Richard's Castle
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article does not cite any references or sources. (March 2007) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
Richard's Castle is a village on the border between Herefordshire and Shropshire in England and lies between Leominster and Ludlow.
Contents |
[edit] The Best of Both Worlds
The village is split by the county border, and constitutes two civil parishes, one called Richard's Castle (Hereford), the other called Richard's Castle (Shropshire).
[edit] Amenities
The parish church is All Saints [1], a large and new church. [2]
[edit] History
Richard Fitz Scrob (or Fitz Scrope) was a Norman knight granted lands by the Saxon King Edward the Confessor before the Norman Conquest, in Herefordshire, Worcestershire and Shropshire as recorded in the Domesday Book. He built Richard's Castle before 1051. The castle was a motte and bailey style construction, one of very few castles of this type built before the Norman conquest. Most were built after the conquest. Richard was last mentioned in 1067. His castle passed to his son, Osbern Fitz Richard, who married Nesta, the daughter of King Gruffydd ap Llywelyn of Wales.
Osbern died around 1137 and was succeeded by his grandson, Osbern Fitz Hugh, who died in 1187. Richard's Castle then passed to his brother-in-law, Hugh de Say, who died in 1190, leaving the barony to his son, another Hugh Say. In 1196 this Hugh fought at the battle at New Radnor and was probably killed there, his castles eventually passing to Robert Mortimer of Attleborough. In 1264 his son, Hugh Mortimer, was forced to surrender himself and Richard's Castle to Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester. His grandson, the last Hugh Mortimer of Richard's Castle, was poisoned to death by his wife in 1304. The castle then passed to the Talbots who were still living there in the late 14th century. By the 16th century it was in ruins.
[edit] The Castle
Today the fortress is reduced mainly to its earthworks and foundations. A polygonal keep stood on the high motte or mound. This was reached possibly via a semi-circular barbican. The bailey wall still stands twenty feet high in places and there are remains of several towers and an early gatehouse around the perimeter. There earthwork remains of an outer ward enclosing the church and a borough defence.
[edit] References
- Remfry, Paul Martin, (1997) Richard's Castle, 1048 to 1219, Worcester: SCS Publishing, 39 pp, ISBN 1-899376-34-8
- Remfry, Paul Martin, The Nine Castles of Burford Barony, 1048 to 1308, ISBN 1-899376-39-9
[edit] External links
- CastleWales page
- Herefordshire Council info
- Genuki information
- Anglo-Norman castles
- Suggests Richard's Castle was the first castle in England