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Pontefract Castle: part of late Saxon cemetery and town ditch, Norman motte and bailey castle and later medieval enclosure castle

A Scheduled Monument in Pontefract North, Wakefield

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.6955 / 53°41'43"N

Longitude: -1.3039 / 1°18'14"W

OS Eastings: 446057.643873

OS Northings: 422337.441692

OS Grid: SE460223

Mapcode National: GBR MTBQ.H0

Mapcode Global: WHDC6.YC8V

Entry Name: Pontefract Castle: part of late Saxon cemetery and town ditch, Norman motte and bailey castle and later medieval enclosure castle

Scheduled Date: 3 April 1957

Last Amended: 13 July 1992

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1010127

English Heritage Legacy ID: 13298

County: Wakefield

Electoral Ward/Division: Pontefract North

Built-Up Area: Pontefract

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): West Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Pontefract All Saints

Church of England Diocese: Leeds

Details

Pontefract Castle is situated in the town of Pontefract on an outcrop which
formerly commanded two of England's principal highways: the north road and the
route west over the River Aire and the Pennines. The monument consists of a
single area which includes part of the site of the late Saxon
cemetery and town ditch that predated the castle, the eleventh century motte
and bailey castle, and the twelfth to sixteenth century enclosure castle which
remained in use until the mid-seventeenth century. Archaeological remains
will survive outside the area but they are not sufficiently well understood
at this time to be included in the scheduling.
Information on the development of the castle has been gained from a wide range
of documentary sources and also from a number of partial excavations
culminating in a major programme of work carried out between 1982 and 1986 by
the West Yorkshire Archaeological Service. Evidence for a Christian cemetery
belonging to the important tenth century royal town of Tanshelf, the Saxon
forerunner of Pontefract, was found underlying the inner bailey of the castle
near the eleventh century St Clement's chapel. In addition, the outer rim of
a large ditch encircling the Norman motte was found by resistivity survey and
is believed to have been originally part of the town ditch of the Saxon
settlement though it was later modified and utilised as part of the castle
defences.
The first castle comprised an earthen motte, which would initially have been
crowned by a timber palisade and tower, and an open area or bailey which would
have contained domestic and garrison buildings and corrals for cattle and
horses. The stone walls of the later inner bailey overlie the perimeter of
the earlier one, showing it to have been kidney-shaped, with the motte at its
southern end, and measuring c.150m from north to south by c.100m from east to
west. Two of the buildings that occupied the early bailey have been found,
the earliest being St Clement's chapel, the nave and chancel of which are late
eleventh century, and the second surviving in part as a spiral stair and
Norman arch leading into the later gunpowder store. During the twelfth and
early thirteenth centuries the castle was gradually rebuilt in stone, during
which time a curtain wall was constructed around the bailey. Towers were
built into this wall at regular intervals, evidence for their existence being
seen in the fabric of the later medieval Gascoigne and Treasurer's Towers and
in the southern part of the Gatehouse Tower. A substantial part of the
surviving south-west curtain is of twelfth century date, though on the north-
east side, the early wall can be seen only in the foundations of the Constable
Tower. In addition, excavation has revealed the site of another early tower
beneath the fifteenth century kitchen. Documents also record the existence of
Piper Tower dating from the earlier period, though this has not yet been
definitely located.
The keep was first built in stone during the first half of the thirteenth
century, when the pre-existing motte was encased in stone and the gap between
the two gradually filled in as the tower was built upwards. The early motte
survives inside this structure. In form, the stone keep is similar to
Clifford's Tower in York, its standing remains comprising three drum towers
joined in a trefoil shape projecting southwards away from the inner bailey.
Possibly the missing inward facing side was a fourth drum tower, but a
description by John Leland written in about 1530 suggests that it may have
consisted of three narrow projecting towers. In 1374 John of Gaunt ordered
the keep to be heightened and descriptions dating to 1538 and 1643 indicate
that, in its final form, it was three-storeyed, the upper floor being called
by then the `artelere' and the lower floors comprising either five or six
rooms. Below the first floor was a basement and a postern gate led out of the
south-facing tower onto the rampart. From between the south and east towers,
a section of curtain wall ran to the west gate and later formed part of the
west wall of an outer bailey.
In addition to the heightening of the keep, the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries saw the systematic strengthening and reorganisation of the castle.
This included the construction of Swillington and Constable Towers, in the
ditch outside the west curtain and in the north-east curtain respectively, and
also the building of King's Tower and Queen's Tower, both in the north
curtain. These two towers contained royal apartments and were linked by the
late fourteenth or early fifteenth century Great Hall which may itself have
replaced an earlier hall to the west, the building of which then became the
kitchen. Documents refer to repairs being carried out continually throughout
the first half of the fifteenth century, not only to the domestic buildings
but also to the defences. Gascoigne and Gatehouse Towers in particular were
enlarged and strengthened and the upper and lower outer baileys appear to have
been walled at this time though they may, as unenclosed or palisaded wards,
have originated earlier. Very little is left standing of the outer bailey
walls, though their foundations will survive below ground. The only standing
remains are at the south-west corner of the lower ward, in the lower courses
of the modern wall along Castle Garth, and in the more substantial remains of
the barbican that was built in the fourteenth or fifteenth century beyond the
west gate. A medieval road passed through the barbican and west gate before
proceeding between the two outer wards and out again through the east gate.
This road and the east gate are now partially overlain by Castle Garth, as are
the buried remains of a building described as the King's stables.
The castle was founded before 1086 by Ilbert de Lacy, lord of the Honour of
Pontefract. Apart from a period of temporary dispossession by Henry I, it
remained with the de Lacy family until 1194 when it devolved through the
female line to Roger fitzEustace. However, a condition of Roger's inheritance
was that he adopt the name de Lacy. It thus continued in the de Lacy line
until 1311 when Roger's great-grandson Henry died without a male heir.
Through Henry's daughter Alice it passed by marriage to Thomas of Lancaster,
nephew of Edward I. Thomas's opposition to his cousin Edward II culminated in
his execution for treason in 1322, after which his lands were seized by the
king. A faction led by Thomas's brother Henry deposed Edward in 1327, after
which Henry received his brother's titles and estates, passing them on to his
son Henry who was made the first Duke of Lancaster by Edward III in 1351.
After Henry's death the Lancaster estates passed to Edward III's third son,
John of Gaunt, through his marriage to Henry's daughter Blanche. In this way,
in 1399, after Richard II was deposed and succeeded as king by John's son
Henry Bolingbroke, Pontefract became a royal castle. Following a period of
continuous rebuilding that coincided with the Wars of the Roses, it gradually
fell into decay during the sixteenth century when the only new building
appears to have been the construction of the Elizabethan chapel. Between 1618
and 1620, the future Charles I paid out of his own purse for substantial
repairs to be carried out, an investment which benefited him greatly during
the ensuing Civil War. At this time the castle housed a substantial Royalist
garrison and successfully withstood three prolonged sieges before finally
surrendering in 1649. Afterwards it was systematically dismantled by
Parliament but still remains the property of the Queen through the Duchy of
Lancaster.
A number of features are excluded from the scheduling. These include all
modern buildings, fixtures and fittings such as the visitors' centre and
custodian's lodge, the Victorian tea-room and the veterans' shelter,
information boards, standpipe, railings, safety grilles, benches, bins, modern
steps and lighting, the surface of Castle Garth where it passes through the
protected area and the surfaces of all paths, and the greenhouses and other
nursery buildings and fixtures in the outer bailey. The ground beneath these
features is, however, included.

MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.

Source: Historic England

Reasons for Scheduling

Motte and bailey castles are medieval fortifications introduced into Britain
by the Normans. They comprised a large conical mound of earth or rubble, the
motte, surmounted by a palisade and a stone or timber tower. In a majority of
examples an embanked enclosure containing additional buildings, the bailey,
adjoined the motte. Motte castles and motte-and-bailey castles acted as
garrison forts during offensive military operations, as strongholds, and, in
many cases, as aristocratic residences and as centres of local or royal
administration. Built in towns, villages and open countryside, motte and
bailey castles generally occupied strategic positions dominating their
immediate locality and, as a result, are the most visually impressive
monuments of the early post-Conquest period surviving in the modern landscape.
Over 600 motte castles or motte-and-bailey castles are recorded nationally,
with examples known from most regions. As one of a restricted range of
recognised early post-Conquest monuments, they are particularly important for
the study of Norman Britain and the development of the feudal system. Although
many were occupied for only a short period of time, motte castles continued to
be built and occupied from the 11th to the 13th centuries, after which they
were superseded by other types of castle.

Pontefract Castle is a very well-documented example of a major motte and.
bailey castle which developed into an equally important enclosure castle whose
military and administrative significance lasted throughout the Middle Ages and
into the early modern period. It has played a very important role in the
political history of England and been associated with some of the leading
families of the medieval period. Although its surviving standing remains are
limited owing to its being slighted during the seventeenth century, the buried
remains of a wide range of structures and features relating to all phases of
its history, including the period of Saxon settlement, survive within its
three baileys.

Source: Historic England

Sources

Books and journals
Roberts, I, Pontefract Castle, (1990)
Gardiner, K, 'Pontefract Archaeological Journal' in Work in Pontefract Castle, ()
Other
In preparation, Pontefract Castle excavations,

Source: Historic England

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