We all know of Nottingham Castle, perched high on its rocky hill overlooking the city. It was the lair of the wicked Sheriff, and has legendary connections with Robin Hood. It also has amazing caves through which Mortimer escaped, and that “It was from Nottingham Castle that news was announced to the people of England that second half of the reign of Edward IV had begun”. It was also where Richard III and Anne heard the tragic news of their son’s death, and where the widowed Richard stationed himself while awaiting Henry Tudor’s invasion.

The original castle’s actual appearance is not known, but it is believed to have looked like the illustration above, and perhaps more accurately like this:-

The castle as it was known to these great historical figures has disappeared, of course, and became instead:-

Then this incarnation was burned down in riots in 1831:-

The castle was rebuilt, but is now to be “renovated” again, although I do not know how much of its appearance will change. If anything. At the moment it is covered in scaffolding and hidden behind plastic sheets.

What will emerge from this cocoon? The suspense is awful, but we must wait until 2020 to see the eventual butterfly. I haven’t been able to find any satisfactory illustrations of the glamorous new wings that will unfold.

To read more, go to:
https://nottinghamhiddenhistoryteam.wordpress.com/2015/05/25/nottinghamshires-part-in-richard-iiis-story/ and
https://www.nottinghamcastle.org.uk/ and
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-nottinghamshire-24725569


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  1. As I live not far from Nottingham, I know they’re moving the visitor centre and finally joining up the caves to the castle too.

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  2. […] 10th August, is my birthday, and on this date in 1485, the last Yorkist king, Richard III, was in Nottingham preparing for the imminent invasion of his realm by his Lancastrian foe, Henry Tudor, who didn’t […]

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  3. […] sorry, but even before the above fire in 1831, Nottingham Castle didn’t look anything like a proper castle. Gone are the medieval towers and battlements, and […]

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  4. […] after Richard and Queen Anne visited Cambridge on March the 9th–and before they moved on to Nottingham, where they received the terrible news about Edward of Middleham‘s death. They appear to have […]

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  5. […] was much grander, for he was a son of Ralph Neville, 2nd Baron Neville. He became Constable of Nottingham Castle and, like Sir John, was a knight of the […]

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  6. […] Richard must have had some doubts about Rhys’s loyalty, as he asked him to send his son to Nottingham as a hostage (this was not an uncommon or unusually cruel thing for kings to ask, incidentally.) However, Rhys begged him to take account of the child’s young age and Richard did not insist upon the boy going to Nottingham. […]

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  7. […] his army. The author has to be joking, of course. The Tudor maggot stayed safely in Nottingham Castle until the battle was almost over, and only then toddled along to the field to see what was going […]

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  8. […] but these are the two that spring to my mind. Oh, and that as Prince John (along with the dastardly Sheriff of Nottingham) he was one of Robin Hood’s greatest enemies. […]

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