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Pendragon Castle

Coordinates: 54°25′03″N 2°20′20″W / 54.41747°N 2.33898°W / 54.41747; -2.33898
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pendragon Castle
Cumbria, England
A general view of Pendragon Castle, Cumbria, England
Coordinates54°25′03″N 2°20′20″W / 54.41747°N 2.33898°W / 54.41747; -2.33898
Site information
Ownerprivate
Conditionruins
Site history
Built12th century
Built byUther Pendragon according to legend, Ranulph de Meschines according to history

Pendragon Castle is a ruin located in Mallerstang Dale, Cumbria, south of Kirkby Stephen, and close to the hamlet of Outhgill (at grid reference NY781025). It stands above a bend in the River Eden, overlooked by Wild Boar Fell to the south-west and Mallerstang Edge to the east. It is a Grade I listed building.[1]

Legend

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Pendragon Castle, looking down on the River Eden

According to legend, the castle was built by Uther Pendragon, father of King Arthur, who is said to have unsuccessfully tried to divert the river to provide its moat,[2] as is recalled in a well-known local couplet:

Let Uther Pendragon do what he can,
Eden will run where Eden ran.

Uther (if he was indeed a real person) was possibly a 5th-century chieftain who led resistance to the invading Anglo-Saxons. According to another local legend, Uther and many of his men died here when the Saxons poisoned the well (but other legends give St Albans as the location for his death). There are several other "Arthurian" sites in Cumbria – for example King Arthur's Round Table, near Penrith – and many names in the North-west, such as Penrith and Cumbria, have Celtic origins.

History

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Pendragon Castle, ca 1740

Despite legend (and the discovery of a Roman coin) there is no evidence of any pre-Norman use of this site. The castle was built in the 12th century by Ranulph de Meschines, during the reign of King William Rufus. It has the remains of a Norman keep, with the later addition of a 14th-century garderobe turret, and some further additions in the 17th century.

One of its most notable owners was Sir Hugh de Morville, Lord of Westmorland, one of the four knights who murdered St Thomas Becket in 1170. A nearby high point on Mallerstang Edge is named after him, as Hugh Seat. Another owner was Lady Idonea de Veteripont who, after the death of her husband (Roger de Lilburn), spent much of her remaining years living in the castle, until her death in 1334. Lady Idonea founded the church of St Mary in the nearby hamlet of Outhgill, ca 1311.[3]

The castle was attacked by Scots raiding parties in 1342 and again in 1541. After the latter attack it remained an uninhabitable ruin until it passed into the hands of Lady Anne Clifford, who rebuilt it in 1660, also adding a brewhouse, bakehouse, stables and coach-house. It remained one of the favourites among her many castles until her death in 1676 at the age of 86.

Lady Anne Clifford, who was buried in
St Lawrence's Church, Appleby

Lady Anne's successor, the Earl of Thanet, had no use for the castle and removed anything of value from it, including the lead from the roof. By the 1770s much of the building above the second storey had collapsed,[4] and it has since gradually decayed further to become the romantic ruin seen today.

In 1962, the castle was sold at auction by Appleby Castle Estate to Raven Frankland, a landowner and archaeologist, for £525.[5] During the Second World War, Frankland's father, Edward, had written a book about the Arthurian legends associated with the castle.[5][6] The current owner, John Bucknall, inherited the castle following the deaths of his cousin Raven in 1998 and Raven's wife Juliet in 2013.[2]

In recent years some of the rubble has been cleared, some consolidation of the crumbling walls has been undertaken, and a limited archaeological survey has been carried out by the Lancaster University Archaeological Unit[7] published in 1996.[8]

The castle is privately owned and on farmland. There is public access to the outside of the building, with a warning that the castle walls should not be entered. It appears that some remedial work has been carried out with the aid of a grant.[9]

Etymology

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The name Pendragon was first recorded in 1309 and is likely to have been a product of later medieval enthusiasm for Arthurian romance.[10] It is less likely that the name is derived from Brittonic pen, meaning "head, top, summit",[10] and dragon, "dragon", honoratively "prince, warlord" (Welsh pen draig).[10]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Historic England. "Pendragon Castle (Grade I) (1144890)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Welcome to Pendragon Castle – Yorkshire's most mysterious ruin". The Yorkshire Post. 16 February 2019. Retrieved 20 August 2019.
  3. ^ Nicolson, Joseph; Burn, Richard (1777). W. Strahan y T. Cadell (ed.). The history and antiquities of the counties of Westmorland and Cumberland. Londres.
  4. ^ A Virtual Walk through Mallerstang, Part 2: North from Pendragon Castle Archived 14 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine accessed 13 April 2012
  5. ^ a b "£58,000 paid for 7,870 acres of grouse moor". The Guardian. 21 July 1962. p. 3. Retrieved 20 August 2019. – via newspapers.com (subscription required)
  6. ^ "Arthur the Bear of Britain". Noble Knight Games. Retrieved 20 August 2019. Written during World War II as Britain struggled with threats of new invasion, Frankland's portrait of Arthur bears the stamp of authentic feeling and historical truth.
  7. ^ English Heritage Historic Buildings and Monuments Grants accessed 13 April 2012
  8. ^ Archaeological Research Framework accessed 13 April 2012
  9. ^ Notice on site
  10. ^ a b c James, Alan. "A Guide to the Place-Name Evidence" (PDF). SPNS – The Brittonic Language in the Old North. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 August 2017. Retrieved 25 November 2018.
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54°25′03″N 2°20′20″W / 54.41747°N 2.33898°W / 54.41747; -2.33898