
Flint walls, keeper's house, castle mound in background
'Berkhamsted Castle', is a ruined
Norman Motte and Bailey castle at
Berkhamsted in
Hertfordshire. The castle is said to be unique in having a double
moat ().
The original
fortification dates from
Saxon times. Work on the Norman structure was started in
1066 by
William the Conqueror who later passed the castle to his half-brother,
Robert, Count of Mortain. In the
12th Century, the castle was home to
Thomas Becket,
Chancellor of England and later
Archbishop of Canterbury. In the
14th Century, it became the residence of
Edward, the Black Prince, and
Geoffrey Chaucer was appointed Clerk to the Works. The castle has been owned by the
Duchy of Cornwall since
1337.
History
1066: After the
Battle of Hastings,
William granted the Manor and Honour of
Berkhamsted to his half-brother,
Robert of Mortain, and started work on the castle, at that time a timber structure. Berkhamsted was of some strategic importance, and there was already a
Saxon fort guarding the main route through the valley.
1123:
Henry I held court at the Castle. During the reigns of
Henry I and
Henry II, the castle was in the hands of the
Chancellors, including
Thomas Becket. Extensive building works were undertaken, and the earliest stone buildings date from Thomas's time (1155-1164).
1163:
Thomas Becket, then
Archbishop of Canterbury, was deprived of the castle by
Henry II who accused him of having misappropriated cash.
1191:
Richard I gave the castle to his queen,
Berengaria of Navarre who lived there until Richard’s death in
1199.
1204:
King John granted the castle to his queen,
Isabella of Angoulême, who remained in residence until
1216.
1216: Prince Louis of France (later
Louis VIII) laid siege to the castle. The defenders held out for only two weeks.
1227:
Richard, Earl of Cornwall, younger brother of
Henry III, was granted the castle. He used it as one of his main residences and the administrative centre of the Earldom of Cornwall. His wife
Isabel later died here, following childbirth, in
1240.
1270:
Richard's son, Edmund, the 2nd
Earl of Cornwall, who had been born at the castle, founded a religious house at
Ashridge and installed a small order of monks, the
Bonhommes, to manage it.
1291:
Edward I held a parliament at
Ashridge.
Edward granted Berkhamsted to his second queen,
Margaret of France. On her death,
Isabella of France, queen of
Edward II, succeeded.
1337:
Edward III gave the castle to his son
Edward, the Black Prince, as part of the newly-created
Duchy of Cornwall.
1356:
John II of France was imprisoned in the castle after the
Battle of Poitiers.
1361: The
Black Prince spent his honeymoon at the castle, and hunted in its extensive deer park.
1389:
Geoffrey Chaucer was appointed Clerk to the Works. It is not known how much time he actually spent at the castle, however.
1399: On his accession,
Henry IV granted the castle to his son, later
Henry V. It then passed to
Margaret of Anjou,
Henry VI's queen.
1469:
Edward IV granted the castle to his mother
Cecily Neville, Duchess of York, who lived here for the remainder of her life. After her death, the castle gradually fell into decay.
1580:
Elizabeth I leased the Manor of Berkhamsted, including the ruined castle and the deer park, for the nominal rent of one red rose to
Sir Edward Carey,
Keeper of the Queen’s Jewels. He built Berkhamsted Place on the hill above the castle using stone from the ruins.
The Present Day

The Castle, Jan 2007
The castle is currently (2007) in the care of
English Heritage. The ruins are open to visitors. Admission is free.
External link
★ http://www.berkhamsted-castle.org.uk
Reference
Remfry, Paul Martin, ''Berkhamsted Castle 1066-1495'', published by Dacorum Heritage Trust, nd.