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Somerton Castle

Somerton Castle is located approximately 1 mile (1.6 km) west of the village of Boothby Graffoe in Lincolnshire, England and to the south of the city of Lincoln, England. The site is on low-lying land between the Lincoln Edge and the River Witham. Although Somerton Castle is in the parish of Boothby Graffoe, it is in the Manor of Waddington and this portion is often referred to as the Manor of Somerton Castle. Antony Bek probably built the castle in 1281 and he gave it to King Edward II in 1309. King John II of France was imprisoned at Somerton Castle between 1359 and 1360, having been taken prisoner after the Battle of Poitiers. It continued as crown property until it was sold by Charles I in 1628, since when the castle has continued in private ownership.[1]

Somerton Castle
Lincolnshire, England
Somerton Castle, engraving by Samuel and Nathaniel Buck
Somerton Castle
Coordinates53°07′04″N 0°34′34″W / 53.1177°N 0.5760°W / 53.1177; -0.5760
Grid referenceSK 95361 58739
Site information
OwnerPrivate
Open to
the public
No
Site history
MaterialsLimestone

Medieval history edit

Antony Bek inherited Somerton from his mother, Eva de Gray, and built the castle after being granted a licence to crenellate in 1281.[2][3] In 1309 Bek gave the castle as a gift to King Edward II. The castle was found to be in poor condition at the accession of King Edward II, lead had been stolen from the towers and the great hall and the chapel, which were on the west side of the castle, were in poor repair. After the accession of Edward III in 1330, John Crabbe, a military engineer was appointed Constable of the Castle, and in autumn of 1334 King Edward visited the castle, presumably to authorise repair work. A total of £222 was spent during the next two years on rebuilding the outer drawbridge and remaking part of the moat – presumably this was the time when the outer bailey to the south of the castle was constructed.[2] In late 1335 or early 1336 the Countess Alice de Lacy of Bolingbroke, Countess of Lincoln, was held and raped at Somerton after being kidnapped from her castle at Bolingbroke by Baron Hugh de Fresne. They married later that year, although without royal authority and so, by order of Edward III, they were held captive in separate towers in Somerton Castle. Royal assent was granted on 20 March 1336, however de Fresne died in December 1336 and the countess Alice returned to Bolingbroke. After Crabbe's death in 1351/2, Stephen Shawe was appointed as Constable and regular repairs took place to the domestic buildings in the inner court. Further repairs and alterations took place in 1359-60 when King John II of France was held captive in the castle having been taken prisoner after the Battle of Poitiers. Sir Saier De Rochford, ancestor of the Rochford family of Stoke Rochford, "an eminent soldier in the wars of France," and High Sheriff of Lincolnshire, was allowed two shillings a day for the safekeeping of King John while at Somerton.[4]

By 1393 the castle was reported as being defective in walls, gates, towers , bridges, ditches, lead roofing , tiling, boarding, glazing and ironwork and would need the expenditure of £100 to repair. In 1408 King Henry VI granted the castle to Sir Ralph Rochford, who was High Sheriff of Lincolnshire in that year. He was to spend £112 12s. 9d on repairs during the next three years. The works carried out included making good the roof of the queen's hall, with its buttery and pantry, and repairing the chapel and chamber of St Christopher. The castle was held from the King by the Dukes of Clarence from 1415 until 1478, when George, Duke of Clarence was executed.[5] The castle was allowed to fall into disrepair during this period and it suffered waste, dilapidation and strip from those who held it from the King.[5]

Later history edit

 
Somerton Castle, Boothby Graffoe, Lincolnshire in 1973

The Castle was transferred to the estates of the Duchy of Lancaster by Henry VII[5] and the Castle and its lands were held by De’Isney or Disney family. A Duchy of Lancaster Survey of 1601 described the castle as being utterly defaced and fallen almost downe to the ground, but one of the four towers was standing almost to its full height.[5] The property was bought from the Charles I in 1628 by the Corporation of the City of London and it then passed to the Hussey family.

The print produced by Samuel Buck in 1726 is dedicated to Sir Henry Hussey, and this print shows the castle as in much the same state as described in 1601. Sir Henry left Somerton Castle to his aunt Jane Hatcher, who died in 1734[6] and it then passed to the Pochin family of Barkby in Leicestershire, who sold the castle to Montague Cholmeley of Easton in 1780.

 
Somerton Castle from the S.E. in 1850

The property and estate were bought from Sir Montague Cholmeley, 1st Baronet in 1812 by the Isaac Marfleet of Bassingham who had been previously leasing the castle; the property then passed on to several of the family's descendants,[7] until it passed to the Battersby family, who sold the castle and surrounding farmland in the mid-1970s.

About 2010, due to the deterioration of the fabric of the castle buildings, Somerton Castle was put on the English Heritage Buildings at Risk register,[8] and Ridge & Morris of Snape in Suffolk were commissioned as architects to draw up plans for the restoration of the castle [9] Planning consents were granted by North Kesteven District Council for additional building work, which included a new wing extending to the northwards behind the south front and also the conversion of the 19th-century farm buildings into dwellings.[10]

Architecture and visible remains edit

 
Plan of Somerton Castle by J. S. Padley, 1850
 
Cooling Castle, Kent OS map 1964 – for comparison with Somerton Castle.

The medieval castle appears to have most in common in its plan and layout with later castles of the 14th century and early 15th century such as Maxstoke Castle in Warwickshire, Wingfield Castle in Suffolk and, in particular Cooling Castle in Kent. These castles are set in moats with roughly rectangular curtain walls between corner towers. Cooling Castle was licensed to crenellate in 1381,[11] and in front of the rectangular inner bailey is a trapezoid-shaped outer bailey with open-backed corner towers. This is the arrangement that is indicated in Padley's plan, even though the towers are shown as mounds at the corners. These open-backed artillery towers started appearing in Europe around 1330 and would have been familiar to John Crabbe, the Constable of the Castle, who came from Flanders. In these towers the artillery would be placed on two or three floors and the open backs to the towers gave ventilation from the fumes released by igniting gunpowder. This forward defence is likely to have been placed in front of the main gate to the inner bailey of Somerton Castle, and the towers would have given the artillery a sweep of about 270º to the south of the castle.

 
Caister Castle from J. D. Mackenzie's The Castles of England: their story and structure

A similar layout was adopted for Sir John Fastolf's castle at Caistor by Great Yarmouth in the 1430s. Caister Castle, built in brick, was laid out with three rectangular baileys, each of which was surrounded by a water-filled moat and fortified with open-back towers in the forward bailey. One of the corner towers of the rectangular inner bailey is much taller than the other three.[12]

Some prominent and visible enclosures still surround the site, including parts of the moat. What remains of the castle walls are incorporated into the present farmhouse. The castle has been recognised as an important building and has been classified as a Grade I listed building.[3]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ Colvin 1963, pp. 838–839.
  2. ^ a b Colvin 1963, p. 838.
  3. ^ a b Historic England. "Somerton Castle (326074)". Research records (formerly PastScape). Retrieved 8 February 2011.
  4. ^ Turnor, Edmund; Collections for the History of the Town and Soke of Grantham Containing Authentic Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton, William Miller (1806), p. 143
  5. ^ a b c d Colvin 1963, p. 839.
  6. ^ Battersby Papers, Lincolnshire Archives
  7. ^ Battersby papers, Lincolnshire Archives
  8. ^ http://risk.historicengland.org.uk/register.aspx?id=46205&rt=1&pn=12&st=a&ctype=all&crit=south+west [dead link]
  9. ^ . Hoare, Ridge & Morris LLP. Archived from the original on 15 August 2014. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  10. ^ North Kesteven Planning 14/0292/FUL
  11. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 312–313.
  12. ^ Goodall 2011, pp. 351–353.

References edit

  • Colvin, H. M., ed. (1963). The History of the King's Works, Vol.ii: The Middle Ages. H.M.S.O.
  • Goodall, John (2011). The English Castle 1066-1650. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300110586.

Literature edit

  • Antram N. (revised), Pevsner N. & Harris J., (1989), The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, Yale University Press. p. 660.
  • Blagg, T. M., (1933), "Somerton Castle" Transactions of the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire Vol. 37 pp. 49–60 doi:10.5284/1112079  
  • Padley J. S. (1851) Selections from the ancient monastic ecclesiastical and domestic edifices of Lincolnshire [1]
  • Trollope E., (1857a) Trollope, E., 1857, The Captivity of John, King of France, at Somerton Castle, Associated Architectural Societies' reports and papers (Lincoln, York, Northampton, Bedford, Worcester, Leicester and Sheffield) Vol. 4 pp. 49–64
  • Trollope, E., (1857b), Somerton Castle and its Builder Associated Architectural Societies' reports and papers (Lincoln, York, Northampton, Bedford, Worcester, Leicester and Sheffield) Vol. 4 pp. 83–91 [2]
  • Trollope, E., (1882), "Somerton Castle", The Archaeological Journal Vol. 39 pp. 180–3 doi:10.5284/1067651  
  • Turner T. Hudson (1851/1877) 2nd ed. Some account of the Domestic Architecture of England, from the Conquest to the End of the 13th Century. Parker, Oxford & London pp. 172–3. [3] Contains 'Notes on Somerton Castle' by Edward James Willson.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Somerton Castle at Wikimedia Commons
  • , Lincolnshire History Project, Magicjon.fsnet.co.uk (web archive)
  • , Society for Lincolnshire History and Archeology (web archive)

somerton, castle, this, article, about, castle, lincolnshire, somerton, somerset, which, also, castle, somerton, somerset, located, approximately, mile, west, village, boothby, graffoe, lincolnshire, england, south, city, lincoln, england, site, lying, land, b. This article is about the castle in Lincolnshire For Somerton in Somerset which also had a castle see Somerton Somerset Somerton Castle is located approximately 1 mile 1 6 km west of the village of Boothby Graffoe in Lincolnshire England and to the south of the city of Lincoln England The site is on low lying land between the Lincoln Edge and the River Witham Although Somerton Castle is in the parish of Boothby Graffoe it is in the Manor of Waddington and this portion is often referred to as the Manor of Somerton Castle Antony Bek probably built the castle in 1281 and he gave it to King Edward II in 1309 King John II of France was imprisoned at Somerton Castle between 1359 and 1360 having been taken prisoner after the Battle of Poitiers It continued as crown property until it was sold by Charles I in 1628 since when the castle has continued in private ownership 1 Somerton CastleLincolnshire EnglandSomerton Castle engraving by Samuel and Nathaniel BuckSomerton CastleCoordinates53 07 04 N 0 34 34 W 53 1177 N 0 5760 W 53 1177 0 5760Grid referenceSK 95361 58739Site informationOwnerPrivateOpen tothe publicNoSite historyMaterialsLimestoneMedieval history editAntony Bek inherited Somerton from his mother Eva de Gray and built the castle after being granted a licence to crenellate in 1281 2 3 In 1309 Bek gave the castle as a gift to King Edward II The castle was found to be in poor condition at the accession of King Edward II lead had been stolen from the towers and the great hall and the chapel which were on the west side of the castle were in poor repair After the accession of Edward III in 1330 John Crabbe a military engineer was appointed Constable of the Castle and in autumn of 1334 King Edward visited the castle presumably to authorise repair work A total of 222 was spent during the next two years on rebuilding the outer drawbridge and remaking part of the moat presumably this was the time when the outer bailey to the south of the castle was constructed 2 In late 1335 or early 1336 the Countess Alice de Lacy of Bolingbroke Countess of Lincoln was held and raped at Somerton after being kidnapped from her castle at Bolingbroke by Baron Hugh de Fresne They married later that year although without royal authority and so by order of Edward III they were held captive in separate towers in Somerton Castle Royal assent was granted on 20 March 1336 however de Fresne died in December 1336 and the countess Alice returned to Bolingbroke After Crabbe s death in 1351 2 Stephen Shawe was appointed as Constable and regular repairs took place to the domestic buildings in the inner court Further repairs and alterations took place in 1359 60 when King John II of France was held captive in the castle having been taken prisoner after the Battle of Poitiers Sir Saier De Rochford ancestor of the Rochford family of Stoke Rochford an eminent soldier in the wars of France and High Sheriff of Lincolnshire was allowed two shillings a day for the safekeeping of King John while at Somerton 4 By 1393 the castle was reported as being defective in walls gates towers bridges ditches lead roofing tiling boarding glazing and ironwork and would need the expenditure of 100 to repair In 1408 King Henry VI granted the castle to Sir Ralph Rochford who was High Sheriff of Lincolnshire in that year He was to spend 112 12s 9d on repairs during the next three years The works carried out included making good the roof of the queen s hall with its buttery and pantry and repairing the chapel and chamber of St Christopher The castle was held from the King by the Dukes of Clarence from 1415 until 1478 when George Duke of Clarence was executed 5 The castle was allowed to fall into disrepair during this period and it suffered waste dilapidation and strip from those who held it from the King 5 Later history edit nbsp Somerton Castle Boothby Graffoe Lincolnshire in 1973 The Castle was transferred to the estates of the Duchy of Lancaster by Henry VII 5 and the Castle and its lands were held by De Isney or Disney family A Duchy of Lancaster Survey of 1601 described the castle as being utterly defaced and fallen almost downe to the ground but one of the four towers was standing almost to its full height 5 The property was bought from the Charles I in 1628 by the Corporation of the City of London and it then passed to the Hussey family The print produced by Samuel Buck in 1726 is dedicated to Sir Henry Hussey and this print shows the castle as in much the same state as described in 1601 Sir Henry left Somerton Castle to his aunt Jane Hatcher who died in 1734 6 and it then passed to the Pochin family of Barkby in Leicestershire who sold the castle to Montague Cholmeley of Easton in 1780 nbsp Somerton Castle from the S E in 1850 The property and estate were bought from Sir Montague Cholmeley 1st Baronet in 1812 by the Isaac Marfleet of Bassingham who had been previously leasing the castle the property then passed on to several of the family s descendants 7 until it passed to the Battersby family who sold the castle and surrounding farmland in the mid 1970s About 2010 due to the deterioration of the fabric of the castle buildings Somerton Castle was put on the English Heritage Buildings at Risk register 8 and Ridge amp Morris of Snape in Suffolk were commissioned as architects to draw up plans for the restoration of the castle 9 Planning consents were granted by North Kesteven District Council for additional building work which included a new wing extending to the northwards behind the south front and also the conversion of the 19th century farm buildings into dwellings 10 Architecture and visible remains edit nbsp Plan of Somerton Castle by J S Padley 1850 nbsp Cooling Castle Kent OS map 1964 for comparison with Somerton Castle The medieval castle appears to have most in common in its plan and layout with later castles of the 14th century and early 15th century such as Maxstoke Castle in Warwickshire Wingfield Castle in Suffolk and in particular Cooling Castle in Kent These castles are set in moats with roughly rectangular curtain walls between corner towers Cooling Castle was licensed to crenellate in 1381 11 and in front of the rectangular inner bailey is a trapezoid shaped outer bailey with open backed corner towers This is the arrangement that is indicated in Padley s plan even though the towers are shown as mounds at the corners These open backed artillery towers started appearing in Europe around 1330 and would have been familiar to John Crabbe the Constable of the Castle who came from Flanders In these towers the artillery would be placed on two or three floors and the open backs to the towers gave ventilation from the fumes released by igniting gunpowder This forward defence is likely to have been placed in front of the main gate to the inner bailey of Somerton Castle and the towers would have given the artillery a sweep of about 270º to the south of the castle nbsp Caister Castle from J D Mackenzie s The Castles of England their story and structure A similar layout was adopted for Sir John Fastolf s castle at Caistor by Great Yarmouth in the 1430s Caister Castle built in brick was laid out with three rectangular baileys each of which was surrounded by a water filled moat and fortified with open back towers in the forward bailey One of the corner towers of the rectangular inner bailey is much taller than the other three 12 Some prominent and visible enclosures still surround the site including parts of the moat What remains of the castle walls are incorporated into the present farmhouse The castle has been recognised as an important building and has been classified as a Grade I listed building 3 Gallery edit nbsp Somerton Castle viewed from road nbsp Somerton Castle today nbsp Somerton Castle nbsp Somerton Castle Illustration by James Sandby Padley nbsp Towers at Somerton Castle Illustration by James Sandby Padley nbsp Tower at Somerton Castle Illustration by James Sandby Padley nbsp Tower at Somerton Castle Illustration by James Sandby Padley nbsp North East Tower Interior vaulting nbsp North East Tower plan of interiorReferences edit Colvin 1963 pp 838 839 a b Colvin 1963 p 838 a b Historic England Somerton Castle 326074 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 8 February 2011 Turnor Edmund Collections for the History of the Town and Soke of Grantham Containing Authentic Memoirs of Sir Isaac Newton William Miller 1806 p 143 a b c d Colvin 1963 p 839 Battersby Papers Lincolnshire Archives Battersby papers Lincolnshire Archives http risk historicengland org uk register aspx id 46205 amp rt 1 amp pn 12 amp st a amp ctype all amp crit south west dead link Somerton Castle Lincolnshire Hoare Ridge amp Morris LLP Archived from the original on 15 August 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2015 North Kesteven Planning 14 0292 FUL Goodall 2011 pp 312 313 Goodall 2011 pp 351 353 References editColvin H M ed 1963 The History of the King s Works Vol ii The Middle Ages H M S O Goodall John 2011 The English Castle 1066 1650 Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300110586 Literature editAntram N revised Pevsner N amp Harris J 1989 The Buildings of England Lincolnshire Yale University Press p 660 Blagg T M 1933 Somerton Castle Transactions of the Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire Vol 37 pp 49 60 doi 10 5284 1112079 nbsp Padley J S 1851 Selections from the ancient monastic ecclesiastical and domestic edifices of Lincolnshire 1 Trollope E 1857a Trollope E 1857 The Captivity of John King of France at Somerton Castle Associated Architectural Societies reports and papers Lincoln York Northampton Bedford Worcester Leicester and Sheffield Vol 4 pp 49 64 Trollope E 1857b Somerton Castle and its Builder Associated Architectural Societies reports and papers Lincoln York Northampton Bedford Worcester Leicester and Sheffield Vol 4 pp 83 91 2 Trollope E 1882 Somerton Castle The Archaeological Journal Vol 39 pp 180 3 doi 10 5284 1067651 nbsp Turner T Hudson 1851 1877 2nd ed Some account of the Domestic Architecture of England from the Conquest to the End of the 13th Century Parker Oxford amp London pp 172 3 3 Contains Notes on Somerton Castle by Edward James Willson External links edit nbsp Media related to Somerton Castle at Wikimedia Commons Somerton Castle Lincolnshire History Project Magicjon fsnet co uk web archive Somerton Castle Society for Lincolnshire History and Archeology web archive nbsp England portal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Somerton Castle amp oldid 1220464334, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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