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===Architecture=== ====Baileys==== [[File:Plan of Castle Rising Castle.jpg|thumb|300px|Plan of Castle Rising in the 21st century; A - west [[Bailey (fortification)|bailey]]; B - [[keep]]; C - [[Norman people|Norman]] [[chapel]]; D - remains of 14th-century west range and chapel; E - inner bailey; F - [[gatehouse]], [[barbican]] and bridge; G - east bailey]] Castle Rising is made up of two rectangular baileys to the west and east, and an oval inner bailey in the middle, each with their own substantial earthwork defences and ditches.<ref name=Brown1988P28>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=28}}.</ref> The earthworks of Castle Rising cover a total area of {{convert|5|ha}}, and are considered by archaeologists Oliver Creighton and Robert Higham to be among the most impressive in Britain.<ref>{{harvnb|Liddiard|2000|p=172}}; {{harvnb|Creighton|Higham|2003|p=37}}.</ref> The interior of the western bailey has been levelled up to form a platform, and is no longer directly connected to the rest of the castle.<ref name=Brown1988P28/> The eastern bailey is {{convert|82|m}} by {{convert|59|m}} across, and formed a protective buffer, covering the entrance way to the inner bailey.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=28, 80}}; {{harvnb|Liddiard|2000|p=172}}.</ref> A stone bridge connects the eastern bailey to the inner bailey, and is {{convert|24|m}} across, still retaining some of its original stonework at its base, although the remainder of it has since been rebuilt many times.<ref name=Brown1988P28/> The bridge leads onto a stone [[gatehouse]], dating from around 1138; when it was first built it was substantially taller and longer than today.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=29–30}}.</ref> It was originally equipped with a [[portcullis]], and a stone [[barbican]] was later built outside it for additional protection.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=29}}.</ref> Beyond the gatehouse is the inner bailey, which forms a [[ringwork]] {{convert|73|m}} by {{convert|60|m}} in size, with a circumference of {{convert|320|m}}; the banks are now {{convert|18|m}} high from the bottom of the defensive ditch, although they were originally only half this height.<ref>{{harvnb|Liddiard|2000|p=172}}; {{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=28}}.</ref> It is uncertain what was placed around the top of this bank when it first built; there may have been a wooden [[palisade]], or possibly a timber [[revetment]].<ref>{{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=133}}.</ref> Some of the remains of the 14th-century brick wall, built on an additional {{convert|1|m}} layer of [[Lime (material)|limed]] sand for stability, have survived along part of the bank.<ref>{{harvnb|Liddiard|2000|p=172}}; {{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=137}}.</ref> There were three towers built along the walls during the medieval period, two of which have left their mark in the earth banks; the location of the third is uncertain.<ref>{{harvnb|Liddiard|2000|p=172}}; {{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=49}}.</ref> [[File:Castle Rising Castle 16.jpg|thumb|left|The Norman chapel, looking east]] The main architectural focus of the inner bailey was the great keep, but it also contained a Norman chapel and, from at least the 14th century onwards, a complex of smaller residential and service buildings.<ref>{{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=42}}; {{harvnb|Brown|1989|p=80}}; {{harvnb|Pounds|1994|p=188}}.</ref> The visible stone foundations on the north side of the keep belong to the chapel and range built for Queen Isabella around 1330.<ref name=MorleyGurneyPP5657>{{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|pp=56–57}}.</ref>{{efn|Archaeologists divide the buildings in the bailey into six different, numbered periods, covering the period from around 1300 to 1544. Isabella's ownership of the castle falls into phase 1.<ref name=MorleyGurneyPP5657/>}} The bailey well can also still be seen.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=33}}.</ref> On the north side of the bailey are the remains of the Norman chapel, which comprised a [[nave]], a square tower and an [[apsidal]] [[chancel]], 12.7 metres by 6 metres (42 ft by 20 ft), 4 metres square (13 ft square) and 4.6 metres by 4 metres (15 ft by 13 ft) respectively.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=32}}; {{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=24}}.</ref> It was built from local grey [[sandstone]], and [[Imbrex and tegula|Roman tiles]] from one of the nearby villas were used to construct its roof and incorporated into the walls.<ref>{{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|pp=9, 24}}.</ref> Originally the tower would have had a [[church bell]], and the [[Bellfounding|casting pit]] for this is buried under the floor of the nave.<ref>{{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|pp=4, 28–29}}.</ref> A stone bench runs around the base of the walls, and in the 19th century there was also a stone base for a [[Baptismal font|font]] in the nave, but this has since been lost.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=32}}; {{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=27}}.</ref> A piece of early medieval [[graffiti]], possibly depicting a Norman soldier, has survived on the south exterior wall.<ref>{{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=27}}.</ref> A fireplace was added to the chapel during the [[Tudor period]], although this was only in use for a few years before being abandoned.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=32}}; {{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=38}}.</ref> ====Keep==== [[File:Castle Rising, plan.png|thumb|upright=1.2|Plan of Castle Rising's keep, 1st floor (top), ground floor (bottom); A - kitchen; B - Great hall; C - waiting room; D - throne niche; E - great chambers; F - chapel; G - entrance to forebuilding]] Historians Beric Morley and David Gurney consider Castle Rising to have "one of the finest of all Norman keeps".<ref name="Morley 1997 3"/> It is an early example of the longer, oblong form of these buildings, called a hall-keep, and would have taken huge resources to erect.<ref>{{harvnb|Pounds|1994|p=21}}; {{harvnb|Brown|1962|pp=48–49}}.</ref> Externally, it resembles Henry I's keeps at [[Norwich Castle|Norwich]] and [[Château de Falaise|Falaise]], although Norwich appears to have inspired the latter design, and Rising's internal layout was probably based on that at Norwich as well.<ref>{{harvnb|Hulme|2007–2008|p=222}}; {{harvnb|Goodall|2011|p=115}}.</ref> In imitating Norwich, which was then the only royal castle in the county, Castle Rising may have been intended to symbolise D'Albini's loyalty to the Crown during the troubled years of the Anarchy.<ref>{{harvnb|Liddiard|2005|pp=117, 119}}.</ref> The keep is built from courses of local, brown [[carrstone]] rubble with [[oolite]] [[ashlar]] facings, and is strengthened with intramural timbers, laid down within the stone walls to reinforce the structure.<ref>{{harvnb|Higham|Barker|2004|pp=184–185}}.</ref> Its main body is {{convert|24|m}} by {{convert|21|m}} wide, with walls approximately {{convert|15|m}} high, with a forebuilding running along the east side.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=36}}.</ref> It has prominent [[pilaster]] [[buttress]]es, giving the keep what [[Sidney Toy]] describes as an "impression of strength and dignity"; the corners have clasping buttresses, forming four turrets.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=36}}; {{harvnb|Toy|1985|p=76}}.</ref> There is extensive [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]] detail on the outside of the keep, including [[Arcade (architecture)|arcading]] along the west side and decorative stonework on the forebuilding.<ref>{{harvnb|Creighton|Higham|2003|p=47}}; {{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=37–38}}.</ref> The interior of the keep is divided by an internal wall to improve its structural strength, the division running north–south through the building.<ref name="Brown 1988 46">{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=46}}.</ref> The basement of the keep has two main sections, the north room {{convert|18|m}} by {{convert|8|m}}, with pillars supporting the great hall above, and the south chamber {{convert|18|m}} by {{convert|5|m}} in size.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=48}}.</ref> The forebuilding leads from the ground to the first floor, up a passageway {{convert|2.4|m}} wide with 34 steps and through three arched doorways.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=43–45}}.</ref> At the top is a waiting room; the glazed windows are a mixture of Tudor and more modern insertions.<ref name="Brown 1988 46"/> On the first floor is the great hall, {{convert|14|m}} by {{convert|7|m}}, now floorless and open to the sky.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=49, 81}}</ref> Its original entrance way was blocked up by a chimney when the forebuilding was converted into a separate apartment in the Tudor period, and an additional entrance way inserted into the castle wall.<ref name=Brown1988PP49ListedBuilding>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=49, 81}}; {{cite web|url=https://britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101077599-ruins-of-castle-and-eleventh-century-church-castle-rising|title=Ruins of Castle and Eleventh Century Church, Castle Rising|access-date=22 October 2024|author=English Heritage|publisher=British Listed Buildings}}</ref> The fireplace itself was later filled in with Tudor tiles around 1840.<ref name=Brown1988PP49ListedBuilding/> A mural passageway, dug out in the Tudor period, leads through to the kitchen and service quarters.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=49–50}}.</ref> On the southern side is the great chamber with a large, original 12th-century fireplace, and a mixture of original tri-lobed windows and 19th-century additions.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=52–53}}</ref> At the far end of the great chamber is an ornate chapel, with Norman arcading and arching.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=53–54}}</ref> The keep was originally built to have been relatively self-contained, and would not have needed many additional outbuildings to function as a residence.<ref>{{harvnb|Goodall|2011|p=113}}.</ref> The second floor of the keep is limited in space, and contains only one small room above the chapel which was possibly used the chaplain or by castle guards.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=55}}.</ref> The forebuilding was later equipped with an additional room on this level, {{convert|4.8|m}} by {{convert|4.8|m}}, which remained inhabited longer than the rest of the castle keep, and which contains a 19th-century fireplace.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|p=56}}; {{cite web|url=https://britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101077599-ruins-of-castle-and-eleventh-century-church-castle-rising|title=Ruins of Castle and Eleventh Century Church, Castle Rising|access-date=22 October 2024|author=English Heritage|publisher=British Listed Buildings}}</ref> The upper {{convert|3.7|m}} of the keep's walls are different in design to the main body of the building; as described above, this may be the result of either a final phase of construction between 1200 and 1230, or a period of repair and renovation shortly after 1300.<ref>{{harvnb|Brown|1988|pp=41, 81}}; {{harvnb|Morley|Gurney|1997|p=3}}.</ref>
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