The Bigod Family

The Bigod Shield
The Bigod family were a medieval Norman family who were created the second Earls of Norfolk who were renowned for their great castles in Suffolk, which still grace the county's skyline today. In the 12th century, Norwich Castle became a stronghold for their political dealings and treacherous manoeuvrings, for which the Bigods are famous for.

They had a taste for rebellion against the King which is ironic that their power in the East Anglia was built on loyalty to the crown.

Roger Bigod was a second rank Norman nobleman, who following the
Norwich Castle
conquest of England in 1066 became a royal advisor to King William I. The rebellion of Ralph Guader, Earl of Norfolk at the time, from Norwich in 1075 had created a vacuum in the east, and Bigod’s lands, combined with those from other forced dispossessions, allowed Bigod to establish himself in the east. His allegiance and landholdings further elevated the Bigods status in the king's court.

Following William’s death in 1087, the throne of England became a precarious position in the Anglo-Norman Kingdom. William’s lands were divided between his eldest son Robert 'Curthose', who became Duke of Normandy, and his second son William 'Rufus' who was made King of England. Robert was ambitious, impatient to claim his inheritance; he had been a thorn in the side of his father and was never likely to settle for only a share of the kingdom. This division put magnates such as the Bigods in a dilemma. Twenty years after the conquest they had to choose between loyalty to their king, or their duke, and their Norman roots.

Time of Signing
A story of Ida de Tosny, Wife of
Roger Bigod
How where the Bigods? Why did they rebel against the King? How did they

regain the title? These are all questions I want to find out and I wish to share with all of you.


Sit back and enjoy the posts on the Bigod family.
Roger Bigod

High Sheriff  of Norfolk & Suffolk

Let’s start at the beginning with Roger Bigod.

Roger was from a poor family of Norman knights who were considered second ranking nobles in those days. He came to England during the Norman Conquest of 1066. He was given lands in East Anglia and created High Sheriff of Norfolk and Suffolk as reward for his loyalty to his Duke and King. The Doomsday Book, written in 1086, said that Roger held six lordships in Essex, 117 in Suffolk and 187 in Norfolk.

In 1075 Ralph Guader,  a Breton who was the first Norman constable of the castle,
Norwich in the 11th Century
from began a rebellion Norwich, which was the heart of Bigod’s lands, had created a vacuum in the east.  Bigod along with Guader intended to join together to remove William from the throne but are thwarted by the Earl of Hereford, and the castle became under siege from the Royal Army led by Lanfranc. After three months of deprivation the besieged where allowed to leave unharmed.

Following the death of William the Conqueror in 1087, the throne of England became a precarious position and according to his will his lands were to be divided between his eldest son Robert, who became Duke of Normandy, and his second surviving son William who was crowned King of England. This division put the Bigod’s claim to East Anglia in a dilemma. Twenty years after the conquest they had to choose between loyalty to their king, or their duke, and their Norman roots.

Back in Normandy, Bigod had become an under-tenant of Odo of Bayeux, who was the leading figure in the revolt against Rufus in England and make Robert King and Duke. The key military strategy of the 11th century was the Norman's use of castles to establish their control over the land, and this was something that the rebels were quick to exploit. Across England, in anticipation that Robert would invade from Normandy to support their move, some of the most powerful men in the country moved to secure castles in their region. For Roger Bigod the royal castle at Norwich was a prime target, and it was duly seized.    

William was an astute politician and sought to divide the rebels; offering to them more English lands, and cautioning them not to oppose the decision of the Conqueror. Through a combination of cajoling, threats, and brute force, William succeeded in suppressing the rebellion. After a lengthy siege at Rochester, Odo was captured and Robert’s position in Normandy was consistently undermined by his younger brother.
Bigod's involvement with the rebel’s cause was brief, and his realignment with the King indeed proved profitable and was made the royal advisor.

When William died in a tragic accident during a hunting trip (what really happened is not clear) on the 2nd August 1100 is younger brother Henry became King. There was an attempt to Henry with Robert, but this time Roger Bigod stayed loyal to the King.

In 1120 another drama about the issue of succession once more plunged the Anglo-Norman Kingdom into conflict. In November of that year the White Ship sank off Barfleur taking the life of the only legitimate male heir to Henry's throne. Among the other casualties of the disaster was William Bigod. The event was to prove as fateful for the fortunes of the Bigod family as it was for the crown.
Framlingham Castle

Sometime before his death in 1147, he acquired the manor of Framlingham that was to become so indelibly linked to the Bigod name, his lands then passed to his second son Hugh as his eldest son William had drowned on the White Ship. Roger also had 3 daughters: Gunnor, Cicely and Maud by his wife Adeliza de Tosny.

Hugh Bigod

1st Earl of Norfolk
Hugh Bigod was not the nicest man you could meet.

He was the second son of Roger and was born in 1095 at Belvoir Castle. After the death of his older brother William, Hugh became heir to the Bigod fortune. Hugh succeeded his aunt Albreda, heiress of her brother Berengar de Tosny, in holding lands in Yorkshire and in Normandy and in 1122 he became Constable of Norwich Castle.

When King Henry I died he supported Stephen’s claim to the throne over the legitimate heir, Matalida. Suprise, suprise. He claimed that Henry had wanted Stephen to become King over Matilda. He like so many other barons didn’t want to follow a woman and a man should sit on the throne.

Civil War
Civil war began as Matalida fought her usurping cousin for the crown. Her greatest triumph was in Febuary 1141, when her forces defeated and captured King Stephen at Lincoln; he was made a prisoner and effectively deposed. Her advantage lasted only until July of that year, and she released Stephen in December in return for her half brother, Robert Duke ofGloucester, who was captured by the enemyu. In 1147, Maud was finally forced to return to her husband Geoffrey in Anjou after the death of her brother who was her strongest supporter.

In 1136 Stephen was stricken with sickness and word was that he was on his death bed was quickly spread abroad. A rising of the turbulent barons necessarily followed, and Bigod was the first to take up arms. Hugh seized and held Norwich; but Stephen, who was quickly recovering laid siege to the city and Hugh was compelled to surrender. Stephen spared the Bigod who in return remained faithful.

In 1140 Bigod declared for the empress, but documents show that by the next year he is in the ranks of Stephen's army fighting in the disastrous First Battle of Lincoln, after which the Earl deserted him and assumed a position of armed neutrality during the rest of the war.

In 1153, Matilda’s eldest son Henry, Duke of Normandy, landed in England to assert his claim to the throne and Bigod vested his interests with the rising power, and held out in Ipswich against Stephen's forces.

On Henry II's coronation in December 1154, Bigod at received confirmation of the possession of the earldom and stewardship by charter issued in January of the next year. The first years of the new reign were spent in restoring order to the shattered kingdom, and in breaking the power of the independent barons, which had grown out of control during King Stephen's reign.

It was not before long before Bigod started to go against the king. He grew restless with measures such as the scutage, a fee paid by vassals in lieu of military service, which became the central feature of Henry II's military system of operation by 1159. The Earl showed signs of resistance, but was at once put down. In 1157 Henry II marched into the eastern counties and received the earl's submission.

After this incident Hugh Bigod makes no significant appearances in the chronicles for some time; he is named among those who had been excommunicated by Becket, in consequence of his retention of lands belonging to the monastery of Pentney in Norfolk.

The Bigod Family Tree
In 1173, the young crowned Prince Henry raised a revolt against his father. This gave Hugh Bigod, yet another chance for rebellion, along with the league of the English barons with the kings of France and Scotland in his favour. He at once became a leader in the cause, perhaps eager to revive the feudal power, which Henry II had curtailed. Norwich Castle was promised by the young prince as his reward.

The rebellion was crushed and Hugh was punished. He was compelled to surrender his castles but Bigod kept his lands and his earldom, and lived at peace with Henry II until his death reportedly in 1177 in Palestine.

Hugh had three sons by two wives. His first wife was Juliane de Vere, the daughter of Aubrey de Vere  II and Adeliza de Clare, who he married 1140. They had one son together Roger and the marriage was dissolved in 1468 when Roger was 7. Juliane had been beaten by her husband and able to conceive any more children.

Hugh married again to the daughter of Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick. Gundreda gave him two sons, Hugh and William.

Hugh even death created problems in his family as we will soon find out.
Norwich Castle

Norwich is a city on the River Wensum in the beautiful rural county of Norfolk. During the 11th century, Norwich was the largest city in England after London, and one of the most important places in the kingdom.
Norwich Castle

When the Normans conquered England in 1066, Norwich had 25 churches and a population of over 5,000 English Saxons. With its easy access to Europe via the river Yare made it a thriving trade centre, but the Normans did not realise the potential of the town and area.

The heart of Norwich at that time was based around the ancient crossroads at Tombland where the market place and the houses of the officials who administered the town. The Normans looked for high ground to build their castle. Ninety-eight Saxon homes were demolished to build the William’s royal palace.

Shortly after the castle was built Ralph Guader the Earl of East Anglia, tried to seize it but failed and escaped to France leaving his wife, Emma at Norwich Castle. William’s army of over 300 men, laid seize to the castle for three months and Emma had no choice but surrender.

William returned to Norwich at Christmas in 1075, and ordered that many of the castle’s defenders were executed or had their hands cut off or their eyes cut out. By 1122 the castle was complete and William’s son, King Henry I stayed at the castle.

In 1100, work began on a stone keep to replace the timber castle which was built of flint and faced with stone from Caen, Normandy, France. It took 20 years to complete the task.

The Castle and its fee (the area covered by the outer defences) were controlled by the Sheriff of Norwich, who was responsible directly to the King. The Cathedral Priory was a law onto itself, and controlled the area of the Cathedral precincts which are still walled off to this day.

Small conflicts between the Normans, Saxons and Vikings continued, but eventually the town became stable enough to receive a royal charter from Henry II in 1158 and another one from Richard the Lionheart in 1194.

Bigod Crest
During the Revolt of 1173–1174 when Henry II's sons rebelled against him starting a civil war, Norwich Castle was put in a state of readiness. Hugh Bigod, 1st Earl of Norfolk was one of the more powerful Earls who joined the revolt against Henry. With 318 Flemish soldiers that landed in England in May 1174, and 500 of his own men, Bigod advanced on Norwich Castle. They captured the castle and took fourteen prisoners who were held for ransom. When peace was restored later that year, Norwich was returned to royal control.

The Normans introduced the Jews to Norwich and they lived close to the castle. A cult was founded in Norwich in the wake of the murder of a young boy, William, for which the Jews in Norwich were blamed. In Lent 1190, violence against Jews erupted in East Anglia and on 6th February (Shrove Tuesday) it spread to Norwich. Some fled to the safety of the castle, but those who did not were killed.

When the barons rebelled against King John in 1215, the Prince Louis of France was invited to seize the throne of England. Louis captured Norwich Castle in 1217 and plundered the town.

The town was again plundered in 1266 by 'disinherited barons'.

In 1297 work began on building the city walls for 37 years. All inhabitants had to contribute to the cost. The walls and the 12 gates helped control the influx of people into the town, and the collection of tolls.
In 1349, the Black Death arrived in Norwich, and further outbreaks of the plague in 1362 and 1369 led to the deaths of over a quarter of the population.

In 1380 a charter was obtained giving the Bailiffs and committee of 'Twenty Four' who were rich merchants, the power the make and alter by-laws. A charter in 1404 replaced the Bailiffs with a Mayor and two Sheriffs, but control of the city was still in the hands of the rich merchants. Two more charters in 1414 and 1417 made Norwich a legal corporation and a county in itself.

In the 14th century, Norwich Castle was no longer a favourite residency of the King but was used instead as a prison but no prisoners were kept there until the 15th century. 

By 1707 prisoners were escaping due to bad repair of the castle so they were kept in chains. By 1810 only a few were chained up as most prisoners were sentenced to death; flogging was not common at Norwich prison.

It was no different to any other prison and by the late 18th Century the gaoler charged the prisoners for almost everything including, furniture, bed clothes, drink, visitors and for releases. The poor were given a bread allowance and relied on friends or other people for food. 

During 1824 the prison was rebuilt to accommodate 255 prisoners and 250 prisoners in 1845. Tunnels were built from the Shirehall to the castle, to transport prisoners. Tunnels also ran from the Guildhall, the Cathedral and the Crown Derby Pub.  On the 2nd of August 1887 the prisoners were transferred to the new prison.

While the castle was a prison, Saturday was the day for the hangings on the bridge between the two gatehouses, attracting up to 30,000 onlookers. During 1849 trains were laid on for the hanging of James Bloomfield Rush for the murder of Isaac Jeremy who was the recorder of Norwich) and his bones were buried within the castle walls. Robert Kett was captured and hung from the top of the castle for his rebellion against Edward VI. A hanging in 1854 lasted 5 minutes with the person struggling and the last pubic hanging was in 1867. Some prisoners were burnt at the stake in the castle ditches. 

Norwich Castle was purchased in 1887 to become a museum and still is today, the castle was a prison for 900 years.

Ghosts and Death

Norwich Castle’s oldest ghost is King Gurgunt. During roman times he built a castle at Norwich, and when he died the mound that the castle is now on was built for him and it is thought that he still sits on the mound, with a sword in hand and next to a table piled with silver and gold.

Martha Alden
Kett’s ghost is reported to have been seen hanging from the top of the castle, rotting in a swinging cage.

The most popular and most sighted ghost of the castle is of a woman in black. She was first seen in 1820 by several prisoners who were scared half to death.  She is thought to be wearing Victorian clothing and wanders around the art exhibition area of the museum; she turns the corner and vanishes. This area where she haunts was once part of the prison. She has also been seen in the grounds of the castle, floating around and the staff of the museum have witnessed in this area.

This is Martha Alden, who lived at Attleborough with her husband and on the 18th July 1807, she murdered her husband by cutting off his head with a billbrook, she then proceeded to take her husbands’ body to a dry ditch in the garden with help from Mary Orvice before moving it two days later to a pond on a nearby common and the body was soon discovered. 

Martha’s defence for killing her husband was that he had beaten her, threatened to kill her and was drinking away their inheritance. Martha’s hanging took place on the 31st July 1807 to a rowdy Attlebrough crowd, on a hurdle which represented a mark of shame. Once she had died her body was handed over for dissection. The crowd burnt the cottage down that she once lived in, but a few days later a ghostly figure was seen on the castle hill and it was identified as Martha.

Henry Kable and Susannah Holmes

Two of Norwich Castle’s most famous inmates were Henry Kable and Susannah Holmes.

Henry was born in 1763 in Laxfield, Suffolk as the son of Henry Kable and Dianna Fuller. Susannah was born in Surlingham, Norfolk in 1763.

Kable was known for being a businessman, but was convicted of burglary at Thetford, Norfolk, on 1st February 1783 and sentenced to death. This was commuted to transportation for fourteen years to America, but the American Revolution meant that transportation to there was no longer possible. Henry was returned to the Norwich Castle prison.

Susannah Holmes was sentenced to death after being found guilty of theft from the home of Jabez Taylor. Mr. Justice Nares donned his black cap and sentenced Susannah to be ‘hanged by the neck until she was dead’. The judge who passed sentence then recommended that she be given a reprieve, which was granted by the king.  was then sentenced for transportation to the American colonies for 14 years.

Susannah and Henry began a relationship whilst prisoners.

In 1786 Susannah gave birth in her Castle cell to a baby boy who she called Henry. That same year mother and baby were sent to Dunkirk prison at Plymouth to await transportation. An order from London forbade Henry from going with Susannah and their child. He must have thought he would never see his family again.
Mother and baby were also cruelly separated. Captain Bradley who was in charge of the prison had orders only to receive Susannah and turned her baby away. “The frantic mother was led to her cell execrating (cursing) the cruelty of the man and vowing to put an end to her own life.”

A man called John Simpson, the Norwich prison warder who had escorted mother and child to Plymouth took the baby to London to see Home Secretary Lord Sydney who was finalising plans for the first convict fleet to sail for Australia. Simpson was refused entry but slipped in a side door only to be told that he would have to wait several days to see Lord Sydney.
“Not long after, he saw Lord Sydney descend the stairs and he instantly ran to him. His Lordship shewed an unwillingness to attend to an application made in such a strange and abrupt manner. But Mr. Simpson described the exquisite misery he had been witness to and expressed his fears that the unhappy woman in the wildness of her despair should deprive herself of existence.”

Sydney not only ordered that mother and child be reunited but gave instructions that Henry should be allowed to join them as well. So Simpson collected Henry Kable from Norwich. Together with the baby, they made the final journey to Plymouth and a remarkable reunion.

The new family were transported to Australia in the very first famous fleet of convicts. Susannah and Henry were married among on 10th February 1788 in Sydney; they were the first to marry in the new colony.
They fought and won the first court case in Australia’s history. Henry became the Colony’s first Chief Constable and the first of these reluctant settlers to step ashore on Australia.

In the years that followed the Kables thrived. At first, conditions were harsh in the primitive hovels gathered round the bay. Famine was ever-present. But Henry was undaunted. He was made an overseer of convict gangs, then a constable and finally Governor Phillip appointed him as the first Chief Constable of New South Wales. As with so much of this young family’s life you simply could not make it up.

Susannah gave birth to ten more children and all but one survived. The family grew rich and powerful. For a while Henry ran a public house called the Ramping Horse, the first stage house in Australia, was named after Rampant Horse Street in Norwich.

The first ship of any size in the new colony was named after their eldest daughter Diana. It was built by Henry as part of a fleet that traded across the Pacific.

Diana married a senior civil servant who had come to help establish the colony. It was Australia’s first ‘society’ wedding. By then her parents had served their sentence and the family had grown wealthier with several estates and trading partnerships.

Henry Kable died in 1846 at the age of 82 ad was buried alongside Susannah who had died 1825.
Ten generations later the dynasty they founded is thriving and meets appropriately enough at Kable’s restaurant in Sydney to remember their celebrated forebears who famously became known as the First Fleeters.

Susannah is regarded as one of Australia’s founding daughters. A few years ago she was voted one of that country’s most influential historic figures.


Westminster Palace

Westminster is known as the Houses of Parliament in the City of Westminster, London but it was once a
Westminster
royal palace.

The Palace of Westminster was strategically important during the Middle Ages, due to its location on the banks of the River Thames. St Edward the Confessor, built Westminster Palace at about the same time as he built Westminster Abbey (1045–50). The oldest existing part of the Palace, Westminster Hall, dates from the reign of King William II.

Westminster was the monarch's principal residence in the late Medieval period and the Parliament, the Curia Regis (Royal Council), met in Westminster Hall (although it followed the King when he moved to other palaces). The first official Parliament of England, met in 1295 and almost all subsequent Parliaments have met there.

Westminster became increasingly important as the centre of government and royal authority during the reign of King Henry III. Westminster Hall was built north of the great hall around 1270, and the Court of Common Pleas to be located within the Palace, as well as Courts of the King's Bench and of Chancery.

In 1245, the first mention is made of a royal throne which stood on a dais against the south wall of Westminster Hall. The throne symbolised the King's continuous presence at the ceremonial heart of the Palace, and was occupied during great occasions of state.

In 1310, the Chancery (the administrative branch of the Crown) established its headquarters in the Hall. These developments firmly established Westminster as the royal seat of government.

Henry III regularly occupied the palace during public occasions. The King was expected to make generous gifts of alms, and Henry did not stint in this respect. To mark great feasts, he distributed vast quantities of food to the poor. In order to accommodate the numbers, the old and sick were fed in Westminster Hall, the children in the Queen's Chamber, and the remaining poor in the Painted Chamber.

Elizabeth of York
Two important women in history were born at Westminster: Elizabeth of York and Margaret Tudor. Elizabeth of York was born on 11th February 1466 and was the eldest child of King Edward IV and Queen Elizabeth Woodville. Margaret Tudor was born on 28th November 1489 at Westminster Palace as the eldest daughter of Henry VII of England and Elizabeth of York, and was the elder sister of Henry VIII.

The Gunpowder Plot is a well known plan to blow up the Houses of Parliament and kill the King during the State Opening of England's Parliament on 5th November 1605, as the prelude to a popular revolt in the Midlands during which James's nine-year-old daughter, Princess Elizabeth, was to be installed as the Catholic head of state. The plot failed and the conspirators were executed.

On 16th October 1834, a fire broke out in the Palace after an overheated stove used to destroy the Exchequer's stockpile of tally sticks set fire to the House of Lords Chamber in which both houses were destroyed. Westminster Hall was saved thanks to fire-fighting efforts and a change in the direction of the wind. The Jewel Tower, the Undercroft Chapel and the Cloisters and Chapter House of St Stephen's were the only other parts of the original Palace to survive.

Immediately after the fire, King William IV offered the almost-completed Buckingham Palace to Parliament, hoping to dispose of a residence he disliked. The building was considered unsuitable for parliamentary use, however, and the gift was rejected.

In his speech opening Parliament in 1835, the King assured the members that the fire was accidental, and left it to Parliament itself to make "plans for [its] permanent accommodation." Each house created a committee and a public debate over the proposed styles ensued. The neo-Classical approach, similar to that of the White House and the Federal Capitol in the United States, was popular at the time and had already been used by Soane in his additions to the old palace, but had connotations of revolution and republicanism, whereas Gothic design embodied conservative values. The committee in the House of Lords announced in June 1835 that "the style of the buildings should be either Gothic or Elizabethan". On 14 July 1835 a Royal Commission was appointed and the chairman was Charles Hanbury-Tracy and the other members were Edward Cust, Thomas Liddell, the poet Samuel Rogers and the artist George Vivian. The Commission accepted the recommendation of a competition, and architects began submitting proposals following some basic criteria.


During the bombing of London during the Second World War, Westminster was hit by bombs on fourteen separate occasions. One bomb fell into Old Palace Yard on 26th September 1940 and severely damaged the south wall of St Stephen's Porch and the west front. The statue of Richard the Lionheart was lifted from its pedestal by the force of the blast, and its upheld sword bent, an image that was used as a symbol of the strength of democracy, "which would bend but not break under attack". Another bomb destroyed much of the Cloisters on 8th December.
Warwick Castle

Warwick Castle
Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, is a medieval castle built by William the Conqueror in 1068 and the original wooden motte-and-bailey castle was rebuilt in stone in the 12th century. During the Hundred Years War, the castle was refortified, resulting in one of the most recognisable examples of 14th century military architecture. It is recognised as the home of the most powerful family of the 15th century: the Nevilles.

An Anglo-Saxon settlement was established on the site in 914 with fortifications instigated by Ethelfleda, daughter of Alfred the Great. Ethelfeda established one of ten settlements which defended Mercia against the marauding Danes as its position allowed it to dominate the Fosse Way, as well as the river valley and the crossing over the River Avon. Though the motte to the south-west of the present castle is now called "Ethelfleda's Mound", it is in fact part of the later Norman fortifications, and not of Anglo-Saxon origin.

William the Conqueror built a castle at Warwick in 1068 to maintain control of the Midlands as he advanced northwards. Building a castle in a pre-existing settlement could require demolishing properties on the intended site and four houses were torn down to make way for the castle. William appointed Henry de Beaumont, the son of a powerful Norman family, as constable of the castle and in 1088, de Beaumont was made the first Earl of Warwick. He founded the Church of All Saints within the castle walls by 1119; the Bishop of Worcester, believing that a castle was an inappropriate location for a church, removed it in 1127–28.

In 1153, the wife of Roger de Beaumont, 2nd Earl of Warwick, was tricked into believing that her husband was dead, and surrendered control of the castle to the invading army of Henry of Anjou, later King Henry II. Roger de Beaumont died on hearing the news that his wife had handed over the castle. Henry later returned the castle to the Earls of Warwick as they had been supporters of his mother during the civil war between Stephen of Blois and Empress Matilda (The Anarchy 1135–54).

Thomas Beaumont
During the reign of King Henry II the motte-and-bailey was replaced with a stone castle in which the new castle took the form of a shell keep with all the buildings constructed against the curtain wall. During the barons' rebellion of 1173–74, the Earl of Warwick remained loyal to King Henry II, when the castle was used to store provisions. The castle and the lands associated with the earldom passed down in the Beaumont family until 1242 when Thomas de Beaumont died the castle and lands passed to his sister, Lady Margery, countess of Warwick and when her husband died soon afterwards she married John du Plessis in December 1242.
During the Second Barons' War of 1264–67, William Maudit, a supporter of King Henry III and the castle was taken in a surprise attack by the forces of Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester in 1264. Maudit and his wife were taken to Kenilworth Castle and held until a ransom was paid. After his death in 1267, the title and castle passed to his nephew William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick. Following William's death, Warwick Castle passed through seven generations of the Beauchamp family, who over the next 180 years made additions to the castle.

The line of Beauchamp earls ended in 1449 when Anne de Beauchamp, 15th Countess of Warwick, died and Richard Neville became the next Earl of Warwick through his wife's inheritance of the title. Richard is known as The Kingmaker as he helped Edward of York to claim the crown.

During the summer of 1469, Neville rebelled against King Edward IV and imprisoned him in Warwick Castle. Neville attempted to rule in the king's name however, constant protests by the king's supporters forced the Earl to release the king. Neville was killed at the Battle of Barnet, fighting against Edward IV in 1471.

George Plantagenet
Warwick Castle then passed to his son-in-law, George Plantagenet. George was executed in 1478 and his lands passed onto his son Edward Plantagenet, 17th Earl of Warwick; however, Edward Plantagenet was only two at his father’s execution so his lands were taken in the custody of The Crown. After the Battle of Bosworth, Edward Plantagenet was held in the Tower of London until he was executed for high treason by Henry VII in 1499.

While in the care of The Crown the castle underwent repairs and renovations using about 500 loads of stone. The castle, as well as lands associated with the earldom, was in Crown care from 1478 until 1547, when they were granted to John Dudley with the second creation of the title the Earl of Warwick and during his appeal for ownership of the castle Dudley said of the castle's condition: "... the castle of its self is not able to lodge a good baron with his train, for all the one side of the said castle with also the dungeon tower is clearly ruinated and down to the ground". Warwick Castle fell into decay due to its age and neglect, and Dudley made no repairs to the castle.

Queen Elizabeth I visited the castle in 1566 during a tour of the country, and again in 1572 for four nights where a timber building was erected in the castle for her to stay in, and Ambrose Dudley, 3rd Earl of Warwick, left the castle to the Queen during her visits. When Ambrose Dudley died in 1590 the title of Earl of Warwick became extinct for the second time.

In 1604, the castle was given to Sir Fulke Greville by King James I and was converted into a country house. Whilst the castle was undergoing repairs, it was involved in the Gunpowder Plot of 1605. The conspirators involved awaited news of their plot in Dunchurch in Warwickshire and when they discovered the plot had failed they stole cavalry horses from the stables at Warwick Castle to help in their escape.

Fulke Greville 
When the title of Earl of Warwick was created for the third time in 1618, the Greville family were still in possession of Warwick Castle. Fulke Greville spent over £20,000 (around £3 million today) renovating the castle making it "a place not only of great strength but extraordinary delight, with most pleasant gardens, walks and thickets, such as this part of England can hardly parallel".

On 1st September 1628 Fulke Greville was murdered in Holborn by his manservant: Ralph Haywood—a "gentleman"—who stabbed the baron in the back after discovering he had been left out of Greville's will. Greville died from his wounds a few days later.

Under Robert Greville, 2nd Baron Brooke, the castle’s defences were enhanced in 1642 in preparation for attack during the First English Civil War when garden walls were raised, barricades of beams & soil to
mount artillery were constructed and gunpowder & wheels for two cannons were obtained. Greville was a Parliamentarian, and on 7th August 1642 a Royalist force laid siege to the castle. Greville was not in the castle at the time and the garrison was under the command of Sir Edward Peyto. William Dugdale, acting as a herald, called for the garrison commander to surrender the castle, but he was refused. The besieging army opened fire on the castle, to little effect.

... our endeavours for taking it were to little purpose, for we had only two small pieces of cannon which were brought from Compton House, belonging to the Earl of Northampton, and those were drawn up to the top of the church steeple, and were discharged at the castle, to which they could do no hurt, but only frightened them within the castle, who shot into the street, and killed several of our men.

The siege was lifted on 23rd August 1642 when the garrison was relieved by the forces of Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex, and the Royalists were forced to retreat to Worcester. After the Battle of Edgehill in 1642, prisoners were held at Warwick Castle.

During the Second English Civil War prisoners were again held at the castle. A garrison was maintained in the castle complete with artillery and supplies from 1643 to 1660, at its strongest it numbered 302 soldiers. In 1660 the English Council of State ordered the castle governor to disband the garrison and hand over the castle to Robert Greville, 4th Baron Brooke.

The state apartments were found to be outmoded and in poor repair. Under Roger and William Hurlbutt, master carpenters of Warwick; extensive modernization of the interiors was undertaken, 1669–78. To ensure that they would be in the latest taste, William was sent down to Dorset to make careful notes of the interiors recently finished at Kingston Lacy for Sir Ralph Bankes to designs by Sir Roger Pratt. On 4 November 1695 the castle was in sufficient state to host a visit by King William III.

Francis Greville, 8th Baron Brooke, undertook a renewed programme of improvements to Warwick Castle and its grounds. The 8th Baron Brooke was also bestowed with the title Earl of Warwick in 1759, the fourth creation of the title. With the recreation of the title, the castle was back in the ownership of the earls of Warwick. Daniel Garrett's work at Warwick is documented in 1748; Howard Colvin attributed to him the Gothick interior of the Chapel. Lancelot "Capability" Brown had been on hand since 1749. Brown, who was still head gardener at Stowe at the time and had yet to make his reputation as the main exponent of the English landscape garden, was called in by Lord Brooke to give Warwick Castle a more "natural" connection to its river. Brown simplified the long narrow stretch by sweeping it into a lawn that dropped right to the riverbank, stopped at each end by bold clumps of native trees. A serpentine drive gave an impression of greater distance between the front gates and the castle entrance.

Brown's maturing scheme in 1751 and remarked in a letter: "The castle is enchanting. The view pleased me more than I can express; the river Avon tumbled down a cascade at the foot of it. It is well laid out by one Brown who has set up on a few ideas of Kent and Mr Southcote."

In 1754 the poet Thomas Gray, a member of Walpole's Gothicising circle, commented disdainfully on the activity at the castle:

... he [Francis Greville] has sash'd the great apartment ... and being since told, that square sash windows were not Gothic, he has put certain whimwams withinside the glass, which appearing through are to look like fretwork. Then he has scooped out a little burrough in the massy walls of the place for his little self and his children, which is hung with paper and printed linnen, and carved chimney-pieces, in the exact manner of Berkley-square or Argyle Buildings.

Greville commissioned Italian painter Antonio Canaletto to paint Warwick Castle in 1747, while the castle grounds and gardens were undergoing landscaping by Brown. Five paintings and three drawings of the castle by Canaletto are known, making it the artist's most often represented building in Britain. Canaletto's work on Warwick Castle has been described as "unique in the history of art as a series of views of an English house by a major continental master".

Greville commissioned Brown to rebuild the exterior entrance porch and stairway to the Great Hall. Brown also contributed Gothick designs for a wooden bridge over the Avon.

The Princess Tower at Warwick Castle 
In 1802 George Greville, 2nd Earl of Warwick of the new creation, had debts amounting to £115,000 (£9 million as of 2014). The earl's estates, including Warwick Castle, were given to the Earl of Galloway and John FitzPatrick, 2nd Earl of Upper Ossory, in 1806, but the castle was returned to the earls of Warwick in 1813. The Great Hall was reroofed and repaired in Gothic taste in 1830–31 by Ambrose Poynter. Anthony Salvin was responsible for restoring the Watergate Tower in 1861–63. The castle was extensively damaged by a fire in 1871 that started to the east of the Great Hall. Although the Great Hall was gutted, the overall structure was unharmed.


Restoration and reparations carried out by Salvin during 1872–75 were subsidised by donations from the public, which raised a total of £9,651 (£770 thousand as of 2014).