Corfe Castle

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Template:GBthumb Corfe Castle is a small village and ruined castle (Template:Coor dms) dating back to the 11th century, situated in a gap in the Purbeck Hills, five miles south of Wareham, in Dorset, England.

The word "corfe" is from the Saxon for gap, as in the gap in the hills which the castle commands.

Contents

The castle

The oldest surviving structure on the castle site dates to the 11th century, although evidence exists of some form of stronghold predating the Norman Conquest. Edward the Martyr was assassinated at the site on March 18, 978.

Image:Corfecastle3.jpg Construction of a stone hall and inner bailey wall occurred in the 11th century and extensive construction of other towers, halls and walls occurred during the reigns of Henry I, John and Henry III. By the 13th century the castle was being used as a royal treasure storehouse and prison. The castle remained a royal fortress until sold by Elizabeth I in the 16th century to Sir Christopher Hatton her Lord Chancellor.

The castle was bought by Sir John Bankes, Attorney General to Charles I, in 1635.

During the English Civil War, the castle twice came under siege by Parliamentarian forces. Sir John was away from his estate attending on the King so defence of the castle was led by his wife Lady Mary Bankes — "Brave Dame Mary" as she became known.

The first siege, in 1643, lasted for six weeks before the Parliamentarians withdrew with the loss of 100 men.

The second siege, in 1646, was resisted for two months before the castle was betrayed by a member of the garrison. After its capture, the castle was destroyed with explosives and by undermining to ensure that it could never stand again as a Royalist stronghold. In the centuries that followed, the local populace took advantage of this easy source of building material and masonry, door frames and other items originally from the castle can be seen in a number of nearby houses.

After the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, the Bankes family regained their properties. Rather than rebuild or replace the ruined castle they choose to build a new house at Kingston Lacy on their other Dorset estate near Wimborne Minster.

In fiction

Keith Roberts, an English science fiction writer living nearby set his novel Pavane partly around the castle and similar events in an alternate history.

The village

Image:Corfe Castle.jpg Despite its small population, the former royal status of Corfe meant that it was a borough electing two members of parliament. In the 17th and 18th centuries, with the Bankes's owning much of the property and thereby controlling most of the votes, the town was a rotten borough. The Bankes family was able to ensure that at least one of the MPs returned to the House of Commons was a member of the family or a Bankes nominee. The Reform Act 1832 abolished the rotten boroughs and Corfe lost its direct representation. The village and castle were part of Corfe Castle hundred.

The village is constructed almost completely from the local grey Purbeck limestone and comprises two main streets, East Street and West Street, linked at their north end at the Square. Around the square, with its cross commemorating Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee of 1897, are clustered the small collection of shops, the post office, church and pubs. The main route through the village is East Street taking traffic to Wareham in the north and Swanage in the south. Separating the two streets is an area of common land called "the Halves".

As of 2001, the village had a population of 1,429, of which 36 per cent was retired. Template:Ref.

The National Trust owns the castle and much of the village having been bequeathed the property by Ralph Bankes in the 1980s along with the estate at Kingston Lacy. The castle is open to the public, receiving 168,377 visitors in 2004Template:Ref.

The village was for many years the residence of composer Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji. Template:Ref

Events

See also

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External links

References

  1. Template:Note Office for National Statistic, Census 2001 data
  2. Template:Note Michael Habermann & Liane Hansen, 1996. Weekend Edition. National Public Radio; Alistair Hinton, 2000. "Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji."
  3. Template:Note National Trust Annual Report 2004-05sv:Corfe Castle

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