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Orford Castle

Orford Castle is a castle in Orford in the English county of Suffolk, 12 miles (19 km) northeast of Ipswich, with views over Orford Ness. It was built between 1165 and 1173 by Henry II of England to consolidate royal power in the region. The well-preserved keep, described by historian R. Allen Brown as "one of the most remarkable keeps in England", is of a unique design and probably based on Byzantine architecture. The keep stands within the earth-bank remains of the castle's outer fortifications.

Orford Castle
Suffolk, England
The keep of Orford Castle
Orford Castle
Coordinates52°05′37″N 1°31′48″E / 52.0936°N 1.5300°E / 52.0936; 1.5300
Grid referencegrid reference TM419498
TypeKeep and bailey
Site information
OwnerEnglish Heritage
Open to
the public
Yes
ConditionKeep remains
Site history
MaterialsCaen stone, mudstone, coralline, Northamptonshire limestone

History edit

12th century edit

Prior to the building of Orford Castle, Suffolk was dominated by the Bigod family, who held the title of the Earl of Norfolk and owned key castles at Framlingham, Bungay, Walton and Thetford.[1] Hugh Bigod had been one of a group of dissenting barons during the Anarchy in the reign of King Stephen, and Henry II wished to re-establish royal influence across the region.[2] Henry confiscated the four castles from Hugh, but returned Framlingham and Bungay to Hugh in 1165.[3] Henry then decided to build his own royal castle at Orford, near Framlingham, and construction work began in 1165, concluding in 1173.[4] The Orford site was around 2 miles (3.2 km) from the sea, lying on flat ground with swampy terrain slowly stretching away down to the river Ore, about 12 mile (0.80 km) away.[5]

External audio
  A tale of two castles: The Bigods, royal rebellions and Framlingham and Orford Castles, The English Heritage Podcast

The design of the keep was unique, and has been termed "one of the most remarkable keeps in England" by historian R. Allen Brown.[6] The 90-foot-high (27-metre) central tower was circular in cross-section with three rectangular, clasping towers built out from the 49-foot-wide (15-metre) structure.[7] The tower was based on a precise set of proportions, its various dimensions following the one-to-the-root-of-two ratio found in many English churches of the period.[8] Much of the interior is built with high-quality ashlar stonework, with broad, 5-foot-6-inch-wide (1.7-metre) staircases.[9] The best chambers were designed to catch the early morning sun, whilst the various parts of the keep were draught-proofed with doors and carefully designed windows.[10] Originally the roof of the keep, above the upper hall, would have formed a domed effect, with a tall steeple above that.[11] The chapel above the entrance to the keep was unusually shaped; historian Stephen Brindle suggests that such a design "would not normally have been thought seemly for a room dedicated to the service of God".[12]

The keep was surrounded by a curtain wall with probably four flanking towers and a fortified gatehouse protecting a relatively small bailey; these outer defences, rather than the keep, probably represented the main defences of the castle.[13] The marshes nearby were drained, turning the village of Orford into a sheltered port. The castle, including the surrounding ditch, palisade and stone bridge, cost £1,413 to build, the work possibly being conducted by the master mason Alnoth.[14] Some of the timbers were brought from as far away as Scarborough, and the detailed stonework being carved from limestone from Caen in Normandy, the remainder of the stone being variously local mudstone and coralline, as well as limestone from Northamptonshire.[15]

The design of the keep has attracted much historical interest.[16] Traditional explanations for its unusual plan argued that the castle was a transitional military design, combining both the circular features of later castles with the square angled buttresses of earlier Norman fortifications.[16] More recent scholarship has critiqued this explanation.[17] The design of the Orford keep is hard to justify in military terms, as the buttresses created additional blind spots for the defenders, whilst the chambers and staircase in the corners weakened the walls against attack.[17] Square Norman keeps continued to be built after Orford, whilst Henry II was aware of fully circular castle designs before building the keep.[17] A round keep was constructed at New Buckenham, Norfolk, in 1146, for example.[18] Historians have therefore questioned to what extent the design can be seen as legitimately transitional.[17] Instead, historians now believe that the design of Orford Castle was instead probably driven by political symbolism. Architectural historian Sandy Heslop argues that the plain, simple elegance of the architecture would, for mid-12th-century nobility, have summoned up images of King Arthur, who was then widely believed to have had Roman or Greek links.[19] The banded, angular features of the keep resembled the Theodosian Walls of Constantinople, then the idealised image of imperial power, and the keep as a whole, including the roof, may have been based on a hall that had been recently built in Constantinople by John II Komnenos.[20]

 
Plan of the Orford Castle keep

13th to 19th centuries edit

 
Watercolour of Orford Castle in 1600, by John Norden

By the start of the 13th century, royal authority over Suffolk had been firmly established, after Henry II crushed the Bigods in the revolt of 1173–1174, Orford being heavily garrisoned during the conflict, with 20 knights being based there.[21] Upon the collapse of the rebellion, Henry ordered the permanent confiscation of Framlingham Castle. The political importance of Orford Castle diminished after Henry's death in 1189, although the port of Orford grew in importance, however, handling more trade than the more famous port of Ipswich by the beginning of the century.[22]

The castle was captured by Prince Louis of France who invaded England in 1216 at the invitation of the English barons who were disillusioned with King John.[3] John Fitz-Robert became the governor of the royal castle under the young Henry III, followed by Hubert de Burgh.[23] Under Edward I governorship of the castle was given to the de Valoines family, and it passed by marriage to Robert de Ufford, the 1st Earl of Suffolk, who was granted it in perpetuity by Edward III in 1336.[23] The Uffords modernised the castle, adding glass to the windows and installing wood panelling in various rooms. Despite these changes to make Orford more comfortable, Brindle suggests the earl and his family would only have used the castle occasionally as earl's large household would have needed more space.[24] No longer a royal castle, Orford was passed on through the Willoughby, Stanhope and Devereux families, whilst the surrounding economy of Orford went into decline.[23] The estuary of the River Ore silted up and the Orford Ness spit increased, making the harbour access more difficult, resulting in a decline in trade, reducing the importance of the castle as the centre of local government.[22]

The castle descended to Michael Stanhope, who commissioned John Norden to carry out a survey of his family's estates. The earliest surviving depiction of the castle dates from this survey. Stanhope built a new home at Sudbourne in 1604 and 1605, and in doing so probably reused stone from Orford Castle.[25]

 
Orford Castle and surrounding earthworks

The castle and surrounding lands were bought by the Seymour-Conway family in 1754.[23] By the late 18th century only the north wall of the bailey survived and the roof and upper floors of the keep had badly decayed, and Francis Seymour-Conway, the 2nd Marquess of Hertford, proposed destroying the building in 1805.[26] He was prevented from doing so by the government, on the grounds that the keep formed a valuable landmark for ships approaching from Holland, wishing to avoid the nearby sandbanks.[27] Francis's son, also called Francis, undertook conservation efforts in 1831, installing a new, relatively flat, lead roof and a replacement upper floor.[28] Francis furnished the top of the keep for use as an apartment by guests.[27] By the 1840s, however, all of the surrounding bailey wall and mural towers had almost vanished, having been quarried for stone, and the foundations could only just be seen.[29]

Modern period edit

 
The Imperial War Museum has a collection of photographs titled "Invasion Village" series, showing life in Orford during WWII.
 
Orford Ness, Suffolk, showing locations of main sites.[30]

Sir Arthur Churchman bought Orford Castle in 1928 and gave the property to the Orford Town Trust; an appeal for money to maintain and restore it began shortly afterwards. In 1930 the castle opened to the public.[31] During the Second World War the castle was refortified with barbed wire to form what was originally intended to be an anti-aircraft emplacement, with Nissen huts erected around the keep.[32] The castle was instead used as a radar emplacement, and a concrete floor was installed in the south-east tower to support the equipment.[33] These buildings were removed at the end of the conflict.[32] The Ministry of Information took a series of propaganda photographs around Orford dubbed "Invasion Village"; as well as showing life in the village, the images contrasted the old fortification with new defences to demonstrate that heritage was under threat.[34]

Orford Castle was given to the Ministry of Works in 1962, and is now maintained by English Heritage.[35] The first guidebook to the site was published two years later, written by R. Allen Brown. Later guidebooks were written by Derek Renn (1988), John Rhodes (2003), and Stephen Brindle (2018).[36][37]

The keep of the castle is the only part of the structure remaining intact, although the earthwork remains of the bailey wall are still visible. Some of the ditches visible amongst the earthworks are not medieval but results of later quarrying of the bailey walls.[33] Archaeological work to interpret the surrounding environment has continued, most recently during 2002 to 2003.[38] The castle is a scheduled monument and a Grade I listed building.[33]

While maintained by English Heritage, the castle also houses Orford Museum. The museum moved into the castle in 2005, and is housed in the upper hall. It had been without a venue since 1998.[39] The Orford Museum Trust has created exhibits in there featuring displays of archaeological artefacts found locally.[40]

In the 21st century, English Heritage began a programme of conservation to stem the decay of the mudstone, also known as septaria, used to build the castle. The stone had been weathering since at least the 16th century, and in 2008 English Heritage began trialling different means of preserving the stone. After various trials, in 2022 a £1 million project was undertaken to cover the castle in lime render.[41][42]

Wild Man of Orford edit

Orford Castle is associated with the legend of the Wild Man of Orford. According to the chronicler Ralph of Coggeshall, a naked wild man, covered in hair, was caught in the nets of local fishermen around 1167.[43] The man was brought back to the castle where he was held for six months, being questioned or tortured. He said nothing and behaved in a feral fashion throughout.[44] The wild man finally escaped from the castle.[44] Later accounts described him as a merman, and the incident appears to have encouraged the growth in "wild men" carvings on local baptismal fonts—around twenty such fonts from the later medieval period exist in coastal areas of Suffolk and Norfolk, near Orford.[43]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Pounds, p.55; Brown (1962), p.191.
  2. ^ Pounds, p.55.
  3. ^ a b Brown (1962), p.191.
  4. ^ Brown (1962), pp.53, 191.
  5. ^ Hartshorne, p.60.
  6. ^ Brown (1962), pp.52-3.
  7. ^ Heslop, pp.279, 289.
  8. ^ Heslop, p. 284.
  9. ^ Heslop, p.283.
  10. ^ Heslop, pp.283-4.
  11. ^ Heslop, p.293.
  12. ^ Brindle, p.15.
  13. ^ Heslop, p.279; Suffolk HER ORF 054, Heritage Gateway, accessed 23 April 2011.
  14. ^ Brown (2004), pp.110-1.
  15. ^ Brown (2004), p.111; Suffolk HER ORF 054, Heritage Gateway, accessed 23 April 2011.
  16. ^ a b Liddiard (2005), p.47.
  17. ^ a b c d Liddiard (2005), p.50.
  18. ^ Liddiard (2005), p.49.
  19. ^ Heslop, p.288-9.
  20. ^ Heslop, p.290.
  21. ^ Brown (2004), p.136.
  22. ^ a b Creighton, p.44.
  23. ^ a b c d White, p.517.
  24. ^ Brindle, p.34.
  25. ^ Brindle, p.36.
  26. ^ White, p.516; Orford Castle, National Monuments Record, accessed 12 May 2011.
  27. ^ a b White, p.516.
  28. ^ Hartshorne, p.61; White, p.516.
  29. ^ Hartshorne, p.61; Orford Caste, National Monuments Record, accessed 12 May 2011.
  30. ^ "Orfordness Visitor Map" (PDF). National Trust. 2018. Retrieved 19 November 2018.
  31. ^ James, p.100; Brindle, p.40.
  32. ^ a b Suffolk HER ORF 001, Heritage Gateway, accessed 23 April 2011.
  33. ^ a b c Orford Castle, National Monuments Record, accessed 2 June 2020.
  34. ^ Davis, pp.91–92.
  35. ^ Orford History, Orford and Gedgrave Parish Council, accessed 24 April 2011.
  36. ^ "Orford Castle (The Gatehouse Record)". www.gatehouse-gazetteer.info. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  37. ^ "Guidebook: Orford Castle". www.english-heritageshop.org.uk. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  38. ^ Suffolk HER ORF 054, Heritage Gateway, accessed 23 April 2011.
  39. ^ "New museum could attract extra tourists", East Anglian Daily Times, 27 February 2004, retrieved 4 June 2021
  40. ^ The Museum, Orford Museum Trust, retrieved 4 June 2021
  41. ^ Bareham, Dominic (20 December 2022). "Historic 12th century Suffolk castle has been restored in £1m project". East Anglian Daily Times. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  42. ^ "Conservation of Orford Castle". English Heritage. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  43. ^ a b Thompson, p.30.
  44. ^ a b Varner, p.78.

Bibliography edit

  • Brindle, Stephen. (2018) Orford Castle. London: English Heritage. ISBN 978-1-910907-30-6
  • Brown, R. Allen. (1962) English Castles. London: Batsford. OCLC 1392314.
  • Brown, R. Allen. (2004) Allen Brown's English Castles. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-069-6.
  • Creighton, Oliver Hamilton. (2005) Castles and Landscapes: Power, Community and Fortification in Medieval England. London: Equinox. ISBN 978-1-904768-67-8.
  • Davis, Sophia. (2020) Island Thinking: Suffolk Stories of Landscape, Militarisation and Identity. London: Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1007/978-981-13-9676-2
  • Hartshorne, Charles Henry. (1842) "Observations on Orford Castle", Archaeologia, Vol. 29, pp. 60–69. doi:10.1017/S0261340900001892
  • Hussey, Stephen and Paul Thompson. (eds) (2004) Environmental Consciousness: the roots of a new political agenda. New Brunswick, US: Transaction. ISBN 978-0-7658-0814-1.
  • Heslop, T. A. (2003) "Orford Castle: nostalgia and sophisticated living", in Liddiard (ed) 2003.
  • James, Montague Rhodes. (2010) [1930] Suffolk and Norfolk: A Perambulation of the Two Counties. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-108-01806-7.
  • Liddiard, Robert. (ed) (2003a) Anglo-Norman Castles. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-85115-904-1.
  • Liddiard, Robert. (2005) Castles in Context: Power, Symbolism and Landscape, 1066 to 1500. Macclesfield, UK: Windgather Press. ISBN 0-9545575-2-2.
  • Pounds, Norman John Greville. (1994) The Medieval Castle in England and Wales: a social and political history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45828-3.
  • Thompson, Paul. (2004) "The English, the Trees, the Wild and the Green: two millennia of mythological metamorphoses", in Hussey and Thompson (ed) (2004).
  • Varner, Gary R. (2007) Creatures in the Mist: Little People, Wild Men and Spirit Beings around the World. US: Algora. ISBN 978-0-87586-546-1.
  • White, William. (1855) History, Gazetteer and Directory of Suffolk. Sheffield: Robert Leader. OCLC 21834184.

Further reading edit

  • Potter, Valerie; Poulter, Margaret; and Allen, Jane. (2002) The Building of Orford Castle: a translation from the Pipe Rolls, 1163–78. Orford: Orford Museum.

External links edit

  • English Heritage webpage on Orford Castle
  • Orford Museum Trust
  • Reconstructions of the castle by Bob Marshall, commissioned by English Heritage
  • Video detailing conservation work in 2022

orford, castle, castle, orford, english, county, suffolk, miles, northeast, ipswich, with, views, over, orford, ness, built, between, 1165, 1173, henry, england, consolidate, royal, power, region, well, preserved, keep, described, historian, allen, brown, most. Orford Castle is a castle in Orford in the English county of Suffolk 12 miles 19 km northeast of Ipswich with views over Orford Ness It was built between 1165 and 1173 by Henry II of England to consolidate royal power in the region The well preserved keep described by historian R Allen Brown as one of the most remarkable keeps in England is of a unique design and probably based on Byzantine architecture The keep stands within the earth bank remains of the castle s outer fortifications Orford CastleSuffolk EnglandThe keep of Orford CastleOrford CastleCoordinates52 05 37 N 1 31 48 E 52 0936 N 1 5300 E 52 0936 1 5300Grid referencegrid reference TM419498TypeKeep and baileySite informationOwnerEnglish HeritageOpen tothe publicYesConditionKeep remainsSite historyMaterialsCaen stone mudstone coralline Northamptonshire limestone Contents 1 History 1 1 12th century 1 2 13th to 19th centuries 1 3 Modern period 2 Wild Man of Orford 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory edit12th century edit Prior to the building of Orford Castle Suffolk was dominated by the Bigod family who held the title of the Earl of Norfolk and owned key castles at Framlingham Bungay Walton and Thetford 1 Hugh Bigod had been one of a group of dissenting barons during the Anarchy in the reign of King Stephen and Henry II wished to re establish royal influence across the region 2 Henry confiscated the four castles from Hugh but returned Framlingham and Bungay to Hugh in 1165 3 Henry then decided to build his own royal castle at Orford near Framlingham and construction work began in 1165 concluding in 1173 4 The Orford site was around 2 miles 3 2 km from the sea lying on flat ground with swampy terrain slowly stretching away down to the river Ore about 1 2 mile 0 80 km away 5 External audio nbsp A tale of two castles The Bigods royal rebellions and Framlingham and Orford Castles The English Heritage PodcastThe design of the keep was unique and has been termed one of the most remarkable keeps in England by historian R Allen Brown 6 The 90 foot high 27 metre central tower was circular in cross section with three rectangular clasping towers built out from the 49 foot wide 15 metre structure 7 The tower was based on a precise set of proportions its various dimensions following the one to the root of two ratio found in many English churches of the period 8 Much of the interior is built with high quality ashlar stonework with broad 5 foot 6 inch wide 1 7 metre staircases 9 The best chambers were designed to catch the early morning sun whilst the various parts of the keep were draught proofed with doors and carefully designed windows 10 Originally the roof of the keep above the upper hall would have formed a domed effect with a tall steeple above that 11 The chapel above the entrance to the keep was unusually shaped historian Stephen Brindle suggests that such a design would not normally have been thought seemly for a room dedicated to the service of God 12 The keep was surrounded by a curtain wall with probably four flanking towers and a fortified gatehouse protecting a relatively small bailey these outer defences rather than the keep probably represented the main defences of the castle 13 The marshes nearby were drained turning the village of Orford into a sheltered port The castle including the surrounding ditch palisade and stone bridge cost 1 413 to build the work possibly being conducted by the master mason Alnoth 14 Some of the timbers were brought from as far away as Scarborough and the detailed stonework being carved from limestone from Caen in Normandy the remainder of the stone being variously local mudstone and coralline as well as limestone from Northamptonshire 15 nbsp The basement would have been used for storage in the medieval period It contains a well and a sink built into one of the walls nbsp The corbels around the upper hall originally supported the domed ceiling nbsp The chapel on the first mezzanineThe design of the keep has attracted much historical interest 16 Traditional explanations for its unusual plan argued that the castle was a transitional military design combining both the circular features of later castles with the square angled buttresses of earlier Norman fortifications 16 More recent scholarship has critiqued this explanation 17 The design of the Orford keep is hard to justify in military terms as the buttresses created additional blind spots for the defenders whilst the chambers and staircase in the corners weakened the walls against attack 17 Square Norman keeps continued to be built after Orford whilst Henry II was aware of fully circular castle designs before building the keep 17 A round keep was constructed at New Buckenham Norfolk in 1146 for example 18 Historians have therefore questioned to what extent the design can be seen as legitimately transitional 17 Instead historians now believe that the design of Orford Castle was instead probably driven by political symbolism Architectural historian Sandy Heslop argues that the plain simple elegance of the architecture would for mid 12th century nobility have summoned up images of King Arthur who was then widely believed to have had Roman or Greek links 19 The banded angular features of the keep resembled the Theodosian Walls of Constantinople then the idealised image of imperial power and the keep as a whole including the roof may have been based on a hall that had been recently built in Constantinople by John II Komnenos 20 nbsp Plan of the Orford Castle keep 13th to 19th centuries edit nbsp Watercolour of Orford Castle in 1600 by John NordenBy the start of the 13th century royal authority over Suffolk had been firmly established after Henry II crushed the Bigods in the revolt of 1173 1174 Orford being heavily garrisoned during the conflict with 20 knights being based there 21 Upon the collapse of the rebellion Henry ordered the permanent confiscation of Framlingham Castle The political importance of Orford Castle diminished after Henry s death in 1189 although the port of Orford grew in importance however handling more trade than the more famous port of Ipswich by the beginning of the century 22 The castle was captured by Prince Louis of France who invaded England in 1216 at the invitation of the English barons who were disillusioned with King John 3 John Fitz Robert became the governor of the royal castle under the young Henry III followed by Hubert de Burgh 23 Under Edward I governorship of the castle was given to the de Valoines family and it passed by marriage to Robert de Ufford the 1st Earl of Suffolk who was granted it in perpetuity by Edward III in 1336 23 The Uffords modernised the castle adding glass to the windows and installing wood panelling in various rooms Despite these changes to make Orford more comfortable Brindle suggests the earl and his family would only have used the castle occasionally as earl s large household would have needed more space 24 No longer a royal castle Orford was passed on through the Willoughby Stanhope and Devereux families whilst the surrounding economy of Orford went into decline 23 The estuary of the River Ore silted up and the Orford Ness spit increased making the harbour access more difficult resulting in a decline in trade reducing the importance of the castle as the centre of local government 22 The castle descended to Michael Stanhope who commissioned John Norden to carry out a survey of his family s estates The earliest surviving depiction of the castle dates from this survey Stanhope built a new home at Sudbourne in 1604 and 1605 and in doing so probably reused stone from Orford Castle 25 nbsp Orford Castle and surrounding earthworksThe castle and surrounding lands were bought by the Seymour Conway family in 1754 23 By the late 18th century only the north wall of the bailey survived and the roof and upper floors of the keep had badly decayed and Francis Seymour Conway the 2nd Marquess of Hertford proposed destroying the building in 1805 26 He was prevented from doing so by the government on the grounds that the keep formed a valuable landmark for ships approaching from Holland wishing to avoid the nearby sandbanks 27 Francis s son also called Francis undertook conservation efforts in 1831 installing a new relatively flat lead roof and a replacement upper floor 28 Francis furnished the top of the keep for use as an apartment by guests 27 By the 1840s however all of the surrounding bailey wall and mural towers had almost vanished having been quarried for stone and the foundations could only just be seen 29 Modern period edit nbsp The Imperial War Museum has a collection of photographs titled Invasion Village series showing life in Orford during WWII nbsp Interactive fullscreen map nearby articles Orford Ness Suffolk showing locations of main sites 30 Sir Arthur Churchman bought Orford Castle in 1928 and gave the property to the Orford Town Trust an appeal for money to maintain and restore it began shortly afterwards In 1930 the castle opened to the public 31 During the Second World War the castle was refortified with barbed wire to form what was originally intended to be an anti aircraft emplacement with Nissen huts erected around the keep 32 The castle was instead used as a radar emplacement and a concrete floor was installed in the south east tower to support the equipment 33 These buildings were removed at the end of the conflict 32 The Ministry of Information took a series of propaganda photographs around Orford dubbed Invasion Village as well as showing life in the village the images contrasted the old fortification with new defences to demonstrate that heritage was under threat 34 Orford Castle was given to the Ministry of Works in 1962 and is now maintained by English Heritage 35 The first guidebook to the site was published two years later written by R Allen Brown Later guidebooks were written by Derek Renn 1988 John Rhodes 2003 and Stephen Brindle 2018 36 37 The keep of the castle is the only part of the structure remaining intact although the earthwork remains of the bailey wall are still visible Some of the ditches visible amongst the earthworks are not medieval but results of later quarrying of the bailey walls 33 Archaeological work to interpret the surrounding environment has continued most recently during 2002 to 2003 38 The castle is a scheduled monument and a Grade I listed building 33 While maintained by English Heritage the castle also houses Orford Museum The museum moved into the castle in 2005 and is housed in the upper hall It had been without a venue since 1998 39 The Orford Museum Trust has created exhibits in there featuring displays of archaeological artefacts found locally 40 In the 21st century English Heritage began a programme of conservation to stem the decay of the mudstone also known as septaria used to build the castle The stone had been weathering since at least the 16th century and in 2008 English Heritage began trialling different means of preserving the stone After various trials in 2022 a 1 million project was undertaken to cover the castle in lime render 41 42 Wild Man of Orford editOrford Castle is associated with the legend of the Wild Man of Orford According to the chronicler Ralph of Coggeshall a naked wild man covered in hair was caught in the nets of local fishermen around 1167 43 The man was brought back to the castle where he was held for six months being questioned or tortured He said nothing and behaved in a feral fashion throughout 44 The wild man finally escaped from the castle 44 Later accounts described him as a merman and the incident appears to have encouraged the growth in wild men carvings on local baptismal fonts around twenty such fonts from the later medieval period exist in coastal areas of Suffolk and Norfolk near Orford 43 See also editCastles in Great Britain and Ireland List of castles in England Conisbrough CastleReferences edit Pounds p 55 Brown 1962 p 191 Pounds p 55 a b Brown 1962 p 191 Brown 1962 pp 53 191 Hartshorne p 60 Brown 1962 pp 52 3 Heslop pp 279 289 Heslop p 284 Heslop p 283 Heslop pp 283 4 Heslop p 293 Brindle p 15 Heslop p 279 Suffolk HER ORF 054 Heritage Gateway accessed 23 April 2011 Brown 2004 pp 110 1 Brown 2004 p 111 Suffolk HER ORF 054 Heritage Gateway accessed 23 April 2011 a b Liddiard 2005 p 47 a b c d Liddiard 2005 p 50 Liddiard 2005 p 49 Heslop p 288 9 Heslop p 290 Brown 2004 p 136 a b Creighton p 44 a b c d White p 517 Brindle p 34 Brindle p 36 White p 516 Orford Castle National Monuments Record accessed 12 May 2011 a b White p 516 Hartshorne p 61 White p 516 Hartshorne p 61 Orford Caste National Monuments Record accessed 12 May 2011 Orfordness Visitor Map PDF National Trust 2018 Retrieved 19 November 2018 James p 100 Brindle p 40 a b Suffolk HER ORF 001 Heritage Gateway accessed 23 April 2011 a b c Orford Castle National Monuments Record accessed 2 June 2020 Davis pp 91 92 Orford History Orford and Gedgrave Parish Council accessed 24 April 2011 Orford Castle The Gatehouse Record www gatehouse gazetteer info Retrieved 19 May 2021 Guidebook Orford Castle www english heritageshop org uk Retrieved 19 May 2021 Suffolk HER ORF 054 Heritage Gateway accessed 23 April 2011 New museum could attract extra tourists East Anglian Daily Times 27 February 2004 retrieved 4 June 2021 The Museum Orford Museum Trust retrieved 4 June 2021 Bareham Dominic 20 December 2022 Historic 12th century Suffolk castle has been restored in 1m project East Anglian Daily Times Retrieved 2 February 2023 Conservation of Orford Castle English Heritage Retrieved 2 February 2023 a b Thompson p 30 a b Varner p 78 Bibliography editBrindle Stephen 2018 Orford Castle London English Heritage ISBN 978 1 910907 30 6 Brown R Allen 1962 English Castles London Batsford OCLC 1392314 Brown R Allen 2004 Allen Brown s English Castles Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 069 6 Creighton Oliver Hamilton 2005 Castles and Landscapes Power Community and Fortification in Medieval England London Equinox ISBN 978 1 904768 67 8 Davis Sophia 2020 Island Thinking Suffolk Stories of Landscape Militarisation and Identity London Palgrave Macmillan doi 10 1007 978 981 13 9676 2 Hartshorne Charles Henry 1842 Observations on Orford Castle Archaeologia Vol 29 pp 60 69 doi 10 1017 S0261340900001892 Hussey Stephen and Paul Thompson eds 2004 Environmental Consciousness the roots of a new political agenda New Brunswick US Transaction ISBN 978 0 7658 0814 1 Heslop T A 2003 Orford Castle nostalgia and sophisticated living in Liddiard ed 2003 James Montague Rhodes 2010 1930 Suffolk and Norfolk A Perambulation of the Two Counties Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 108 01806 7 Liddiard Robert ed 2003a Anglo Norman Castles Woodbridge UK Boydell Press ISBN 978 0 85115 904 1 Liddiard Robert 2005 Castles in Context Power Symbolism and Landscape 1066 to 1500 Macclesfield UK Windgather Press ISBN 0 9545575 2 2 Pounds Norman John Greville 1994 The Medieval Castle in England and Wales a social and political history Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 45828 3 Thompson Paul 2004 The English the Trees the Wild and the Green two millennia of mythological metamorphoses in Hussey and Thompson ed 2004 Varner Gary R 2007 Creatures in the Mist Little People Wild Men and Spirit Beings around the World US Algora ISBN 978 0 87586 546 1 White William 1855 History Gazetteer and Directory of Suffolk Sheffield Robert Leader OCLC 21834184 Further reading editPotter Valerie Poulter Margaret and Allen Jane 2002 The Building of Orford Castle a translation from the Pipe Rolls 1163 78 Orford Orford Museum External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Orford Castle nbsp Scholia has a topic profile for Orford Castle English Heritage webpage on Orford Castle Orford Museum Trust Reconstructions of the castle by Bob Marshall commissioned by English Heritage Video detailing conservation work in 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orford Castle amp oldid 1164089868, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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