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.
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Warkworth Castle
Overlooking the River Coquet, the majestic ruins of Warkworth Castle stand as a powerful reminder of the conflicts that once engulfed Northern England.
The origins of Ludlow Castle reach back into the shadowed years immediately following the Norman Conquest of 1066. Erected upon a commanding promontory above the River Teme, near the turbulent Welsh frontier, this motte-and-bailey stronghold served as one of the first stone castles in England, a resolute forward post from which the Normans might press their claims into Wales. Walter de Lacy, granted the manor shortly after Hastings, began the work; his sons Roger and Hugh raised the earliest surviving masonry—the great ringwork with its four towers and rock-hewn ditch—that still defies time.
In the twelfth century the de Lacys consolidated their hold, replacing timber defences with enduring sandstone curtain walls, towers, and a formidable gatehouse. Through the Anarchy and beyond, the castle changed hands amid baronial strife, yet each lord added to its strength: an outer bailey by the later twelfth century, an innermost enclosure in the thirteenth for greater seclusion. By the close of the medieval age, Ludlow had become the grandest fortress for many miles—a sandstone bastion of Norman, Gothic, and emerging Tudor forms, its inner bailey ringed by high walls pierced with turrets and barbican, its outer court alive with stables, workshops, and lodgings.
The Heart of the Marcher Lordship
No castle better embodied the peculiar power of the Welsh Marches than Ludlow. Here the Marcher Lords—those semi-autonomous barons granted vast liberties by the English crown—exercised their authority as wardens of the border. In return for defending the realm against Welsh incursions, they held rights almost regal within their domains. Ludlow became their caput, the chief seat of government and justice.
The Mortimers, acquiring the lordship in 1301, made it their principal residence; Roger Mortimer, first Earl of March, rebuilt the Great Chamber block in the 1320s with chivalric flourish, even as he rose—and fell—in rebellion against Edward II. Later still, Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York, established his household here during the gathering storm of the Wars of the Roses, rendering Ludlow a nerve-centre of Yorkist ambition.
In 1473 Edward IV, drawing upon his own boyhood memories of the Marches, sent his son Edward (the future uncrowned Edward V) to reside at Ludlow as titular head of the newly formalised Council in the Marches of Wales. This body, part administrative council, part high court, governed the border shires and much of Wales itself. Ludlow thus assumed the character of a regional capital; nobles journeyed thither for its sittings, swelling the town's prosperity and importance. For more than two centuries the castle remained the very pulse of Marcher administration, its halls resonant with the counsels and conspiracies that shaped the realm.
A Nursery of Princes
Among the most poignant chapters in Ludlow's annals is the brief residence of Prince Arthur Tudor, eldest son of Henry VII and heir presumptive to the throne. Created Prince of Wales at three, despatched to the Marches at seven to learn the arts of rule, Arthur grew to manhood within these walls, tutored in letters, governance, and the decorum of Renaissance courts. The solar block—its broad windows flooding light upon his desk—served as his schoolroom; here he presided, in name at least, over the Council, gaining experience of justice and command.
In the winter of 1501–2, the fifteen-year-old prince welcomed his bride, Catherine of Aragon, to Ludlow after their proxy marriage in London. Their union, intended to seal the Tudor dynasty's security, lasted but five months; Arthur succumbed to illness—perhaps the sweating sickness—on 2 April 1502. Catherine survived to wed his brother Henry, yet Ludlow retains its melancholy association with the tragic prince whose early death altered the course of English history.
Tudor Pomp and Civil Strife
The Tudors lavished attention upon Ludlow, transforming it from frontier fortress into symbol of royal dominion. Henry VII ordered improvements to proclaim Tudor presence; Henry VIII's sister Mary Tudor defied her brother by secretly wedding Charles Brandon here in 1513. Later, Mary (daughter of Henry VIII and Catherine) spent winters at the castle between 1525 and 1528, presiding over the Council as Princess of Wales.
Under Elizabeth I, Sir Henry Sidney, long President of the Council, oversaw the final great refurbishments: state apartments, glazed windows, judicial chambers. The Great Hall witnessed masques and entertainments, including Milton's Comus in 1634.
Yet the castle's Tudor splendour yielded to the brutal realities of the English Civil War. Seized by Royalists in 1642, it endured three sieges before surrendering to Parliament in 1646. Parliamentary orders slighted its defences—roofs stripped, walls breached—to render it untenable. Though briefly revived after the Restoration, the Council was abolished in 1689; Ludlow sank into neglect, its courtyards grazed by cattle, its masonry overtaken by ivy.
Restoration and Enduring Glory
For two centuries the ruins slumbered, guarded only by a solitary gatekeeper. In the nineteenth century, however, the Earls of Powis—leasing from the Crown since 1772 and purchasing outright in 1811—began to arrest decay. Anthony Salvin supervised partial restoration of the state apartments; later efforts cleared vegetation and stabilised fabric. Today, owned by the Trustees of the Powis Castle Estate and open to the public as a Grade I listed monument, Ludlow stands among the most complete and evocative medieval fortresses in Britain.
Over nine centuries its stones have witnessed conquest, rebellion, royal tragedy, and administrative pomp. From Norman wardens to Marcher Lords, from the doomed Arthur to the intrigues of Tudor and Stuart times, the castle remains a living chronicle of power on the Welsh border. To walk its baileys today is to tread where history itself was forged—to hear, in the wind through the battlements, the faint echoes of princes, rebels, and kings. Ludlow Castle endures, not merely as relic, but as testament to the enduring fascination of our medieval past.
Bamburgh Castle began as an Anglo-Saxon royal stronghold in 547 and later became a Norman fortress, Wars of the Roses battleground and Tudor garrison. Restored in the Victorian era, it remains one of England’s most historically continuous castles, guarding the Northumberland coast for over fourteen centuries.
Alnwick Castle stands as a symbol of power on England’s northern frontier. From Norman fortification to Percy stronghold and Victorian reinvention, it has endured siege, rebellion and political upheaval. More than a romantic ruin, Alnwick represents centuries of border conflict and aristocratic authority.