A Short History of Bamburgh Castle.
Most guide books and some history books will
tell you that the story of Bamburgh began in the year AD 547more
of that presently. Try to imagine the sixth century. This is not easy,
as this was a dark, dangerous and violent time. Remember that the Romans
left this country a couple of hundred years previously, leaving the native
Britons to defend themselves. Already, at this time, enemies from abroad
were struggling to gain power in the South Eastern part of the country.
These barbarians came from north Germany and Denmark. They were called
Saxons and Angles, and, if you are English, whether you like it or not,
they were most likely your ancestors. However, if you are of Celtic descent,
the chances are that you are not of the blood of the Saxons. Celts occupied
most of the West Country and all of Wales, which was a thorn in the side
of the Anglo-Saxon.
King Ida, The Flamebearer
Finally, in the year AD 547, King Ida, or to give him his full title,The
Flamebearer, landed his expeditionary force at Flamborough Head
and conquered Northumberland. At this time, Northumberland stretched from
the Humber to The Firth of Forth. This was a large kingdom and the capital
was Bamburgh. King Ida's grandson, Ethelfrith, gave the settlement to
his wife, Bebba, and it was then named Bebbanburgh, in her honour, ending
up with the name it bears today. In the sixth century Bamburgh Castle
looked nothing at all as it appears today. That ancient, revered historian
The Reverend Bede first described Bamburgh as being fortified by a hedge
and then by a timber palisade. It was not until the Norman Conquest that
the castle as we now know it began to take shape. The Normans were the
finest builders of fortifications in the Western world and they made a
formidable castle at Bamburgh, which stood until the end of the Wars of
the Roses. Until that time, the castle had been besieged on numerous occasions,
but was never taken. The invention of cannon spelt disaster for all castles,
and, for the most part, they were either abandoned or left to fall into
disrepair. This is what happened to Bamburgh.
The Forster Family.
Until the Wars of the Roses (14531486) the castle and lands adjacent
had been the property of the Crown. During the latter part of the reign
of Elizabeth 1st she decided to give the castle and lands to the Forster
family - in particular one Claudius Forster. This worthy gentleman had
been a Warden of the Middle March for quite a number of years and, for
services rendered, was presented with this not inconsiderable reward.
To explain Marches one must try to visualise the Scottish
Border country. There are three ways into and out of Scotland. They are
by way of the East, West and Middle Marches. Riever country! They were
lawless bands of cattle thieves and thieves of anything else for that
matter. With Claudius they had almost met their match. He was as much
of a rogue or maybe more so than the rievers on either side of the border.
Now Claudius was firmly seated in what was left of Bamburgh Castle namely
the Keep with walls between 9 and 12 feet thick. He lived until he was
101 years old (which would have made him about 12 years old at the time
of Flodden!) He sired 11 sons and 2 daughters. None of them could match
their father, in any respect. One of the most famous, or infamous, depending
on your viewpoint, must be Tom Forster. It was he and a handful of his
followers who took part in the first Jacobite rebellion in 1715. Tom was
a trifle short of cash at the time, and, with a view to the main chance,
joined the side of the Jacobites. The rebels, thinking they had recruited
a man of some substance, promptly promoted him to General. Tom was delighted
and rode off to battle to face the soldiers of the King. Arriving at the
battlefield he cast his eyes upon the opposition and promptly surrendered.
He was transported to Newgate prison and locked up. Back at Bamburgh Castle
was Tom's sister, Dorothy. A gem! Having heard of the predicament that
Tom had placed himself, she and her maid set off, on horseback, to visit
her brother. She visited him on several occasions, but on the final visit
she saw him in his cell, alone and not with her maid who had accompanied
her on the previous times. Dorothy wore her maid's clothes under her own,
and, at the right time, dressed Tom in the maid's clothes. The guards
by this time had changed and were quite accustomed to seeing two ladies
leaving the cell containing General Tom, little knowing that the General
was now a lady's maid! All three rode back to Bamburgh Castle where Dorothy
hid Tom for two years. He eventually escaped to France by taking a ship
from the mouth of the Waren bum, close to Bamburgh. Portraits of the brother
and sister still hang in the castle, along with a dress worn by Dorothy
along with a pair of her tiny shoes.
Lord Crewe.
The Forster family was now bankrupt, and in the middle of the eighteenth
century sold the castle and lands. Lord Crewe, Bishop of Durham, ably
assisted by Doctor Sharp, purchased the property. This worthy gentleman
built a windmill at the north end of the castle, which ground corn, and
this was distributed to the poor. Amongst other good deeds was his setting
up of a schoolroom in the castle educating young girls for domestic service.
He also set up a system of signals between the Castle and Holy Island
for the protection of seafarers on this particularly hazardous stretch
of coast. On stormy days men on horseback patrolled the beach. A lot of
money could be made from salvage! There are still reminders of this at
the castle in the shape of massive iron chains, each link of which weighs
about 100 pounds. These chains were wrapped around a beached ship and
then pulled up onto the hard, out of harms way. Teams of Shire horses
carried out this heavy work.
Lord Armstrong.
After the end of the regime of Lord Crewe, the castle was bought and
splendidly restored by the 1st Lord Armstrong at the latter part of the
19th Century. The cost of the restoration at this time was a staggering
one million pounds. The castle remains in the ownership of the Armstrong
family.
Archaeology.
In the early 1970's, an archaeological excavation was carried out at
the north end of the castle grounds. A Dr. Hope-Taylor oversaw this. At
this "dig" he made what he described as "the most important discovery
of my career". It was accurately estimated at the scene of the dig that
to remove and sift through one foot of soil was to go back 200 years.