The Settlement of Conisbrough
The name of the town of Conisbrough is older than the establishment of
the present castle. It is derived from the Anglo-Saxon Cyningesburh -
‘the defended burh of the King’- and suggests that the area belonged
to one or other of the Anglo-Saxon kings, before the Norman Conquest. At the
time of the conquest the manor of Conisbrough was held by King Harold who
was defeated in the Battle of Hastings.
In the Domesday survey the Honour
of Conisbrough was a large estate, centred on the burh, and twenty
eight vills (small townships) then belonged to it. Most of these
places are in the Doncaster district. The Honour, once Harold’s, was then in
the possession of William de Warenne, whose family were to remain the owners
for a considerable time.
The first Norman Castle
William,
the first Earl Warenne, was the son-in-law of William I. He had been one of
the King’s original followers from Normandy in 1066, and one of the chief
knights in the campaign of conquest. He was given property by King William
in many different areas of England, his other two chief estates were based
on Castle Acre in Norfolk and on Lewes in Sussex. William’s principal
English holding appears to have been his Yorkshire estate, at the head of
which was Conisbrough. Very little is known of Earl William’s first castle
at Conisbrough, although it is thought to have been of the common motte and
bailey design and probably built at some time around 1070 on the site of the
present stone castle.
In May 1088, William de Warenne was made Earl of
Surrey. Unfortunately, in June of the same year William died from wounds
received in battle, he was succeeded by his son, another William, who was
earl from 1088 until 1138. There is little documentary evidence for the
history of the castle in the late eleventh and twelfth centuries, but the
second earl gave the living and income from the church at Conisbrough to his
father’s priory at Lewes. This gift, and the gift of other churches besides,
was confirmed by the third earl, another William, who succeeded in 1138 and
died on crusade in 1147.
These direct descendants from the first earl and
his wife were close relations of the Kings of England: the second earl was
the grandson of William I and nephew of Henry I and William Rufus. He
married Isabel, daughter of Hugh, third son of Henry I of France. The family
was thus closely linked to the royal nobility of France and England.
Hamelin Plantagenet and the Stone Castle
The
third earl who died in 1147 left no male heir, having only one daughter,
Isabel. She married the son of King Stephen, William de Blois, who became
the fourth Earl Warenne. He died without issue in 1159, and in 1163 Henry II
arranged another marriage for the widowed Isabel. The fifth earl was Hamelin
Plantagenet, Henry’s illegitimate half-brother, son of Geoffrey of Anjou.
Hamelin seems to have spent more time at his Yorkshire castle than any of
the previous earls; he held the earldom for close on forty years, from 1163
until his death in 1202. It was this period that saw the construction of the
great stone keep of the castle and its development as a place suitable for
royalty - King John, nephew of Hamelin, did actually stay here in 1201.
The cylindrical keep probably dates from around 1180, Hamelin seems to have
ordered its construction to his own design, there being no other example of
this type of keep anywhere in the country. The closest parallel to the
Conisbrough keep is found at Mortemer, near Dieppe in France, a castle also
held by the Warenne family. Evidence suggests that the keep at Mortemer is
also the work of Hamelin Plantagenet. It is generally now assumed that the
construction of the stone curtain walls of Conisbrough followed not long
after the keep, but the layout and the planning of the stone buildings
within the bailey may not have been begun until the thirteenth century and
may be the work of Hamelin’s son William, earl from 1202 until 1239.
After
the death of William in 1239, the castle passed to John, his son by his
second marriage to Maud, the widow of Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk. She took
custody of the castle during the minority of her son, who held the manor
from 1239 until 1304. John married Alice, the sister of Henry III. From the
Hundred Rolls (records of the local court assizes) of the period of the
seventh earl’s tenure, there come tales of men and women imprisoned at
Conisbrough, and of the colourful if rather unlawful dealings of the
seneschal and constables of the castle, one of whom, Richard de Heydon, was
charged with ‘devilish and innumerable oppressions’.
The Last Earl Warenne
John died in 1304 and, since his own son William had
been killed at a tournament in Guildford in 1286, he was succeeded by his
eighteen-year-old grandson John. A marriage was arranged for him to Joan de
Barr, granddaughter of King Edward I. This was not a happy marriage and
there were no children; John was thus the eighth and last Earl Warenne. By
1313 Earl John was separated from his wife. Then began a series of efforts
to obtain a divorce which were repeatedly unsuccessful. At last it seemed in
1316 that the divorce would be allowed, but once again judgement went
against Earl John and, rightly or wrongly, he held Thomas, Earl of
Lancaster, responsible for the failure of his case. Intending insult rather
than romance, therefore, Earl John abducted Lancaster’s wife Alice.
Lancaster retaliated by promptly divorcing her and seizing the Warenne
castles of Sandal and
Conisbrough
from his seat at Pontefract in November 1317. At this point King Edward II
intervened and an uneasy agreement was reached, under which Earl Thomas
retained the Yorkshire castles.
Lancaster did not hold Conisbrough for
long , for in 1322 he led a rebellion against the King which ended with the
battle of Boroughbridge. Thomas was captured and tried for treason, found
guilty then executed outside the walls of his own castle at Pontefract.
Subsequently Conisbrough was then held by Edward II until 1326, the king
stayed briefly at Conisbrough in November 1322, in 1324 he ordered the
expenditure of up to 40 marks on repairing the towers and walls of the
castles at Pontefract and Conisbrough.
The castle was delivered back to
John de Warenne in 1326. He seems to have regained security of tenure during
the early years of the reign of Edward III, and certainly by 1331-32. Though
unable to divorce his wife, John had two sons by Maud de Nerford who had
been the wife of Sir Simon de Derby. By a conveyance ratified by the king,
John attempted to secure the tenure of the manor and castle of Conisbrough
for his two sons and for Maud after his death; but the careful plan went
awry, for John outlived all three and died heirless in 1347.
The later Middle Ages
Conisbrough reverted to the Crown and Edward III
conferred the estate on his youngest son, Edmund Langley, whose mother,
Queen Philippa, administered the estate for him while he was still a child.
His tenure lasted until 1402, and the majority of the improvements to the
accommodation of the inner ward most probably date to this time. Of Edmunds
two sons, Edward, Duke of Albemarle, succeeded in 1402 and died in 1415 at
Agincourt. His brother, Richard, Earl of Cambridge, had been beheaded for
treason earlier in the same year, but the castle now passed to his widow,
Maud, who lived at Conisbrough until her death in 1446. The castle then
passed to her stepson, Richard Duke of York, who died at the battle of
Wakefield in 1460; his son succeeded him and in 1461 became Edward IV. Thus
Conisbrough once again became a royal castle and the estate passed to the
Crown, a settlement which was fixed in perpetuity in 1495.
Collapse
By then, however, the castle was probably suffering from neglect.
A survey carried out in 1537-38 by commissioners of Henry VIII, records that
the gates of the castle, both timber and stonework, the bridge, and about
55m (60 yd) of walling between the tower (keep) and the gate had all fallen.
In addition, one floor of the keep had fallen in, so that by this date the
castle had already reached something like its present state of ruin.
It is
because of this early ruination, and because of sympathetic ownership
thereafter, that the castle still survives with its keep largely intact.
During the Civil War of the seventeenth century, many castles were severely
damaged either by bombardment during a siege or deliberate destruction
afterwards, to prevent their further defensive use. However, because the
collapse of the gate and a stretch of its defences had already made
Conisbrough indefensible, it escaped further destruction at this time.
The
remains of the castle were granted by Henry VIII to the Carey family, who
held it for a long period. It was bought by Conisbrough local council in the
1940s, and has been in the guardianship of the nation since 1949. It is now
in the care of English Heritage.
The fame of
Conisbrough
The fame of the castle, spread by Sir Walter Scott’s novel
Ivanhoe, is world-wide. Scott, who must have seen the castle and been deeply
impressed by it, was relaying local tradition when he called it a ‘Saxon’
fortress. The picture he portrays of events and people at Conisbrough in the
reign of Richard I is of course fictitious. By then the keep would just have
been built, but the castle would not yet have had enclosing stone walls.
Conisbrough Castle and The Ivanhoe Trust
The Ivanhoe Trust was founded in
1986 as a joint venture between Doncaster Council and The Dartington Trust
of North Devon. The aim was to create a Trust based on the Dartington model
to assist in the economic, social and environmental regeneration of the
Dearne Valley Communities.
In 1988 the Trust reached agreement with
English Heritage to participate in, what was then, a unique joint venture. A
Management Agreement handed the day-to-day operation of the castle to the
Ivanhoe Trust. This proved to be the forerunner of the English Heritage
policy of devolving control of some of the properties it operates to local
groups.
Since the Ivanhoe Trust took over the management of the castle, a
new Visitor Centre has been constructed, floodlighting has been installed
around the castle and a new car park has been provided. In 1992 the Trust
and English Heritage embarked upon a project to restore the roof and floors
to the castle keep which had been missing since the sixteenth century. On
the 1st April 1995 the keep of Conisbrough Castle was re-opened to the
public.
Sadly however, visitor numbers never reached the projected 60,000 per year;
a peak of 48,000 in 1995 rapidly declined in subsequent years to level out
at around 27,000 per annum, with around 40% of these being school children
on education visits. Unfortunately these visitor numbers were
insufficient to enable the castle to run in a self sustaining manner,
resulting in a gradual decline in services and facilities. Therefore it was
with regret that the decision was taken to hand back the day-to-day
operation of the site to English Heritage in April 2008.