Farnham Castle is a 12th-century castle in Farnham, Surrey, England. It was formerly the residence of the Bishops of Winchester.
The castle's architecture reflects changing styles through the ages, making it one of the most important historical buildings in the south of England. It is an impressive stone motte and bailey fortress, and has been in almost continuous occupation since the 12th century. The large motte was formed around the massive foundations of a Norman tower and then totally enclosed by a shell keep, with buttress turrets and a shallow gatehouse. Attached to the motte is a triangular inner bailey, with a fine range of domestic buildings and a fifteenth-century brick entrance tower. The formidable outer bailey curtain wall has square flanking towers, a 13th-century gatehouse and a large ditch.
Mary I of England stayed at Farnham Castle in the days before her wedding to Philip of Spain in July 1554.William Henry Black, Illustrations of Ancient State and Chivalry from MSS in the Ashmolean Museum (London: Roxburghe Club, 1839), pp. 44–46. The stables burnt down during a visit by King James, Anne of Denmark, and Prince of Wales in July 1609.Edmund Lodge, Illustrations of British History, vol. 3 (London, 1791), pp. 379-80. The castle was slighting again after the Civil War in 1648. Since then more buildings have been constructed in the castle's grounds, the most impressive being those built by Bishop George Morley in the 17th century.
The castle is set in of gardens overlooking the town of Farnham. A letter in 1594 mentions that white clay was dug in Farnham Park to make drinking vessels used by lawyers at the Inner Temple in London.Alfred John Kempe, Loseley Manuscripts (London, 1836), pp. 310-11.
Since 1962, the castle has been used as an intercultural training and conference centre.The Farnham Castle International Briefing and Conference Centre
English Heritage has guardianship of the keep, but Farnham Castle now manages the visitors to the keep. Entry is free. Local guides provide tours of the Bishop's Palace (certain days only, charge applies).''Three Palaces of the Bishops of Winchester, 2000, English Heritage
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