The following is a list of those who
throughout history have been regarded as those responsible for Conisbrough
Castle or the Lands of Conisbrough.
From: “An Illustrated Account of Conisbrough” by Robert Allen Marsh
c.1000
Elfhelm,
a Saxon nobleman, was granted the lands around Kyningesburg by Wulfric Spott,
one of King Ethelred's ministers.
c.1052
Earl Harold,
son of Godwin, Earl of Wessex held the Manor.
c.1066
William de Warenne,
1st Earl of Surrey. William was the son-in-law of William the Conqueror and
had been one of his chief knights at the Battle of Hastings. The Honour of
Conisbrough was his reward for those services. He also received other
estates based on Castle Acre in Norfolk and Lewes in Sussex. He founded the
Priory of St. Pancras at Lewes. The first Earl died in 1088.
1088
William de Warenne,
2nd Earl, son of the 1st Earl. To the Priory at Lewes, founded by his
parents, he gave the 'living' and income from the Church at Conisbrough
together with the Churches at Braithwell, Dinnington, Harthill, Fishlake and
Hatfield and the Chapels of Thorne and Armthorpe. He gave the tithe of eels
from his fisheries at Hatfield to the Abbey of Roche.
1138
William de Warenne,
3rd Earl, son of the 2nd Earl, confirmed the acts of benevolence of his
father and grandfather. He died on Crusade in 1147 leaving a daughter,
Isabel.
1147
Isabel,
daughter of the 3rd Earl married William de Blois, son of King Stephen who
thus became the 4th Earl of Warenne (and Surrey). This Earl was granted
other titles. To those of Warenne and Surrey were added Moreton, Boulogne
and Lancaster. He was further granted the Honours of Eagle and Pevensey. He
died without issue in 1159.
1163
Hamelin Plantagenet,
son of Geoffrey, Earl of Anjou, and half brother of King Henry 2nd became
the 5th Earl on his marriage to the widowed Isabel. It is accepted that he
built the Castle Keep on the site of an earlier wooden stronghold
c.1180-90, and probably the curtain wall soon afterwards. Isabel and
Hamelin made an endowment of 50/- a year for a priest and a chapel within
the castle 1189. Hamelin's nephew, King John, issued a charter at
Conisbrough in 1201 and may have lodged in the Keep. Hamelin was one of a
number of treasurers responsible for raising 70,000 marks
of silver to affect the release of King Richard who had been imprisoned in
Austria on his return from the Holy Land. Hamelin himself contributed
£40.8.7d. He died in 1201 and was buried at Lewes.
1202
William,
son of Hamelin assumed the name de Warenne and became the 6th Earl, William
married Maud, daughter of the Earl of Arundel and on her death in 1215,
married Maud, daughter of the Earl of Pembroke and widow of Hugh Bigod, Earl
of Norfolk. This William is thought to have been responsible for the
buildings within the castle bailey. He died in 1239.
1239
John the
7th
Earl,
son of William by his second wife was only 5 on his father's death and was
made a ward of the King. He married in 1247, aged 12, Alice, the sister of
Henry III, cohabiting with her when he was 17. The 7th Earl held the castle
and manor until 1304. During
this time the Hundred Rolls (records of court assizes) listed wrongful
imprisonments in the castle and unlawful dealings of the seneschal~ and
constables, one of whom, Richard de Heydon, being charged with: "devilish
and innumerable oppressions". John was also involved in several
disagreements between the King and Barons and for a time, lost most of his
possessions. However, he was on the winning side at the Battle of Evesham
(1265) after which the King restored his estates. In 1270 he was in deep
disgrace after he attacked Allan, Lord Zouche of Ash by, during an enquiry
held in Westminster Hall and in 1281 Edward I called on John to show by what
warrant he, " . . . claimed gallows, assize of bread and bee, measures
and rights of shedding blood, free warren on his estates and refusing to
permit the Kings Bailiff to enter his lands to perform their offices, except
his own bailiffs were present."
At the trial John defended his rights very strenuously and apparently
won his case since, by the King's Mandate, " . . . the Archbishop of
Canterbury, the Bishops of Chichester, Durham, Carlisle, Lincoln, Coventry
and Lichfield were directed to offer prayers to the Throne of Grace for the
health of the soul of John de Warenne and granted that all that shall
perform this acceptable service, forty days of indulgence." After an
eventful life the 7th Earl died in 1304.
1304
John the 8th and last Earl de Warenne
was the previous Earl's grandson and succeeded because his father had been
killed in a tournament at Guildford in 1286. John, aged 18 when he succeeded
to the Earldom, made an unhappy marriage to Joan de Barr, granddaughter of
Edward I. There were no children to this marriage and in c.1316 John
had an affair with Maud de Nerford, which incurred the displeasure of the
Bishop of Chichester who excommunicated him. Stow reported that, "the
sayd Earl came to the Byshoppe with armed men, and foure more hasty than the
reste, threatened the Byshoppe, whereupon the Byshoppes men fell on them and
tooke the Earl and the reste and imprisoned them".
Soon after this occurrence, John abducted the wife of Thomas,
Earl of Lancaster, as a result of which, he lost his castles of Conisbrough
and Pontefract to Thomas. During the time that the Earl of Lancaster held
Conisbrough he ordered that timber from the wood there be felled to repair
the chapel roof. This must have referred to a chapel within the inner ward
in addition to that in the keep. On the death of the Earl of Lancaster,
Conisbrough was held by the King.
1322
King Edward II
held Conisbrough and stayed here for a short time. In 1324, the constable
was ordered to spend up to 20 marks to make repairs to the walls and towers
of the castles at Conisbrough and Pontefract.
1326 Conisbrough Castle was returned to
John the 8th Earl.
Although John had been unable to divorce his wife he had had two sons by
Maud de Nerford who was by law the wife of Simon de Derby. By a conveyance
ratified by the King, John attempted to leave the manor to Maud and his sons
but he outlived them all and died without an heir in 1347.
1347
Edmund Langley,
Edward III's 5th and youngest son succeeded to the castle and estate of
Conisbrough. He was 6 years old and during his minority the estate was
administered by his mother, Queen Philippa. During the 36th year of the
reign of Edward III (1363) he was created Earl of Cambridge and in the 9th
year of the reign of Richard II (1386) Duke of York. Edmund's first wife was
Isabel, daughter of Pedro, King of Castille by whom he had two sons, Edward
later to become 2nd Duke of York and in 1399, Duke of Albemarle,
and Richard, Earl of Cambridge. Richard was born at Conisbrough and was
usually referred to as Richard of Conisbrough. Edmund died in 1402.
1402 Edward Duke of Albemarle and 2nd Duke of York succeeded his
father. He married Philippa, daughter of Lord Mohun but died without issue
at Agincourt in 1415. His brother, Richard of Conisbrough, had married Ann
Mortimer by whom he had a son, also called Richard. Richard of Conisbrough
was beheaded for treason against Henry V earlier in the same year that his
brother fell at Agincourt.
1415 The castle and honour were held in dower by Richard of
Conisbrough's widow, who lived at the castle until her death in 1446.
1446 Richard Plantagenet, 3rd Duke of York, son of Richard of
Conisbrough now inherited the honour. Richard married Cicely, sister of the
Earl of Salisbury by whom he had a son, Edward, Earl of March. Richard was
one of the most ambitious men in the kingdom and a fine soldier. He
contended for the crown but was killed at the Battle of Wakefield in 1460.
1460 Edward Earl of March, grandson of Richard of Conisbrough,
inherited the manor. He was acclaimed Edward IV at St. Albans in 1461 when
Conisbrough Castle and Estates once again passed to the crown. This was
confirmed in perpetuity by a settlement dated 1495. A survey conducted in
1538 for Henry VIII, recorded that, ". . . the gates of the castle,
timber and stonework, the bridge and some of the curtain wall have fallen
and one floor of the keep has collapsed". It seemed that by this time
the castle had fallen into the state of ruin that was to save it from
further destruction during the Civil War.
1558 Sir Henry Carey, 1st Lord Hunsdon was
granted, among other honours and lands, the castle and manor of Conisbrough,
to be held in capite (held as tenant-in-chief) of the Queen (Elizabeth) and
her successors, by the 40th part of a Knight's Fee. Sir Henry accompanied
Elizabeth to Tilbury at the time of the Armada. He was created a baron but
his ambition to become Earl of Wiltshire was never
realised.
The Queen visited him on his deathbed to grant him this earldom when
Henry was reported as saying, "Madam, seeing you counted me not worthy of
this honour whilst I was living, I count myself unworthy of it now I am
dying". Henry died in 1596.
1596 George Carey, 2nd Lord Hunsdon succeeded his father. His
marriage produced a daughter but as the castle and manor were confined to
male heirs, on his death, he was succeeded by his brother.
1603 John Carey, 3rd Lord Hunsdon inherited his brother's estates and
was, in turn, succeeded by his son.
1617 Henry Carey, 4th Lord Hunsdon. Henry was created Earl of Dover
in May 1627. On the occasion of the marriage of his son, John, in 1638, a
fine was levied on Henry's manor at Conisbrough and all other of his lands
in Yorkshire for the use of the married couple. (The amount raised is not
known). On Henry's death he was succeeded by his son.
1668 John Carey, Viscount and 5th Lord Hunsdon, 2nd Earl of Dover.
John and his second wife, Abigail, had a daughter, Dame Mary. Dame Mary
married William Heveningham and by a will dated October 1685, Dame Mary
Heveningham and her heirs were to succeed to the Conisbrough and other
estates.
1668 Dame Mary Heveningham, by her will dated July 1691, left her
Conisbrough estates to her granddaughter, Carey Newton. Dame Mary died in
1696.
1696 Carey Newton, directly descended from Sir Henry Carey, Commander
of Elizabeth's army at the time of the threat of a Spanish invasion,
inherited the castle and manor from her grandmother, Dame Mary. Carey Newton
married Edward Coke and made over the manor to him. On the death of her
husband in 1707, she left it to her second son, another Edward, with
provisions to raise cash to pay off her debts and provide allowances for her
other children.
1707 Edward Coke Esq. of Longford. During the ownership of this
Edward it seemed that part of the estate was mortgaged in order to provide
for other bequests in his mother's will. In July 1728, Edward Coke, in
consideration of £3,000 did demise to Matthew Lamb, the castle and manor for
2,800 years, subject to redemption on payment of £3,000, with interest by
Edward or his heirs. During the next few years the estate was further
mortgaged for relatively large sums of money and was much encumbered at the
time of Edward's death in 1733.
1737 In accordance with directions contained in the will of Edward
Coke, the castle and manor were sold for £2,500 to Thomas Osborne,
4th Duke of Leeds from whom it descended to his grandson, George William
Frederick, 6th Duke of Leeds.
???? Sackville Lane Fox, 12th Baron Conyers, son-in-law of the 6th
Duke of Leeds became the next owner until his death in 1888 when the castle
and manor were carried by Marcia, his eldest daughter, to the Pelham family.
1888 Charles Alfred Worsley Anderson Pelharn 4th Earl of Yarborough
of Brocklesby Park, Lincolnshire, became the last private owner of
Conisbrough's ruined castle through his marriage in 1886 to Marcia, eldest
daughter of Lord Conyers.
c.1946
Conisbrough Urban District Council acquired the castle for a nominal sum
from Lady Yarborough. Since
this time much effort and money has gone into the preservation of the keep
and curtain walls and the layout of the inner bailey made more obvious by
careful landscaping. The castle
is now in the care of English Heritage whose representatives, The Ivanhoe
Trust, manage it and a visitors'
centre
contains items of interest about the castle and locality. The Trust
frequently
organise
events designed to attract the attention of the public to this splendid
monument and it is hoped to roof and floor the keep.
During the early 1940s the Duchess of Yarborough graciously gave
permission for the l0th Doncaster, 2nd Conisbrough Scout Troop to hold a
garden party in the inner ward.
Over £20 was raised by charging one old penny admission and another at the
various booths and sideshows.
From: “An Illustrated Account of Conisbrough” by Robert Allen Marsh