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Peveril Castle

Peveril Castle, also known historically as Castleton Castle or Peak Castle, is a ruined 11th-century fortification overlooking the village of Castleton in Derbyshire. It was the caput of the feudal barony of William Peverel, known as the Honour of Peverel, and was founded some time between the Norman Conquest of 1066 and its first recorded mention in the Domesday Survey of 1086, by Peverel, who held lands in Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire as a tenant-in-chief of the king. The village became the economic centre of the barony.

William Peveril the Younger inherited his father’s estates, but in 1155 they were confiscated by King Henry II. While in royal possession, Henry visited the castle three times, on one occasion hosting King Malcolm IV of Scotland. During the Revolt of 1173–1174, the castle’s garrison was increased from a porter and two watchmen to a force led by 20 knights shared with the castles of Bolsover and Nottingham.

The Earls of Derby had a claim to the Peveril family’s estates through marriage, and in 1199 William de Ferrers, the fourth earl, paid 2,000 marks for the Peak lordship, although the castle remained under royal control. The closest Peveril Castle came to seeing battle was in 1216, when King John gave the castle to William de Ferrers, but the castellan refused to relinquish control. Although they were both John’s supporters, the King authorised the earl to use force to evict the castellan, who eventually capitulated, although there is no evidence that the castle was assaulted.

In 1223 the castle returned to the Crown. In the 13th century there were periods of building work at the castle, and by 1300 its final form had been established. Toward the end of the 14th century, the barony was granted to John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster. Having little use for the castle, he ordered some of its material to be stripped out for re-use, marking the beginning of its decline. Peveril Castle became less important administratively, and by 1609 it was “very ruinous and serveth for no use”. In the 19th century, Sir Walter Scott featured the castle in his novel Peveril of the Peak. The site is situated in a national park, and managed by English Heritage.

History

11th-12th centuries

Peveril Castle’s keep dates from around the 12th century.

Peveril Castle was built following the Norman Conquest of 1066, by William Peverel, a follower of William the Conqueror who was richly rewarded for supporting him during the invasion. By 1086, Peverel had become a powerful landowner, with holdings in Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire.

The castle was located at the west end of the Hope Valley, a natural line of communication which had extra strategic importance due to valuable mineral resources in the area, particularly lead. Under the Anglo-Saxons, the settlement of Hope had been the main administrative centre, and a small castle – Hope Motte – had been built there to control it. Peveril however also built the much larger Peveril Castle, two km to the west and closer to the entrance of the valley.

The exact year he founded Peveril Castle is uncertain, although it must have been started by 1086 as it is recorded in the Domesday Book, one of 48 castles mentioned in the survey and the only one in Derbyshire. The castle was recorded as standing at “Pechesers”, which has been translated as both “Peak’s Tail” and “Peak’s Arse”. Although the earliest Norman castles were usually built in timber, Peveril Castle seems to have been designed from outset to be built in stone.

William Peveril had custody of royal lands such as the district of Hope, and although he had his own estates, he relied on continued royal favour to maintain power in this way. In 1100 the new king, Henry I, granted William “his demesne in the Peak”. Thus the Peak became an independent lordship under William Peveril’s control, and the castle became an important centre of administration for the area, allowing the collection of taxes. The adjacent settlement of Castleton benefited from the castle’s new status and began to grow as the lordship’s new economic centre, or caput.

William Peveril died in 1114 and was succeeded by his son, William Peveril the Younger. In the civil war known as The Anarchy between King Stephen and the Empress Matilda, Peveril backed the losing side and his fortunes suffered after his capture at the Battle of Lincoln in 1141. In 1153, Peveril was suspected of attempting to poison Ranulf de Gernon, the Earl of Chester. In 1153 the future King Henry II accused Peveril of “plundering and treachery” and threatened to confiscate his estates and hand them over to the Earl of Chester. Two years later Henry, now king, followed through his threat. The Earl of Chester was dead by this time, and the King kept the property for himself. Once under royal control, Peveril became the administrative centre of the Forest of High Peak.

William Peveril the Younger died in 1155, and as his only male heir had predeceased him, the family’s claim on the confiscated estates was taken up by the husband of William’s daughter, Margaret Peveril. Margaret had married Robert de Ferrers, 2nd Earl of Derby. King Henry II visited Peveril Castle three times during his reign. During the first visit, in 1157, he hosted King Malcolm IV of Scotland who paid homage to Henry after ceding Cumberland and Westmorland to the English king. Henry II visited again in 1158 and 1164.

When a group of barons led by Henry’s sons Henry the Young King, Geoffrey, Duke of Brittany, and Prince Richard, later Richard I, took part in the Revolt of 1173–1174 against the king’s rule, the King spent £116 on building work at Peveril and Bolsover Castles in Derbyshire. The garrison was also increased. Previously Peveril was guarded by two watchmen and a porter, but this was expanded to a force led by 20 knights shared with Bolsover and Nottingham castles during the revolt. After the revolt ended in 1174, further steps were taken to improve Peveril Castle, and the Pipe Rolls – records of royal expenditure – show that between 1175 and 1177 £184 was spent on building the keep. As few documents have survived, it is uncertain when parts of the castle were built, and archaeological investigations have been unsuccessful in dating the stonework.

Henry II died in 1189 and was succeeded by his son, Richard I. Soon after his coronation, Richard granted the lordship of the Peak, including the castle, to his brother John. While Richard was on crusade, John rebelled and on his return Richard confiscated the lordship. Around this time, the settlement of Castleton was reorganised as a planned borough, and a set of defences built around it, running up to the castle.

13th century

A reconstruction of Peveril Castle in the 13th century
Reconstruction of the castle at the end of the 13th century

John became king in 1199 after Richard’s death. William de Ferrers, the Earl of Derby, maintained the claim of the Earls of Derby to the Peveril estates. He paid King John 2000 marks (£1333) for the lordship of the Peak, but the Crown retained possession of Peveril and Bolsover Castles. John finally gave Ferrers these castles in 1216 to secure his support in the face of country-wide rebellion. However, the castellan Brian de Lisle refused to hand them over. Although de Lisle and Ferrers were both King John’s supporters, the King gave Ferrers permission to use force to retake the castles.

The situation was still chaotic when King Henry III became king after his father’s death in 1216. Although Bolsover fell to Ferrers’ forces in 1217 after a siege, there is no indication that Peveril was assaulted, and it is likely that Brian de Lisle negotiated his surrender. Ferrers only had possession of the lordship until King Henry III came of age. When the time came he was reluctant to hand over the property, and after an initial deadlock the Crown took control in 1223.

Although contemporary Pipe Roll records of expenditure at Peveril survive, they do not specify how the money was spent. As a result, it is unclear what constitutes maintenance and what marks substantial construction work; however, the historian Richard Eales suggests that there were two periods of building, when sums spent were larger than usual: £54 in 1204–1207 and £67 in 1210–1212.

The rest of the 13th century was relatively peaceful, and records show that Peveril Castle was maintained by the Crown. In 1235, in preparation for the king’s visit, the north wall and bridge were repaired. After significant work in 1250–52 (£60 spent), 1272–1275 (£40) and 1288–1290 (£151), it is likely that the castle buildings were complete by 1300.

King Henry gave Prince Edward (later King Edward I) Peveril Castle along with the County Palatine of Chester with the royal holdings in Wales and Ireland. Some of the lands, including Peveril, were made part of Eleanor of Castile’s dower, to come into her possession should her husband, Prince Edward, die. At this time, the Peak lordship was worth around £300 a year. At the outbreak of the Second Barons’ War in 1264, Peveril Castle was occupied by Robert de Ferrers, the Earl of Derby. Simon de Montfort pressured King Henry III into giving him Peveril, although it was recovered by the Crown after De Montfort’s death in 1265.

14th-18th centuries

The castle above Castleton

The castle was returned to Eleanor’s dower, and as she predeceased her husband the lordship returned into royal hands. Its income was used to provide for members of the royal family such as King Edward II’s queen, Isabella of France, and their children, and royal favourites such as Piers Gaveston. In 1331 Edward III gave the lordship to his wife, Philippa of Hainault. It was given to John de Warenne, 7th Earl of Surrey, in 1345. After its return to the Crown, the estate was given to John of Gaunt, Edward III’s third surviving son, partially in exchange for the Earldom of Richmond.

John of Gaunt’s ownership marked the start of Peveril Castle’s decline. He was the richest nobleman in England and held several castles. As Peveril Castle was relatively unimportant, John decided not to maintain it and in 1374 gave orders to strip the lead from the buildings for re-use at Pontefract Castle. It was inherited by his son Henry Bolingbroke, later King Henry IV, and remained under royal control, administered by the Duchy of Lancaster.

During the 15th century, Peveril became less important as administrative functions were moved elsewhere. Although other castles administered by the Duchy of Lancaster were repaired in 1480, there is no indication that this happened at Peveril. A survey conducted for the Duchy in 1561 revealed that Peveril was in a state of decay, and as a result, along with Donnington, was one of two castles that were subsequently abandoned. The castle however hosted local courts until 1600.

By 1609, a survey concluded that Peveril was “very ruinous and serveth for no use”. At some point in the post-medieval period the keep’s facing stone was removed from three sides. The steep slope prevented the removal of the stone from the fourth side. At one point, the castle was used to house animals.

19th-21st centuries

Early 19th-century depiction of the castle

With the advent of the railways in the 19th century, the area became a tourist attraction. The Duchy of Lancaster undertook maintenance in the 19th century to ensure the castle’s condition did not deteriorate further, mostly by clearing rubble and adding new mortar. Sir Walter Scott’s 1823 novel Peveril of the Peak, set in the mid 17th century, described the castle ruins.

By the 1920s, the Duchy was under financial strain and keen to divest itself of the responsibility for maintaining the castle and similar buildings on its estates. In 1932 the Duchy agreed to grant custody of the castle to the Office of Works, while retaining ownership, with the state taking over responsibility for its maintenance.

The site is today cared for by English Heritage, the successor to the Office of Works, and open to visitors. The surrounding landscape has been protected as a national park since 1951, while the castle itself is protected under UK law as a Scheduled Monument and as a Grade I Listed Building. It has been described as “perhaps the finest medieval landmark of the Peak District”, and architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner remarked that it is “By far the most important castle in the county – in fact the only one of importance”.


Architecture

Plan of the castle today

Peveril Castle in Castleton is roughly triangular in shape, about 90 by 65 m (295 by 213 ft), on top of a hill overlooking the Hope Valley. The land slopes steeply away from the castle’s perimeter, forming an almost sheer face to the south east, and the winding approach from the north is the most practical way to the castle. Not only was the site naturally defensible, but its prominence would have allowed the castle to be a highly visible symbol of the builder’s power.

The castle was entered through the gatehouse to the east. Its design was simple, 7 m (23 ft) wide with a passage 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in) across. Little survives, although earlier drawings contain details of mouldings that suggest the structure was built in the 12th century, perhaps by Henry II or King John.

The curtain walls enclosing the castle show the multiple phases of construction at Peveril, with stonework from the Norman period – differentiated by the use of opus spicatum – to modern repairs. The walls were surmounted by walkways, which next to the gatehouse would have stood about 5 m (16 ft) above the ground level immediately outside the castle. In the 12th century, a tower projecting less than 2 m (6 ft 7 in) was added to the north wall. In Eales’ opinion, it “would have been of limited military value, compared with the boldly projecting towers of later castles” which allowed defenders to deploy flanking fire along the base of the walls. The land within the castle slopes downwards from west to east. Water storage would have been an issue for the garrison of the castle, but how they procured water is uncertain.

Interior of the keep

The southern curtain wall is a modern replacement along the line of the medieval wall. There are the remains of two round or semi-circular towers projecting from the wall. Enough of one tower survives that one can see the use of Roman tiles in the construction, probably from the fort of Navio 2 mi (3 km) away. It is uncertain when these towers were built, although it is thought they may date from the 13th century.

Foundations mark the position of buildings abutting the south wall, probably the old hall and a chapel. A document from 1246 recorded a chapel at the castle; the remains of the easternmost building against the south wall are assumed to mark the site of the chapel, as they are oriented roughly east–west. Foundations at the west end of the north wall mark a large building: probably a hall where the lord of the castle would have eaten and entertained high-status guests. It is unclear when the new hall was built, probably replacing the old hall in the south of the castle, although an “old hall” was mentioned in a document of 1251, implying there was also a new hall by that time. The kitchen and food stores would have stood at the east end of the hall, although little remains of those structures. Buildings were also constructed against the west curtain wall, probably high-status apartments.

Although the main approach to Peveril Castle was from the north, there was also a gate in the west, reached via a bridge spanning the gorge and linking the castle with an enclosure on the other side. As it has not been excavated, the exact form the enclosure took is uncertain. Its purpose is also a matter of speculation, whether it was an elaborate outer bailey for defence or used for storage and stabling.

The keep occupies the southern corner of Peveril Castle. Construction probably began in around 1176, instigated by Henry II. Its plan is square, measuring less than 12 by 12 m (39 by 39 ft), and the parapet is 15 m (49 ft) above the keep’s base; as the ground is uneven, on the other side it rises 10.5 m (34 ft) above ground level. It is smaller than contemporary royal keeps such as those at Dover and Scarborough Castles. Today the exterior is coarse, but originally the facing would have been smooth; the south-east side, where the steep natural slope prevented removal of the facing stone, gives an idea of how it may once have appeared. A projection in the south-east face of the keep housed a garderobe.

As was usual with Norman keeps, Peveril’s was entered through the first floor and was accessed by a staircase. This entrance level would have been a large public room and the basement used for storage. A narrow staircase in the east corner allowed access to the basement and the wall walk around the top of the keep.

Visiting the castle

Bibliography

  • Brown, David (1979), Walter Scott and the Historical Imagination, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-7100-0301-0
  • Brown, Reginald Allen (2004) , Allen Brown’s English Castles, Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, ISBN 1-84383-069-8
  • Cathcart King, D. J. (1983), Castellarium Anglicanum: An Index and Bibliography of the Castles in England, Wales and the Islands. Volume I, New York: Kraus International Publications, ISBN 0-527-50110-7
  • Creighton, Oliver (2002), Castles and Landscapes, London: Continuum, ISBN 0-8264-5896-3
  • Eales, Richard (2006), Peveril Castle, London: English Heritage, ISBN 978-1-85074-982-0
  • Friar, Stephen (2003), The Sutton Companion to Castles, Stroud: Sutton Publishing, ISBN 978-0-7509-3994-2
  • Goodall, John (2011), The English Castle 1066–1650, London: Yale University Press, ISBN 978-0-300-11058-6
  • Harfield, C. G. (1991), “A Hand-list of Castles Recorded in the Domesday Book”, English Historical Review, 106: 371–392
  • Hull, Lisa (2008), Understanding the Castle Ruins of England and Wales: How to Interpret the History and Meaning of Masonry and Earthworks, McFarland & Co, ISBN 978-0-7864-3457-2
  • Jessop, Oliver; Beauchamp, Victoria (2015), Duffield Castle, Duffield, Derbyshire: A Reappraisal, The JESSOP Consultancy
  • McNeill, Tom (1992), English Heritage Book of Castles, London: English Heritage and B. T. Batsford, ISBN 0-7134-7025-9
  • Milward, Roy; Robinson, Adrian (1975), The Peak District, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 978-0-413-31550-2
  • Pevsner, Nikolaus; Williamson, Elizabeth (1978) , Derbyshire: Volume 8 of Buildings of England, Pevsner Architectural Guides (2nd ed.), Penguin Books, ISBN 978-0-14-071008-3
  • Rakoczy, Lila (2007), Archaeology of Destruction: A Reinterpretation of Castle Slightings in the English Civil War, University of York (PhD thesis).

Attribution

The text of this page was adapted from “Peveril Castle” on the English language website Wikipedia, as the version dated 3 May 2020, and accordingly the text of this page is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0. Principal editors included Nev1, and the contributions of all editors can be found on the history tab of the Wikipedia article.

Images on this page include those from the Wikimedia and British Museum websites, as of 3 May 2020, and attributed as follows: “Peveril Castle keep, 2009“, author Darren Copley from Sheffield, released under CC BY 2.0; “Peveril Castle keep, 2008“, author Internets Dairy, released under CC BY 2.0; “Reconstruction of the castle”, adapted with new background from “Model of Peveril Castle“, author Mike Peel (www.mikepeel.net), released under CC BY-SA 4.0; “Peveril Castle over the town of Castleton, 2008“, author Steven Newton, released under CC BY 2.0; “The North View of Castleton castle (early 19th century depiction)”, photograph copyright The Trustees of the British Museum, released under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0; “Peveril Castle keep interior” (Public Domain).