Castles in England

England’s castles stand as brooding sentinels across the land, forged in the fire of conquest and tempered by centuries of royal ambition, rebellion, and siege. The Tower of London, William the Conqueror’s grim fortress planted hard by the Thames to cow a defiant city, has guarded crowns, held traitors, and witnessed executions that still chill the blood. Farther afield rise the great baronial strongholds—Warwick, with its towering gatehouse and lush inner bailey; Alnwick, Percy seat of northern power, its battlements etched against the Northumberland sky; Dover, the “key to England,” commanding the white cliffs and the narrow seas beyond. From stark Norman motte-and-bailey earthworks thrown up in haste after 1066 to the later stone keeps and curtain walls that withstood civil war and foreign threat, these fortresses are the very architecture of English history—scarred by trebuchet and treachery, yet enduring as emblems of might and memory.

At Histories and Castles we explore their stories through the chronicles, the masons’ marks, and the weathered stones themselves, bringing to life the turbulent centuries they shaped.