Fotheringhay Castle
Fotheringhay Castle
Fotheringhay Castle played a key role in the Tudor era, being the birthplace of a king, the site of the execution of a pretender ot the throne and then being destroyed by yet another.
Nowadays only the castle mound survives. The castle site is protected as a Scheduled Monument and is open to the public.
The castle was situated in the village of Fotheringhay 3¹⁄₂ miles to the north of the market town of Oundle, Northamptonshire. It was founded circa 1100 by Simon de Senlis, Earl of Northampton.
In 1113, possession passed to Prince David of Scotland when he married Simon's widow. The castle then descended with the Scottish princes until the early 13th century when it was confiscated by King John of England.
By 1220, Fotheringhay Castle was controlled by Ranulf de Blondeville, 6th Earl of Chester. In January the following year, the castle was briefly captured by William II de Forz, 3rd Earl of Albemarle, in his rebellion against King Henry III. Forz abandoned the castle and Henry III took it under his control; Fotheringhay remained in royal hands until the reign of Edward II.
It was a favoured residence of the Dukes of York, and King Richard III was born here in 1452. It was also the final place of imprisonment of Mary, Queen of Scots, who was tried and executed in the castle in 1587. Rumour has it that her ghost still walks up and down the staircase down which her final steps were taken which in now to be found in the Talbot Hotel in nearby Oundle.
In 1627 the castle was dismantled and most of the masonry removed, leaving only the earthworks.