damage. It was strategic destruction — a deliberate weakening of aristocratic fortresses across the realm.
By the late seventeenth century, Arundel stood partially ruined.
Gothic Revival and Reinvention
The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries witnessed transformation rather than decline.
Following Catholic Emancipation, the Dukes of Norfolk reinvested in their ancestral seat. The medieval exterior was enhanced. Interiors were remodelled in Gothic Revival splendour. Towers were heightened. Battlements sharpened.
This was not simple restoration. It was Victorian interpretation of the Middle Ages — romantic, theatrical, yet architecturally ambitious.
Arundel became once again a stage for aristocratic life.
Royal Visitors and Noble Display
The castle received distinguished guests, including Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. By the nineteenth century, Arundel functioned less as fortress and more as ceremonial residence.
Within its walls hung tapestries, portraits and silver amassed across generations. Banquets filled the Great Hall. The castle projected continuity — and confidence.
The Howards had weathered religious suspicion and civil war. Arundel signified endurance.
Twentieth-Century Disruption
War returned in the twentieth century.
During the Second World War, Arundel Castle was requisitioned to house troops preparing for the Normandy landings. Though spared bombing, a catastrophic fire in 1944 destroyed much of the historic library.
Restoration followed under the 17th Duke of Norfolk. By the 1960s and 70s, the damaged interiors had been meticulously repaired. The castle emerged, once again, renewed.
It is a pattern repeated across its history: challenge, damage, reconstruction.
Arundel Today
Arundel Castle remains the principal seat of the Duke of Norfolk — the premier Duke of England and hereditary Earl Marshal.
It continues to host state events and public visits. Its gardens are cultivated. Its chambers are furnished. It is neither fossil nor museum piece.
It is lived in.
Enduring Significance
Arundel Castle represents more than medieval architecture.
It embodies:
- Norman consolidation of power
- Baronial conflict
- Catholic aristocratic survival
- Civil War destruction
- Victorian reinvention
- Modern preservation
From conquest to constitutional monarchy, Arundel has stood in proximity to power.
Its walls have not merely observed English history. They have participated in it.
