Stogursey Castle | |
Location: | Somerset, England |
Coordinates: | 51.1761°N -3.1429°W |
Map Type: | Somerset |
Map Size: | 200 |
Type: | Motte-and-bailey |
Materials: | Stone |
Ownership: | Landmark Trust |
Open To Public: | For holiday let |
Stogursey Castle is a medieval castle in Somerset, England. Most of the site is in ruins, but there is a thatched gatehouse used for holiday rental by the Landmark Trust.
Stogursey Castle was built to the south of the village of Stogursey by the family of the De Courcys, probably in the late 11th or early 12th century.[1] The name Stogursey is a corruption of Stoke Courcy.[2] The castle was a motte-and-bailey design with a 60 metre wide, two metre tall motte and two bailey enclosures, surrounded by a water-filled moat, fed from the nearby Stogursey Brook.[3]
The castle was controlled by King John of England during the First Barons' War, and was ordered to be destroyed in 1215, but survived; John's lieutenant Falkes de Bréauté took control of the castle, and after his death a second order to destroy the property was given in 1228, again apparently ignored.[1] The castle was extended in stone in 1300 by the Fitzpayne family, and was destroyed in the 1450s by the Yorkist faction during the War of the Roses,[1] though the Victoria County History notes that "there is no evidence, either documentary or archaeological, to support the claim for its destruction in 1457".[4] A house was built within the castle grounds in the 17th century and was restored in the 1870s, but by the late 20th century had itself become ruined until restoration by the Landmark Trust.[5]
Storgursey Castle is a scheduled monument and its gatehouse is a Grade II* listed building,[6] restored by the Landmark Trust between 1981 and 1982 for use as a holiday let.[3]