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Montacute Castle
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Montacute Castle was a built on a hill overlooking the village of , , England.


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Montacute Castle was built after the Norman Conquest of England in 1066 by Robert of Mortain.Richardson, p.3. The castle was named Mons Acutus - literally, sharp hill - built on land within the Saxon settlement of Bishopston that Robert had acquired from in exchange for the manor of , an expensive exchange for Robert.Richardson, p.3; Pounds, p.68. The natural features of the hill were used to form an oval-shaped motte and an inner bailey, surrounded by an outer bailey beyond.Richardson, p.7. Village tradition is that a wooden keep was originally built, followed later by a stone castle. A park for hunting was established alongside the castle and the village.Richardson, p.8. Bishopston later adopted the Norman name.

The castle is strategically placed to overlook and control traffic on the Fosseway Roman road and the Somerset levels, so hampering any military movements, The location for the castle is also thought to have been a deliberate political statement by Robert: before the battle of Hastings, the Anglo-Saxons had discovered what they believed to be a on the hill. Taken into battle by who held it in great esteem, "the holy cross" had also been used as the battle cry of the Anglo-Saxon army against the Normans. Parishes: Montacute, A History of the County of Somerset: Volume 3 (1974), pp. 210-224, accessed 13 July 2011; Richardson, p.3.

Robert made Montacute Castle the caput, or main castle, of his honour, abandoning another castle he built in Somerset, .Pounds, p.64. The castle was unsuccessfully besieged in 1068 during a major Anglo-Saxon revolt against Norman rule, but the rebels were defeated by Geoffrey de Montbray, the Bishop of Coutances.Richardson, p.4; Liddiard, p.35; Mackenzie, p.63. In 1102, however, William of Mortain (Robert's son) gave the castle and the surrounding lands to the order, who founded there.Creighton, p.117; Richardson, p.4.

The castle was no longer of military value and was left to decline, although the , dedicated to , continued in use until at least 1315.Richardson, pp.4, 7. The John Leland described the castle in 1540 as "party fell to ruin", and by this period it was being quarried for its stone, ultimately resulting in its disappearance. The castle chapel was eventually rebuilt after the destruction of the surrounding castle.

Today the site is a scheduled monument.Richardson, p.7; Motte and bailey castle, Montacute, Somerset Historic Environment Record, Somerset County Council, accessed 14 July 2011. An 18th century , St. Michael's Hill Tower, named after the castle chapel, stands on the site today, making use of part of the castle chapel's foundations.Richardson, p.7, citing Adkins and Adkins (1989). The site is owned by the National Trust and is open to the public. staff surveyed the site for the National Trust in April 2000. Montacute Castle, Pastscape National Monuments Record, , accessed 14 July 2011.


See also
  • Castles in Great Britain and Ireland
  • List of castles in England


Bibliography

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