Information on this page from Windows Into Our Past, A Genealogy of the Parsons, Smith and Associated Families, Vol. 1 ©1996, Judy Parsons Smith
|
|
The
Norman frontier town of
In
1188, Giraldus
Cambrensis
described
it as
'the noble
castle of
The
Until c. 1240 the castle was part of the large estates of the Lacy family, though for much of that time the Lacys lived elsewhere, especially in Ireland, where they seized great possessions and held important offices. During this period the castle was a grim border stronghold and was often held by rival barons or by the King himself.
The
de Lacys and their heirs retained the lordship until the later 13th century, but
in the civil wars of King Stephen
's
reign it was held by their enemy, Joce de Dinan
. In 1139 Stephen himself besieged the castle and
showed great bravery by rescuing his ally, young Prince Henry of Scotland
, from a grappling iron. The conflicts of those
years are reflected in the Fitzwarine Romance, a prose tale of the early 14th
century which related events that supposedly occurred in the 1140s, when the
castle was held by de Dinan. The romance tells how the castle was betrayed by
Mariana de Bruere, who killed her lover when she discovered his treachery and
then threw herself out of a window.
Walter
de Lacy
, a henchman of William the Conqueror
, was granted the manor of Stanton (now Stanton
Lacy) in 1066, together with other
manors on the Welsh border. Walter and his heirs built many castles along the
Welsh border and laid out several towns, as at Weobly and Ewais Lacy (now
Longtown) in Herefordshire, but Ludlow was their most ambitious creation and
became their principal stronghold.
Roger
Lacy
,
son of Walter de Lacy
. The
oldest part of the castle is the inner bailey, which was most likely built by
Roger Lacy, sometime between 1086 and 1094 on a well protected site in
the southwestern corner of the manor. This is dominated by the Great Tower,
which was built in c. 1130, though incorporating an earlier T-shaped gate-house.
The much larger outer bailey was built in the late 12th century and a new town
was laid out under the protection of the castle, partly to provide essential
services for the garrison, partly to stabilize the surrounding countryside, and
party as a source of income for the manorial lord through tolls, rents and fees.
Though not all the demarcated burgage plots were built upon, the privileges of
town life - in the Middle Ages it was said that 'town air breathes free' -
attracted sufficient migrants, most of them from surrounding villages, to make
the venture a success.
Hugh
II
de Lacy
, d. 1186, assassinated; m1st (unknown); m2nd. an
Irish princess. He gave burgages in lower Corve Street to the Knights
Hospitallers before 1186 and Walter II is signatory to a number of local
charities. He was described as
'swarthy with an ugly scar on his cheek.' He
played a leading role in the first invasion of Ireland in 1171 and became
Procurator General of the conquered areas. Due
to his harsh politics he was assassination in 1186.
Walter
II was also much involved in Ireland, though he was often out of royal favor.
The de Lacys spent much of their time in Ireland, where they won great
estates; but Ludlow remained a major power base.
Through marriage with the heiress of the de Lacys, the Mortimers obtained the castle and lordship of Ludlow in the early fourteenth century. The ambitious Roger Mortimer plotted the overthrow of Edward the Second and lavishly entertained his Queen at Ludlow. A rival faction secured his execution and established Edward the Third as King. But later Mortimers married members of the royal family and so strengthened their aspirations to the throne. The son of the last Mortimer was Richard, Duke of York , the leader of the Yorkist faction in the Wars of the Roses. Ludlow was thus involved in the Wars and was sacked by the Lancastrians in 1459. But when Richard's son became King as Edward the Fourth , he rewarded loyal Ludlow with its charter of incorporation as a borough, confirming many ancient privileges.
[i] Original text authored by