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Ashby de la Zouch Castle

Ashby de la Zouch Castle is a ruined fortification in the town of Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leicestershire, England. The castle was built by William, Lord Hastings, a favourite of Edward IV, after 1473, accompanied by the creation of a 3,000-acre (1,200 ha) park. Constructed on the site of an older manor house, two large towers and various smaller buildings had been constructed by 1483, when Hastings was executed by Richard, Duke of Gloucester. The Hastings family used the castle as their seat for several generations, improving the gardens and hosting royal visitors.

Ashby de la Zouch Castle
Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Leicestershire, England
The castle seen from the south-west, showing the Kitchen Tower (left) and the Great Tower (right)
Ashby de la Zouch Castle
Coordinates52°44′46″N 1°27′59″W / 52.746132°N 1.4664382°W / 52.746132; -1.4664382
Site information
Controlled byEnglish Heritage
Open to
the public
Yes
ConditionRuined
Site history
MaterialsSandstone

During the English Civil War of the 1640s, Henry, a younger son in the Hastings family, became a Royalist commander in the Midlands. He based himself at the castle until he was forced to surrender it after a long siege. A fresh rebellion occurred in 1648, leading Parliament to slight the castle in order to prevent it being used militarily: the two towers were badly damaged with gunpowder and undermining. Parts of the remaining castle were turned into a new house and continued to be used by members of the Hastings family for many years, although they moved their main residence to Donington Hall.

The castle became famous after it featured in Sir Walter Scott's novel Ivanhoe in 1819, and its owner, Francis Rawdon, opened the ruins to visitors. Restoration work was carried out over the course of the next century, but by 1932 the Rawdon family could no longer afford to maintain the castle. It passed into the guardianship of the Ministry of Works, who carried out extensive repairs and opened the castle gardens. In the 21st century, the castle is managed by English Heritage as a tourist attraction, receiving 15,164 visitors in 2015. The historian John Goodall considers the site to be an "outstanding example of a late medieval castle", with its grounds forming "one of the best-preserved and most important" examples of an early Tudor garden.

History edit

11th–15th centuries edit

 
Carved fireplace in the Great Hall, decorated with images of angels and shields

A manor had existed at Ashby-de-la-Zouch from at least 1086, when the location was known as Ascebi.[1] The lands were acquired by Robert de Beaumont, the Count of Meulan and later Earl of Leicester, in 1100.[2] He established the Belmeis family there as his tenants and, after the Belmeis family line died out in 1160, the earls of Leicester reassigned the estate to the La Zouche family, from whom the manor took its later name.[3]

At some point during this period, a manor house was constructed on the same site as the later castle, with a hall and a solar.[3] A settlement grew up alongside the house and, by 1334, the town was probably the sixth-largest in the county.[4] By the mid-1300s, the manor house reportedly included a hall, a chamber, a long house containing service facilities, and was surrounded by a dovecote, orchard and a rabbit warren, accompanied by a 60-acre (24 ha) deer park.[5] The hall and solar were rebuilt by the le Zouches during the second half of the 14th century, but the building remained what the historian Norman Pounds has called a "rather modest manor house".[6]

The le Zouch line died out in 1399, leaving the inheritance of the family estates uncertain.[1] The manor probably passed to Sir Hugh Burnell and, around 1420, onto James Butler, the Earl of Ormond and Wiltshire.[7] The Wars of the Roses broke out in England during 1455 between the rival supporters of the Lancastrian and Yorkist factions. James, a Lancastrian, was captured at the Battle of Towton by the Yorkist leader Edward IV in 1461 and executed; the Crown seized his estates, including the manor of Ashby de la Zouch.[7]

Ashby de la Zouch was converted into a castle by William, Lord Hastings, a favourite of Edward IV; as a minor nobleman he had fought alongside Edward at Towton, but was then knighted and later became the chamberlain of the royal household and the Lieutenant of Calais.[8] William acquired extensive estates across the Midlands during the wars, much of them confiscated from his enemies.[1] Amongst these was Ashby de la Zouch, which was given to William in 1462.[9] His father, Sir Leonard, had maintained the family seat at nearby Kirby Muxloe, but after 1471 William began to use Ashby de la Zouch as his primary residence.[10]

In 1474, Edward granted William the right to crenellate, or fortify, four of his manors and to build deer parks around them.[11] William set about developing the old manorial complex at Ashby de la Zouch with new buildings, and was authorised to create a huge 3,000-acre (1,200 ha) park around it.[12] His intent appears to have been to construct a substantial castle, similar to the royal fortifications at Tutbury and Nottingham, with four huge towers.[13] Work appears to have already started on the site the year before permission was formally given, although it is uncertain whether this referred to the construction of the castle's chapel, or if William had already begun work on the first tower, gambling that the King would subsequently approve it.[14]

Edward IV died in 1483, leaving the kingdom to his young son, Edward V, but his uncle, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, had his own ambitions for the throne.[15] Lord Hastings was unwilling to support the deposition of Edward V and, as a consequence, Richard summarily executed him that June, ahead of his own coronation.[16] Ashby de la Zouch Castle, only partially completed, and Lord Hastings' other estates were then restored to his widow, Katherine.[17]

16th–17th centuries edit

 
The Great Tower, slighted after the English Civil War

The castle passed to William's son, Edward Hastings, who appears to have spent little time at the property, although he hosted a visit from Henry VIII in 1503.[18] It was then inherited by his son, George, who was a royal favourite of Henry VIII and made the Earl of Huntington in 1529, which led to him rebuilding parts of the castle in brick and redesigning the gardens.[19] Henry Hastings inherited the castle in 1560, where he maintained a household of 77 servants.[20] Henry Hastings used it to imprison Mary Queen of Scots in 1569 after she was accused of plotting against Elizabeth I, although he spent most of his time at York, where he led the Council of the North.[20]

It passed onto his younger brother, George, who entertained Queen Anne, Princess Elizabeth, and Prince Henry there on 22 June 1603.[21] The Countess of Derby was welcomed in August 1607 with the Masque at Ashby Castle.[22] His grandson, Henry hosted James I three times between 1612 and 1617, and Charles I in 1634.[23] The gardens were redeveloped, probably to provide a suitable venue for these royal visits.[24] By now, however, several generations of excessive expenditure meant that the family estates had been much diminished, and the family was having trouble maintaining their lavish lifestyle and former prominence in the region.[25]

In 1642, the English Civil War broke out between the supporters of Charles I and Parliament. Henry Hasting briefly joined the royalist cause before his death in 1643, but his eldest son Ferdinando, who inherited the family earldom, remained neutral during the conflict.[26] Ferdinando's younger brother Henry, however, became a key Royalist commander in the Midlands.[26] The castle was strategically well-placed, linking the Royalist territories in the north and the west of England, and giving easy access to the River Trent.[27] Henry used the castle as his base of operations across the region, protecting it by establishing smaller outposts near Donnington and Shardlow.[28] Buildings in the town of Ashby de la Zouch were pulled down to provide materiel to refortify the castle and town, tunnels were dug and an "Irish fort" constructed to help protect the castle.[29][a]

In early 1643, Parliament placed Newark under siege, and the garrison at Ashby was sent to relieve it.[30] As part of a larger force under Prince Rupert, they forced the surrender of the Parliamentary force.[30] By late 1644, the war turned against the King, and the Parliamentary forces based at nearby Coleorton had contained the garrison in the castle.[31] King Charles passed through the castle in May 1645 on his way to besiege Leicester, but the following month his forces were defeated at the Battle of Naseby; the King briefly stayed at the castle once again as he retreated west.[32] By now, the Royalist cause was largely lost.[26]

Henry returned to the castle from Leicester in September, where another 600 Royalist soldiers soon joined him and its 60-man garrison, carrying out raids on Parliamentary convoys and the garrison at Coleorton.[32] Plague broke out at the end of the year, forcing the besiegers to retreat to Leicester, while the garrison temporarily abandoned the castle buildings and occupied the neighbouring park.[33] Once the epidemic passed, Parliament began to raid the town and Henry worked through Ferdinando to agree the surrender of the castle on good terms: this was achieved in February 1646, and allowed for the release of himself, the garrison and their weapons.[34]

In May 1648, a Royalist rebellion broke out in Kent. There were fresh Parliamentary concerns about Henry Hastings and fears grew that he might reoccupy Ashby de la Zouch Castle.[35] Lord Grey – a rival of the Hastings family in Leicestershire – was put in charge of the castle in August, which was used to hold Royalist prisoners, including James Hamilton, the Duke of Hamilton.[36] Parliamentary worries about the security of the castle persisted and, possibly because of Henry's involvement in the recent rebellion, William Bainbrigg was ordered in November to slight the castle to put it beyond military use.[37] He carried out his orders immediately, demolishing one side of the Great Tower and the Kitchen Tower, undermining the foundations and deploying gunpowder charges.[38]

The Hastings family suffered financially as a result of the war, and Ferdinando was imprisoned for debt in 1653.[39] The family moved to Donington Hall, although some of the remains of the castle were repaired to form a house called Ashby Place, which lay on the north side of the site in the old outer court.[40] Selina Hastings, the Countess of Huntingdon, lived there after 1746.[35] With the deterioration of the castle and the departure of the Hastings, the neighbouring town also fell into decline.[41] With the death of Francis Hastings in 1789, the castle was inherited by Francis Rawdon, who later became the Earl of Moira.[42]

18th–21st centuries edit

 
Depiction of the castle in 1831

In 1819, Sir Walter Scott's novel Ivanhoe featured a scene involving a tournament at Ashby de la Zouch Castle; the novel was immensely popular and made the location famous.[42] Edward Mammatt, Francis Rawdon's agent, repaired the castle ruins and opened them to visitors, whom Rawdon hoped to attract to the Ivanhoe Baths which he opened nearby.[42] Ashby Place, which had become used as a House of Industry, was pulled down in 1830 and a new house, Ashby Manor, was built in its place.[42] Work continued throughout the 19th century to repair the castle ruins, although they remained mostly covered in ivy.[43]

A local architect, Thomas Fosbrooke, carried out the first archaeological investigation of the site in 1900, and extensive restoration work took place the following years.[44] The Rawdon family were given a government grant for further repairs in 1912 and they began to start charging visitors for entry.[45] The family found themselves unable to afford to maintain the castle, and by the early 1930s the walls had become unstable and dangerous.[46] The castle was placed into the guardianship of the Ministry of Works in 1932, who carried out repairs, replacing some stonework and opening up the surrounding grounds to visitors.[45]

In the 21st century, the castle is managed by English Heritage as a tourist attraction, receiving 15,164 visitors in 2015.[47] An archaeological investigation of the castle gardens was carried out in 2006.[43] The site is protected under UK law as a Grade I listed building and a scheduled monument.[48]

 
The castle and the sunken gardens

Architecture and landscape edit

Architecture edit

 
Map of the castle: A – Kitchen Tower; B – buttery and pantry; C – Great Hall; D – Great Chamber; E – chapel and inner court; F – site of northern court; G – Great Tower; H – sunken gardens; I – south-west garden tower; J – south-east garden tower

The ruins of Ashby de la Zouch Castle are located close to the centre of the modern town, and comprise two large towers and associated buildings arranged around a court, with formal gardens to the south. Lord Hastings probably intended his castle to ultimately have four large towers, enclosing the interior buildings with a curtain wall to a regular design, but only half of these towers were completed by the time of his death.[49] The outer court that lay to the north of the surviving complex has been lost; having been converted into first Ashby Place, and then Ashby Manor, it is now occupied by the Manor House Preparatory School.[50] The historian John Goodall considers Ashby de la Zouch to form an "outstanding example of a late medieval castle".[51]

The Kitchen Tower stands on the north-west corner of the castle and was intended to supply Lord Hasting's large household.[52] The tower only had two storeys, as the ground floor kitchen had a very high, 34 feet (10 m) high vaulted ceiling, and its walls were 9 feet (2.7 m) thick and made of yellow sandstone.[53] The well-lit kitchen had several hearths and an oven for cooking, a well and a cellar for storage.[54] Above the kitchen was a large room, probably used as a winter parlour.[55] One wall of the tower was slighted in 1648.[54] An underground passage, probably dating from the English Civil War, links the Great Tower with the Kitchen Tower.[56]

Alongside the tower, separated for fire safety by a roofed passageway, was a two-storey service range, including a buttery and pantry.[57] The castle's Great Hall was adapted from the medieval original, and would originally have been subdivided by a line of arches.[58] It was heated by a central heath and the lord and his guests would have eaten on a raised dais at the far end of the hall.[58] The building was raised in height, given new windows and reroofed in the second half of the 17th century.[58] The Great Chamber was a two-storey building, originally with a parlour on the ground level, with a chamber above it used for entertaining guests.[59] Running north from the Great Chamber was a range of buildings used by the senior household staff.[59]

The large chapel, 60 by 21 feet (18.3 by 6.4 m) and built of grey sandstone, lies alongside the Great Chamber, and would originally had an altar on a dais at the north end.[60] One corner of the chapel remains in use as a burial site by the modern Hastings family.[59] An inner, or chapel, court would have been formed by a range of buildings, since lost, stretching between the chapel and the Great Tower.[61] The historian Anthony Emery notes that the castle would have formed a "palace fortress", with the sizeable chapel and adjacent towers constituting symbols of Hastings' power and authority.[62]

The Great Tower was a large structure of grey sandstone, 75 feet (23 m) tall, formed of a four-storey tower, 30 by 25 feet (9.1 by 7.6 m) internally, linked to a smaller seven-storey tower or turret, 10 by 9 feet (3.0 by 2.7 m) across.[63] The ground floor contained the basement and the entrance-way, protected by a portcullis.[64] The first floor held the kitchen, and had a fire-proof stone-vaulted roof.[65] The upper floors consisted of a parlour and a separate great chamber for the lord, with a withdrawing chamber to one side, all with grander windows than the lower levels, with excellent views of the gardens and the parkland beyond.[66] A treasure chamber, accessible only from the upper storeys using a ladder, was built into the first floor.[65] Emery considers the "richness of the upper rooms and the tower's planning and design qualities" to be outstanding, and likens it to the Yellow Tower of Gwent at Raglan Castle.[67]

Gardens and parkland edit

 
Earthworks in the eastern part of the garden, probably intended to resemble bastions

The current gardens to the south of the castle date from around 1530; they occupy 2.0 acres (0.8 ha), and include two sunken areas, separated by a walkway.[68] The eastern area may have been intended to imitate defensive bastion works, and it originally featured a circular brick tower in the middle of it.[69] The site would originally have had a brick wall running all the way around it, of which only the south-east edge survives.[68] Two brick towers survive at the southern corners, one resembling a clover-leaf, the other with an octagonal design, and would have originally been used as banqueting houses.[70] Beyond the gardens would have been an area planted with trees, called "the wilderness", and smaller compartmented garden and ponds.[71] A triangular building called "the Mount" was built in the wilderness in the early 17th century, and is now a private house.[71] John Goodall considers them to be "one of the best-preserved and most important early Tudor gardens in England".[51]

The original 60 acres (24 ha) park probably lay just to the south of the castle, incorporating the current gardens; it was probably expanded to around 340 acres (140 ha) by William Hastings, and was later named the "Little Park".[72] The original boundaries of the other two parks associated with castle to the north and west, Great Park and Prestop Park, are uncertain.[73]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ It is unclear from the evidence what the "Irish fort" was, or exactly where it was constructed.[29]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Goodall 2011, p. 29
  2. ^ Newsome et al. 2008, p. 5
  3. ^ a b Goodall 2011, p. 29; Newsome et al. 2008, p. 5
  4. ^ Moxon 2013, pp. 21–22
  5. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 29; Emery 2000, p. 213
  6. ^ Newsome et al. 2008, p. 6; Emery 2000, p. 213; Pounds 1990, p. 272
  7. ^ a b Goodall 2011, pp. 29–30; Newsome et al. 2008, p. 6
  8. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 29; Newsome et al. 2008, p. 6
  9. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 29–30
  10. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 29–31; Emery 2000, p. 265
  11. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 29–31; Creighton 2013, p. 217
  12. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 31; Newsome et al. 2008, p. 6
  13. ^ Newsome et al. 2008, p. 7
  14. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 31; Newsome et al. 2008, pp. 6–7
  15. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 31
  16. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 31–32; Rosemary Horrox (2004), "Hastings, William, first Baron Hastings (c.1430–1483)", Oxford University Press, retrieved 10 April 2017
  17. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 32; John Goodall, "History of Ashby de la Zouch Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 20 May 2017
  18. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 32–33; Newsome et al. 2008, pp. 7–8
  19. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 32–34
  20. ^ a b Goodall 2011, pp. 33–35; Moxon 2013, pp. 39, 57
  21. ^ John Nichols, Progresses of James the First, vol. 1 (London, 1828), pp. 170-1.
  22. ^ John Nichols, Progresses of James the First, vol. 2 (London, 1828), p. 146.
  23. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 35; Newsome et al. 2008, pp. 8–9
  24. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 35
  25. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 33–36; Newsome et al. 2008, pp. 8–9; Bennett 1980, p. 62
  26. ^ a b c Goodall 2011, p. 37; Moxon 2013, p. 41
  27. ^ Bennett 1980, p. 64
  28. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 37; Bennett 1980, p. 64
  29. ^ a b Goodall 2011, p. 37; Newsome et al. 2008, pp. 9–10
  30. ^ a b Bennett 1980, p. 65
  31. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 37; Newsome et al. 2008, pp. 9–10; Moxon 2013, p. 34
  32. ^ a b Bennett 1980, p. 68
  33. ^ Moxon 2013, p. 34; Ashby-de-la-Zouch 1831, p. 82
  34. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 37–38; Martyn Bennett (2008), "Hastings, Henry, Baron Loughborough (1610–1667)", Oxford University Press, retrieved 10 April 2017
  35. ^ a b Goodall 2011, p. 38
  36. ^ Bennett 1980, p. 62; John Goodall, "History of Ashby de la Zouch Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 20 May 2017; John J. Scally (2013), "Hamilton, James, first duke of Hamilton (1606–1649)", Oxford University Press, retrieved 10 April 2017; Ashby p.87
  37. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 38; Thompson 1994, p. 179; Ashby-de-la-Zouch 1831, p. 88
  38. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 10, 38; Newsome et al. 2008, pp. 10; Ashby-de-la-Zouch 1831, p. 88
  39. ^ Moxon 2013, p. 43
  40. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 4, 38; Newsome et al. 2008, p. 10
  41. ^ Moxon 2013, p. 145
  42. ^ a b c d Goodall 2011, p. 39
  43. ^ a b Goodall 2011, p. 40
  44. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 40; Newsome et al. 2008, p. 11
  45. ^ a b Newsome et al. 2008, p. 11
  46. ^ Fry 2014, p. 29
  47. ^ "2015 Full Attractions Listing", Visit Britain, retrieved 6 May 2017
  48. ^ , Historic England, 2011, archived from the original on 14 July 2014, retrieved 25 May 2017; , Historic England, 2011, archived from the original on 14 July 2014, retrieved 25 May 2017
  49. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 31; John Goodall, "History of Ashby de la Zouch Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 20 May 2017
  50. ^ "Ashby Castle and Associated Formal Garden", Historic England, retrieved 28 May 2017
  51. ^ a b John Goodall, "Significance of Ashby de la Zouch Castle", English Heritage, retrieved 20 May 2017
  52. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 6; Emery 2000, p. 215
  53. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 6–7; Emery 2000, pp. 213–214
  54. ^ a b Goodall 2011, p. 6
  55. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 7
  56. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 6–7
  57. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 5; Emery 2000, p. 213
  58. ^ a b c Goodall 2011, p. 5
  59. ^ a b c Goodall 2011, p. 8
  60. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 8; Emery 2000, pp. 214, 218
  61. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 9; Emery 2000, p. 215
  62. ^ Emery 2000, pp. 216, 218
  63. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 10; Emery 2000, p. 214
  64. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 11–12
  65. ^ a b Goodall 2011, p. 12
  66. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 11–12; Creighton 2013, p. 183
  67. ^ Emery 2000, p. 215
  68. ^ a b Goodall 2011, p. 13; "Ashby Castle and Associated Formal Garden", Historic England, retrieved 28 May 2017
  69. ^ Goodall 2011, p. 13
  70. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 13–14
  71. ^ a b Goodall 2011, p. 16
  72. ^ Newsome et al. 2008, pp. 21–22, 24, 53
  73. ^ Newsome et al. 2008, p. 24; Creighton 2013, p. 183

Bibliography edit

  • Ashby-de-la-Zouch (1831). A Descriptive and Historical Guide to Ashby-de-la-Zouch and the Neighbourhood. Ashby de la Zouch, UK: T. Wayte. OCLC 557025588.
  • Bennett, M. (1980). "Henry Hastings and the Flying Army of Ashby-de-la-Zouch". Transactions of the Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society. 56: 62–70.
  • Creighton, Oliver H. (2013) [2009]. Designs Upon the Land: Elite Landscapes of the Middle Ages. Cambridge, UK: Woodbridge Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-825-8.
  • Emery, Anthony (2000). Greater Medieval Houses of England and Wales, 1300–1500, Volume 2: East Anglia, Central England and Wales. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-58131-8.
  • Fry, Sebastian (2014). "A History of the National Heritage Collection: Volume Five: 1931–1945". Research Report Series. London, UK: English Heritage. ISSN 2046-9799.
  • Goodall, John (2011). Ashby de la Zouch Castle and Kirby Muxloe Castle (2nd ed.). London, UK: English Heritage. ISBN 978-1-84802-109-9.
  • Moxon, Chris (2013). Ashby-de-la-Zouch: Seventeenth Century Life in a Small Market Town. Farnworth, UK: Chris Moxon. ISBN 978-1-291-51228-1.
  • Newsome, Sarah; Canti, Matt; Leary, Jim; Martin, Louise; Pattison, Paul (2008). "Ashby de la Zouch Castle, Leicestershire: A Multidisciplinary Investigation of the Castle Garden". Research Department Report Series. London, UK: English Heritage. ISSN 1749-8775.
  • Pounds, Norman John Greville (1990). The Medieval Castle in England and Wales: A Social and Political History. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45828-3.
  • Thompson, M. W. (1994) [1987]. The Decline of the Castle. Leicester, UK: Magna Books. ISBN 1-85422-608-8.

External links edit

  • English Heritage visitors' page

ashby, zouch, castle, ruined, fortification, town, ashby, zouch, leicestershire, england, castle, built, william, lord, hastings, favourite, edward, after, 1473, accompanied, creation, acre, park, constructed, site, older, manor, house, large, towers, various,. Ashby de la Zouch Castle is a ruined fortification in the town of Ashby de la Zouch Leicestershire England The castle was built by William Lord Hastings a favourite of Edward IV after 1473 accompanied by the creation of a 3 000 acre 1 200 ha park Constructed on the site of an older manor house two large towers and various smaller buildings had been constructed by 1483 when Hastings was executed by Richard Duke of Gloucester The Hastings family used the castle as their seat for several generations improving the gardens and hosting royal visitors Ashby de la Zouch CastleAshby de la Zouch Leicestershire EnglandThe castle seen from the south west showing the Kitchen Tower left and the Great Tower right Ashby de la Zouch CastleCoordinates52 44 46 N 1 27 59 W 52 746132 N 1 4664382 W 52 746132 1 4664382Site informationControlled byEnglish HeritageOpen tothe publicYesConditionRuinedSite historyMaterialsSandstoneDuring the English Civil War of the 1640s Henry a younger son in the Hastings family became a Royalist commander in the Midlands He based himself at the castle until he was forced to surrender it after a long siege A fresh rebellion occurred in 1648 leading Parliament to slight the castle in order to prevent it being used militarily the two towers were badly damaged with gunpowder and undermining Parts of the remaining castle were turned into a new house and continued to be used by members of the Hastings family for many years although they moved their main residence to Donington Hall The castle became famous after it featured in Sir Walter Scott s novel Ivanhoe in 1819 and its owner Francis Rawdon opened the ruins to visitors Restoration work was carried out over the course of the next century but by 1932 the Rawdon family could no longer afford to maintain the castle It passed into the guardianship of the Ministry of Works who carried out extensive repairs and opened the castle gardens In the 21st century the castle is managed by English Heritage as a tourist attraction receiving 15 164 visitors in 2015 The historian John Goodall considers the site to be an outstanding example of a late medieval castle with its grounds forming one of the best preserved and most important examples of an early Tudor garden Contents 1 History 1 1 11th 15th centuries 1 2 16th 17th centuries 1 3 18th 21st centuries 2 Architecture and landscape 2 1 Architecture 2 2 Gardens and parkland 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory edit11th 15th centuries edit nbsp Carved fireplace in the Great Hall decorated with images of angels and shieldsA manor had existed at Ashby de la Zouch from at least 1086 when the location was known as Ascebi 1 The lands were acquired by Robert de Beaumont the Count of Meulan and later Earl of Leicester in 1100 2 He established the Belmeis family there as his tenants and after the Belmeis family line died out in 1160 the earls of Leicester reassigned the estate to the La Zouche family from whom the manor took its later name 3 At some point during this period a manor house was constructed on the same site as the later castle with a hall and a solar 3 A settlement grew up alongside the house and by 1334 the town was probably the sixth largest in the county 4 By the mid 1300s the manor house reportedly included a hall a chamber a long house containing service facilities and was surrounded by a dovecote orchard and a rabbit warren accompanied by a 60 acre 24 ha deer park 5 The hall and solar were rebuilt by the le Zouches during the second half of the 14th century but the building remained what the historian Norman Pounds has called a rather modest manor house 6 The le Zouch line died out in 1399 leaving the inheritance of the family estates uncertain 1 The manor probably passed to Sir Hugh Burnell and around 1420 onto James Butler the Earl of Ormond and Wiltshire 7 The Wars of the Roses broke out in England during 1455 between the rival supporters of the Lancastrian and Yorkist factions James a Lancastrian was captured at the Battle of Towton by the Yorkist leader Edward IV in 1461 and executed the Crown seized his estates including the manor of Ashby de la Zouch 7 Ashby de la Zouch was converted into a castle by William Lord Hastings a favourite of Edward IV as a minor nobleman he had fought alongside Edward at Towton but was then knighted and later became the chamberlain of the royal household and the Lieutenant of Calais 8 William acquired extensive estates across the Midlands during the wars much of them confiscated from his enemies 1 Amongst these was Ashby de la Zouch which was given to William in 1462 9 His father Sir Leonard had maintained the family seat at nearby Kirby Muxloe but after 1471 William began to use Ashby de la Zouch as his primary residence 10 In 1474 Edward granted William the right to crenellate or fortify four of his manors and to build deer parks around them 11 William set about developing the old manorial complex at Ashby de la Zouch with new buildings and was authorised to create a huge 3 000 acre 1 200 ha park around it 12 His intent appears to have been to construct a substantial castle similar to the royal fortifications at Tutbury and Nottingham with four huge towers 13 Work appears to have already started on the site the year before permission was formally given although it is uncertain whether this referred to the construction of the castle s chapel or if William had already begun work on the first tower gambling that the King would subsequently approve it 14 Edward IV died in 1483 leaving the kingdom to his young son Edward V but his uncle Richard Duke of Gloucester had his own ambitions for the throne 15 Lord Hastings was unwilling to support the deposition of Edward V and as a consequence Richard summarily executed him that June ahead of his own coronation 16 Ashby de la Zouch Castle only partially completed and Lord Hastings other estates were then restored to his widow Katherine 17 16th 17th centuries edit nbsp The Great Tower slighted after the English Civil WarThe castle passed to William s son Edward Hastings who appears to have spent little time at the property although he hosted a visit from Henry VIII in 1503 18 It was then inherited by his son George who was a royal favourite of Henry VIII and made the Earl of Huntington in 1529 which led to him rebuilding parts of the castle in brick and redesigning the gardens 19 Henry Hastings inherited the castle in 1560 where he maintained a household of 77 servants 20 Henry Hastings used it to imprison Mary Queen of Scots in 1569 after she was accused of plotting against Elizabeth I although he spent most of his time at York where he led the Council of the North 20 It passed onto his younger brother George who entertained Queen Anne Princess Elizabeth and Prince Henry there on 22 June 1603 21 The Countess of Derby was welcomed in August 1607 with the Masque at Ashby Castle 22 His grandson Henry hosted James I three times between 1612 and 1617 and Charles I in 1634 23 The gardens were redeveloped probably to provide a suitable venue for these royal visits 24 By now however several generations of excessive expenditure meant that the family estates had been much diminished and the family was having trouble maintaining their lavish lifestyle and former prominence in the region 25 In 1642 the English Civil War broke out between the supporters of Charles I and Parliament Henry Hasting briefly joined the royalist cause before his death in 1643 but his eldest son Ferdinando who inherited the family earldom remained neutral during the conflict 26 Ferdinando s younger brother Henry however became a key Royalist commander in the Midlands 26 The castle was strategically well placed linking the Royalist territories in the north and the west of England and giving easy access to the River Trent 27 Henry used the castle as his base of operations across the region protecting it by establishing smaller outposts near Donnington and Shardlow 28 Buildings in the town of Ashby de la Zouch were pulled down to provide materiel to refortify the castle and town tunnels were dug and an Irish fort constructed to help protect the castle 29 a In early 1643 Parliament placed Newark under siege and the garrison at Ashby was sent to relieve it 30 As part of a larger force under Prince Rupert they forced the surrender of the Parliamentary force 30 By late 1644 the war turned against the King and the Parliamentary forces based at nearby Coleorton had contained the garrison in the castle 31 King Charles passed through the castle in May 1645 on his way to besiege Leicester but the following month his forces were defeated at the Battle of Naseby the King briefly stayed at the castle once again as he retreated west 32 By now the Royalist cause was largely lost 26 Henry returned to the castle from Leicester in September where another 600 Royalist soldiers soon joined him and its 60 man garrison carrying out raids on Parliamentary convoys and the garrison at Coleorton 32 Plague broke out at the end of the year forcing the besiegers to retreat to Leicester while the garrison temporarily abandoned the castle buildings and occupied the neighbouring park 33 Once the epidemic passed Parliament began to raid the town and Henry worked through Ferdinando to agree the surrender of the castle on good terms this was achieved in February 1646 and allowed for the release of himself the garrison and their weapons 34 In May 1648 a Royalist rebellion broke out in Kent There were fresh Parliamentary concerns about Henry Hastings and fears grew that he might reoccupy Ashby de la Zouch Castle 35 Lord Grey a rival of the Hastings family in Leicestershire was put in charge of the castle in August which was used to hold Royalist prisoners including James Hamilton the Duke of Hamilton 36 Parliamentary worries about the security of the castle persisted and possibly because of Henry s involvement in the recent rebellion William Bainbrigg was ordered in November to slight the castle to put it beyond military use 37 He carried out his orders immediately demolishing one side of the Great Tower and the Kitchen Tower undermining the foundations and deploying gunpowder charges 38 The Hastings family suffered financially as a result of the war and Ferdinando was imprisoned for debt in 1653 39 The family moved to Donington Hall although some of the remains of the castle were repaired to form a house called Ashby Place which lay on the north side of the site in the old outer court 40 Selina Hastings the Countess of Huntingdon lived there after 1746 35 With the deterioration of the castle and the departure of the Hastings the neighbouring town also fell into decline 41 With the death of Francis Hastings in 1789 the castle was inherited by Francis Rawdon who later became the Earl of Moira 42 18th 21st centuries edit nbsp Depiction of the castle in 1831In 1819 Sir Walter Scott s novel Ivanhoe featured a scene involving a tournament at Ashby de la Zouch Castle the novel was immensely popular and made the location famous 42 Edward Mammatt Francis Rawdon s agent repaired the castle ruins and opened them to visitors whom Rawdon hoped to attract to the Ivanhoe Baths which he opened nearby 42 Ashby Place which had become used as a House of Industry was pulled down in 1830 and a new house Ashby Manor was built in its place 42 Work continued throughout the 19th century to repair the castle ruins although they remained mostly covered in ivy 43 A local architect Thomas Fosbrooke carried out the first archaeological investigation of the site in 1900 and extensive restoration work took place the following years 44 The Rawdon family were given a government grant for further repairs in 1912 and they began to start charging visitors for entry 45 The family found themselves unable to afford to maintain the castle and by the early 1930s the walls had become unstable and dangerous 46 The castle was placed into the guardianship of the Ministry of Works in 1932 who carried out repairs replacing some stonework and opening up the surrounding grounds to visitors 45 In the 21st century the castle is managed by English Heritage as a tourist attraction receiving 15 164 visitors in 2015 47 An archaeological investigation of the castle gardens was carried out in 2006 43 The site is protected under UK law as a Grade I listed building and a scheduled monument 48 nbsp The castle and the sunken gardensArchitecture and landscape editArchitecture edit nbsp Map of the castle A Kitchen Tower B buttery and pantry C Great Hall D Great Chamber E chapel and inner court F site of northern court G Great Tower H sunken gardens I south west garden tower J south east garden towerThe ruins of Ashby de la Zouch Castle are located close to the centre of the modern town and comprise two large towers and associated buildings arranged around a court with formal gardens to the south Lord Hastings probably intended his castle to ultimately have four large towers enclosing the interior buildings with a curtain wall to a regular design but only half of these towers were completed by the time of his death 49 The outer court that lay to the north of the surviving complex has been lost having been converted into first Ashby Place and then Ashby Manor it is now occupied by the Manor House Preparatory School 50 The historian John Goodall considers Ashby de la Zouch to form an outstanding example of a late medieval castle 51 The Kitchen Tower stands on the north west corner of the castle and was intended to supply Lord Hasting s large household 52 The tower only had two storeys as the ground floor kitchen had a very high 34 feet 10 m high vaulted ceiling and its walls were 9 feet 2 7 m thick and made of yellow sandstone 53 The well lit kitchen had several hearths and an oven for cooking a well and a cellar for storage 54 Above the kitchen was a large room probably used as a winter parlour 55 One wall of the tower was slighted in 1648 54 An underground passage probably dating from the English Civil War links the Great Tower with the Kitchen Tower 56 Alongside the tower separated for fire safety by a roofed passageway was a two storey service range including a buttery and pantry 57 The castle s Great Hall was adapted from the medieval original and would originally have been subdivided by a line of arches 58 It was heated by a central heath and the lord and his guests would have eaten on a raised dais at the far end of the hall 58 The building was raised in height given new windows and reroofed in the second half of the 17th century 58 The Great Chamber was a two storey building originally with a parlour on the ground level with a chamber above it used for entertaining guests 59 Running north from the Great Chamber was a range of buildings used by the senior household staff 59 The large chapel 60 by 21 feet 18 3 by 6 4 m and built of grey sandstone lies alongside the Great Chamber and would originally had an altar on a dais at the north end 60 One corner of the chapel remains in use as a burial site by the modern Hastings family 59 An inner or chapel court would have been formed by a range of buildings since lost stretching between the chapel and the Great Tower 61 The historian Anthony Emery notes that the castle would have formed a palace fortress with the sizeable chapel and adjacent towers constituting symbols of Hastings power and authority 62 The Great Tower was a large structure of grey sandstone 75 feet 23 m tall formed of a four storey tower 30 by 25 feet 9 1 by 7 6 m internally linked to a smaller seven storey tower or turret 10 by 9 feet 3 0 by 2 7 m across 63 The ground floor contained the basement and the entrance way protected by a portcullis 64 The first floor held the kitchen and had a fire proof stone vaulted roof 65 The upper floors consisted of a parlour and a separate great chamber for the lord with a withdrawing chamber to one side all with grander windows than the lower levels with excellent views of the gardens and the parkland beyond 66 A treasure chamber accessible only from the upper storeys using a ladder was built into the first floor 65 Emery considers the richness of the upper rooms and the tower s planning and design qualities to be outstanding and likens it to the Yellow Tower of Gwent at Raglan Castle 67 nbsp The Kitchen Tower nbsp Great Hall nbsp Great Chamber nbsp and chapel as seen from the top of the Great TowerGardens and parkland edit nbsp Earthworks in the eastern part of the garden probably intended to resemble bastionsThe current gardens to the south of the castle date from around 1530 they occupy 2 0 acres 0 8 ha and include two sunken areas separated by a walkway 68 The eastern area may have been intended to imitate defensive bastion works and it originally featured a circular brick tower in the middle of it 69 The site would originally have had a brick wall running all the way around it of which only the south east edge survives 68 Two brick towers survive at the southern corners one resembling a clover leaf the other with an octagonal design and would have originally been used as banqueting houses 70 Beyond the gardens would have been an area planted with trees called the wilderness and smaller compartmented garden and ponds 71 A triangular building called the Mount was built in the wilderness in the early 17th century and is now a private house 71 John Goodall considers them to be one of the best preserved and most important early Tudor gardens in England 51 The original 60 acres 24 ha park probably lay just to the south of the castle incorporating the current gardens it was probably expanded to around 340 acres 140 ha by William Hastings and was later named the Little Park 72 The original boundaries of the other two parks associated with castle to the north and west Great Park and Prestop Park are uncertain 73 See also editCastles in Great Britain and Ireland List of castles in LeicestershireNotes edit It is unclear from the evidence what the Irish fort was or exactly where it was constructed 29 References edit a b c Goodall 2011 p 29 Newsome et al 2008 p 5 a b Goodall 2011 p 29 Newsome et al 2008 p 5 Moxon 2013 pp 21 22 Goodall 2011 p 29 Emery 2000 p 213 Newsome et al 2008 p 6 Emery 2000 p 213 Pounds 1990 p 272 a b Goodall 2011 pp 29 30 Newsome et al 2008 p 6 Goodall 2011 p 29 Newsome et al 2008 p 6 Goodall 2011 pp 29 30 Goodall 2011 pp 29 31 Emery 2000 p 265 Goodall 2011 pp 29 31 Creighton 2013 p 217 Goodall 2011 p 31 Newsome et al 2008 p 6 Newsome et al 2008 p 7 Goodall 2011 p 31 Newsome et al 2008 pp 6 7 Goodall 2011 p 31 Goodall 2011 pp 31 32 Rosemary Horrox 2004 Hastings William first Baron Hastings c 1430 1483 Oxford University Press retrieved 10 April 2017 Goodall 2011 p 32 John Goodall History of Ashby de la Zouch Castle English Heritage retrieved 20 May 2017 Goodall 2011 pp 32 33 Newsome et al 2008 pp 7 8 Goodall 2011 pp 32 34 a b Goodall 2011 pp 33 35 Moxon 2013 pp 39 57 John Nichols Progresses of James the First vol 1 London 1828 pp 170 1 John Nichols Progresses of James the First vol 2 London 1828 p 146 Goodall 2011 p 35 Newsome et al 2008 pp 8 9 Goodall 2011 p 35 Goodall 2011 pp 33 36 Newsome et al 2008 pp 8 9 Bennett 1980 p 62 a b c Goodall 2011 p 37 Moxon 2013 p 41 Bennett 1980 p 64 Goodall 2011 p 37 Bennett 1980 p 64 a b Goodall 2011 p 37 Newsome et al 2008 pp 9 10 a b Bennett 1980 p 65 Goodall 2011 p 37 Newsome et al 2008 pp 9 10 Moxon 2013 p 34 a b Bennett 1980 p 68 Moxon 2013 p 34 Ashby de la Zouch 1831 p 82 Goodall 2011 pp 37 38 Martyn Bennett 2008 Hastings Henry Baron Loughborough 1610 1667 Oxford University Press retrieved 10 April 2017 a b Goodall 2011 p 38 Bennett 1980 p 62 John Goodall History of Ashby de la Zouch Castle English Heritage retrieved 20 May 2017 John J Scally 2013 Hamilton James first duke of Hamilton 1606 1649 Oxford University Press retrieved 10 April 2017 Ashby p 87 Goodall 2011 p 38 Thompson 1994 p 179 Ashby de la Zouch 1831 p 88 Goodall 2011 pp 10 38 Newsome et al 2008 pp 10 Ashby de la Zouch 1831 p 88 Moxon 2013 p 43 Goodall 2011 pp 4 38 Newsome et al 2008 p 10 Moxon 2013 p 145 a b c d Goodall 2011 p 39 a b Goodall 2011 p 40 Goodall 2011 p 40 Newsome et al 2008 p 11 a b Newsome et al 2008 p 11 Fry 2014 p 29 2015 Full Attractions Listing Visit Britain retrieved 6 May 2017 Castle Ruins Historic England 2011 archived from the original on 14 July 2014 retrieved 25 May 2017 Ashby Castle and Associated Formal Garden Historic England 2011 archived from the original on 14 July 2014 retrieved 25 May 2017 Goodall 2011 p 31 John Goodall History of Ashby de la Zouch Castle English Heritage retrieved 20 May 2017 Ashby Castle and Associated Formal Garden Historic England retrieved 28 May 2017 a b John Goodall Significance of Ashby de la Zouch Castle English Heritage retrieved 20 May 2017 Goodall 2011 p 6 Emery 2000 p 215 Goodall 2011 pp 6 7 Emery 2000 pp 213 214 a b Goodall 2011 p 6 Goodall 2011 p 7 Goodall 2011 pp 6 7 Goodall 2011 p 5 Emery 2000 p 213 a b c Goodall 2011 p 5 a b c Goodall 2011 p 8 Goodall 2011 p 8 Emery 2000 pp 214 218 Goodall 2011 p 9 Emery 2000 p 215 Emery 2000 pp 216 218 Goodall 2011 p 10 Emery 2000 p 214 Goodall 2011 pp 11 12 a b Goodall 2011 p 12 Goodall 2011 pp 11 12 Creighton 2013 p 183 Emery 2000 p 215 a b Goodall 2011 p 13 Ashby Castle and Associated Formal Garden Historic England retrieved 28 May 2017 Goodall 2011 p 13 Goodall 2011 pp 13 14 a b Goodall 2011 p 16 Newsome et al 2008 pp 21 22 24 53 Newsome et al 2008 p 24 Creighton 2013 p 183Bibliography editAshby de la Zouch 1831 A Descriptive and Historical Guide to Ashby de la Zouch and the Neighbourhood Ashby de la Zouch UK T Wayte OCLC 557025588 Bennett M 1980 Henry Hastings and the Flying Army of Ashby de la Zouch Transactions of the Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society 56 62 70 Creighton Oliver H 2013 2009 Designs Upon the Land Elite Landscapes of the Middle Ages Cambridge UK Woodbridge Press ISBN 978 1 84383 825 8 Emery Anthony 2000 Greater Medieval Houses of England and Wales 1300 1500 Volume 2 East Anglia Central England and Wales Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 58131 8 Fry Sebastian 2014 A History of the National Heritage Collection Volume Five 1931 1945 Research Report Series London UK English Heritage ISSN 2046 9799 Goodall John 2011 Ashby de la Zouch Castle and Kirby Muxloe Castle 2nd ed London UK English Heritage ISBN 978 1 84802 109 9 Moxon Chris 2013 Ashby de la Zouch Seventeenth Century Life in a Small Market Town Farnworth UK Chris Moxon ISBN 978 1 291 51228 1 Newsome Sarah Canti Matt Leary Jim Martin Louise Pattison Paul 2008 Ashby de la Zouch Castle Leicestershire A Multidisciplinary Investigation of the Castle Garden Research Department Report Series London UK English Heritage ISSN 1749 8775 Pounds Norman John Greville 1990 The Medieval Castle in England and Wales A Social and Political History Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 45828 3 Thompson M W 1994 1987 The Decline of the Castle Leicester UK Magna Books ISBN 1 85422 608 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ashby de la Zouch Castle English Heritage visitors page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ashby de la Zouch Castle amp oldid 1161986140, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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