By Stephen Francis Wyley Photographs by Greame Walker |
The are many books are castles which feature the Welsh castles of Edward I but few that feature the contempory town defences. With the aid of Greame Walkers pictures I hope to remedy that situation.
Stephen Francis Wyley
25th August 2000.
From R. Allen Brown's, Castles A History and Guide (p.136).
"Conway
Location: Conway (Gwyedd) (Wales), 13 miles (21km) north-east of Bangor on the A55.
Description: Late 13th-century castle similar in overall plan to Caernarvon, with a series of mural drum-towers. The walled town is contempory with the castle (as at Caernarvon) and it also stands upon tidal waters so that it might be supplied and , if necessary relieved by sea.
Opening hours: SH, SM.
History: The castle was built with remarkable speed between 1283
and 1287. Edward I found himself stranded here in 1294 and cut off from
the main army by an exceptionally full river. Later in 1399 Richard II
visited the castle and there received Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland,
as Bolingbroke's ambassador and accepted from him a false promise of safe
conduct to meet Bolingbroke which resulted in ambush, imprisonment and
the king's death within a year. During the Civil War, John Williams, Archbishop
of York repaired the castle at his own expense (which had been described
in 1608 as `utterly decayed') but in spite of this it was taken without
much difficulty in 1646 by the Cromwellian army under Major-General Mytton."
Figure 1. Looking west to tower 13, the highest.
Upper Gate just lower, to the left.
Figure 2. The south wall looking west, towers
21 to 18, including the Mill Gate.
Figure 3. Looking west to the west wall, towers
9 to 7.
Figure 4. The river wall, looking north west to
its junction with the west wall.
Figure 5. The west wall, looking north from Upper
Gate, near tower 13.
Figure 6. Looking east, past Upper Gate, along
the south wall to the castle.
Figure 7. Looking north east, along the west wall,
from tower 13.
Figure 8. Looking north east, along the west wall,
from outside tower 13.
Figure 9. Exterior of Mill Gate, in the southern
wall.
Allen Brown, R., Castles A History and Guide, U.K., 1980
A
Dictionary of Military Architecture
An
Aerial View of Masada
Anglo-Saxon
Burhs
Bibliography
of Military Architecture
David's
Tower, Jerusalem
Drawings
of Aspects of Military Architecture
Jerusalem
from the Mount of Olives
More
Pictures of the Theodosian Land Walls
Siege
Warfare, The Art of Offence and Defence
Shiro,
A Japanese Castle
The
Walls of Ankara
The
Defences of Constantinople
The
Town Walls of Conwy
What
is a Castle?
Copyright © Stephen Francis Wyley 2000 - 2002
svenskildbiter@angelfire.com |