Dudley Castle

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Coordinates: 52°30′51″N 2°04′48″W / 52.5142, -2.08

Dudley Castle

Dudley Castle
Dudley Castle (West Midlands)
Dudley Castle
Shown within West Midlands
Building
Town Dudley, West Midlands
Country England
Client Earl of Dudley
Coordinates 52°30′51″N 2°04′48″W / 52.5142, -2.08
Construction
Started 8th century
Completed 1530
Demolished 1750 (destroyed by fire)

Dudley Castle is a ruined castle in the town of Dudley, West Midlands, England. Dudley Zoo is located in its grounds. The location, Castle Hill, is an outcrop of Wenlock Group limestone that was extensively quarried during the Industrial Revolution, and which now along with Wren's Nest Hill is a Scheduled Ancient Monument as the best surviving remains of the limestone industry in Dudley. It is also a Grade I listed building. The Dudley Tunnel runs beneath Castle Hill, but not the castle itself.

Contents

History

According to legend, a wooden castle was constructed on the site in the 8th century by a Saxon lord called Dud or Dado.1 However this legend is not taken seriously by historians, who usually date the castle from soon after the Norman Conquest of 10662. It is thought one of the Conqueror's followers, Ansculf, built the first castle and that his son, William Fitz-Ansculf, was in possession of the castle when it was recorded at the time of the Domesday Book of 1086. Some of the earthworks from this castle, notably the 'motte', the vast mound on which the present castle keep now sits, still remain. However the earliest castle would have been of wooden construction and no longer exists.

After Fitz-Ansculf, the castle came into the possession of the Paganel family, who built the first stone castle on the site. However, after Gervase Paganel joined a failed rebellion against King Henry II in 1173 the castle was demolished by order of the king. The Somery's were the next dynasty to own the site and set about building the castle in stone starting in the second half of the 13th century and continuing on into the 14th. The keep (the most obvious part of the castle when viewed from the town) and the main gate dates from this re-building. A chapel and great hall were also constructed.

The last of the male line of Somery, John Somery, died in 1321 and the castle and estates passed to his sister Margaret and her husband John de Sutton. Subsequently, members of this family often used Dudley as a surname. In 1532 another John Sutton (the seventh in the Dynasty named John) inherited the castle but after having money problems was ousted by a relative, John Dudley.

In 1530 the castle was rebuilt as a Renaissance palace by John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland. Dudley was later beheaded, accused of hatching a plot to behead Queen Mary. The castle was later considered as a possible place of imprisonment for Mary Queen of Scots. A century later, the castle became a Royalist stronghold during the English Civil War, but was surrendered to Cromwell's forces in 1646. Parliament subsequently ordered that the castle be partly demolished and the present ruined appearence of the keep result from this decision. However some habitable buidings remained.

The bulk of the remaining habitable parts of the castle was destroyed by fire in 1750, previous to which the living accommodation was used by the Earls of Dudley. The Dudley family then moved to the newly-built Himley Hall approximately four miles away, but were responsible for the site until 1937, when the zoo was established and the castle grounds incorporated into the zoo.

A two-day rock concert was staged at the castle in 2000.

The castle gained fame in 2002 as the venue for the very first live venue for Most Haunted Live on October 31 (Halloween).

The castle also holds the distinction for being the site of the first solid evidence of condoms and their use.34

The maps of Christopher Saxton drawn in 1579 and John Speed in 1610, mark Dudley Castle in the County of Staffordshire not Worcestershire.5

Visitor centre

The castle visitor centre was opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II in June 1994, and amongst other exhibits housed a computer generated reconstruction of the castle as it was in 1550, displayed through hardware that demonstrated the first use of the virtual tour concept, prior to its widespread adoption as a Web-based browser utility. More details of how Her Majesty became the first Royal to experience a virtual world here.

References

  1. ^ Himley House Hotel
  2. ^ Chandler, G. and Hannah, I.C., Dudley: As it was and as it is to-day, B.T.Batsford Ltd., London, 1949
  3. ^ "A History of birth control methods".
  4. ^ "Condom Capers - Condoms, Cathedrals, Castles and Caves".
  5. ^ Richardson, Eric, The Black Country as Seen through Antique Maps, The Black Country Society, 2000. ISBN 0904015602

External links

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  • This page was last modified on 13 November 2008, at 15:19.

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