The most impressive and best preserved part of Conisbrough Castle is
the circular keep, which has six wedge-shaped buttresses placed equidistantly
around its circumference. The keep was built by Hamelin Plantagenet, illegitimate
half-brother of Henry II, sometime around 1180. The keep, and a circuit
of curtain walls that he added soon after, were built on the site of a
castle founded at the end of the 11th century by William de Warenne, the
first Earl Warenne. Hamelin inherited the title and estates through his
marriage to Isabel, daughter of the third Earl Warenne. The design of
the keep is unique in this country; the only other similar example was
built on Warenne owned land in France and might also have been the work
of Hamelin Plantagenet. The keep, built of fine limestone ashlar, stands
close to its original height of 30.5m (100ft) tall. It is dark and gloomy
inside due to an almost complete lack of windows, and its circular shape
means it does not provide very spacious accommodation. The owners of the
castle would undoubtedly have enjoyed the more pleasant accommodation
provided by buildings within the bailey.
When the last Earl Warenne died heirless in 1347, the castle reverted
to the crown. By 1538 the castle was already in a state of ruin. The castle,
made famous by Sir Walter Scott's book, Ivanhoe, is now managed by the
Ivanhoe Trust on behalf of English Heritage.
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