Drumburgh Castle

Drumburgh Castle
Cumbria, England

Drumburgh Castle today
Drumburgh Castle
Coordinates grid reference NY265597
Type Pele tower
Site history
Materials Red sandstone

Drumburgh Castle is a medieval pele tower in the village of Drumburgh, in Cumbria, England.

History

A pele tower was originally built on this site, near the village of Burgh, by Robert le Brun in 1307, on the site of a former tower that had been part of Hadrian's Wall.[1] The construction used red sandstone masonry from the wall for its construction.[2] Thomas Dacre rebuilt the castle in 1518, producing what contemporaries described as "neither castle nor tower but a house of strength".[3] The house was altered again between 1678 to 1681 by John Alglionby, producing the current design.[4] The property today has a distinctive first floor doorway and staircase - a later addition to the castle - decorated with the Dacre coat of arms, and has parts of a Roman shrine incorporated into its stonework.[5]

See also

References

  1. Drumburgh Castle, The Gatehouse website, accessed 19 April 2011; Pettifer, p.40.
  2. Pettifer, p.40.
  3. Pettifer, p.40.
  4. Drumburgh Castle, The Gatehouse website, accessed 19 April 2011.
  5. Richards and Clegg, p.177.

Bibliography

Coordinates: 54°55′36″N 3°08′54″W / 54.9266°N 3.1484°W / 54.9266; -3.1484

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, December 30, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.