Viewed from the west bank of the River Trent Newark Castle looks very
impressive, but if you cross the river and enter the park that surrounds
the castle you discover that the walls are just a facade. Only one and
a half sides of the castle remain, but that does include the oldest part
of the castle, a large gatehouse.
The castle was built in 1133 by Alexander, Bishop of Lincoln, and it
remained a seat of the Bishops of Lincoln until 1547 when King Henry VIII
took it for the Crown. During the Civil War the castle became an important
Royalist garrison, holding out against three long sieges in 1643, 1644
and 1646. On 5 May 1646 King Charles I was captured at nearby Southwell
and ordered Newark to surrender. The Parliamentarians then destroyed the
castle.
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