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  1. Conisbrough Castle is a medieval fortification in Conisbrough, South Yorkshire, England. The castle was initially built in the 11th century by William de Warenne, the Earl of Surrey, after the Norman conquest of England in 1066. Ukraine is facing shortages in its brave fight to survive. Please support Ukraine, because Ukraine supports the laws ...

  2. Castles. Closed now. 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM. Write a review. About. This romantic castle with stunning views over Conisbrough, inspired Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe and still fires the imagination today. With floors and roof restored in the lofty circular keep you can fully appreciate the magnificence of the original 12th century building.

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    • Conisbrough
  3. Closed now. 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM. Write a review. About. This romantic castle with stunning views over Conisbrough, inspired Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe and still fires the imagination today. With floors and roof restored in the lofty circular keep you can fully appreciate the magnificence of the original 12th century building.

  4. Conisbrough - Map. UK. England. Doncaster. Conisbrough Parks. Conisbrough. Conisbrough is a town within the City of Doncaster, in South Yorkshire, England. It is roughly midway between Doncasterand Rotherham, and is built alongside the River Don at 53°29′N 1°14′W / 53.483°N 1.233°W. It has a ward population of 14,333.

  5. Explore the Castle. Step inside the crumbling castle walls and be amazed by the unsually well-preserved keep. The reinstated floors allow you to fully explore the private chambers and steep curving staircases of this impressive castle. Stare down into the basement, then climb right up to the roof top and drink in dramatic views of the ...

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  7. The stone Conisbrough Castle we enjoy today was built around 1180 by Hamelin Plantagenet, illegitimate half-brother of King Henry II. The castle resides on the same site as the original wooden castle, providing a broad, deep, dry moat ditch surrounding the castle. In 1201, royalty was hosted at Conisbrough Castle when King John, nephew to ...

    • Earthworks
    • Curtain Wall
    • Inner Bailey Buildings
    • Keep

    The castle earthworks pre-date the 12th-century stone castle, although whether they formed part of the Anglo-Saxon ‘Cyninges burh’, or were built by William de Warenne shortly after the Norman Conquest, is not known. The knoll on which the castle stands falls away steeply east of the inner bailey. On the other three sides ditches and counterscarps ...

    The coursed rubble curtain wall surrounding the inner bailey, with quoins (cornerstones) at the angles, is not as well built as the keep. The few openings in the walls may not be original. To the east, south and west are five small, solid, semicircular mural towers. They are probably contemporary with the wall, though they are not well bonded with ...

    The curtain wall was once lined with buildings on its north, south and west sides, although only the footings and stumps of walls survive. They date from two main phases: the mid- to late 12th century (roughly contemporary with the keep), and the early 14th century. In the north-west corner was a hall, with service rooms and kitchens to its east. T...

    Conisbrough’s 12th-century keep is a massive four-storey limestone cylinder with six wedge-shaped buttresses; rising from a battered plinth, it is built of a local magnesian limestone and faced in ashlar of superb quality. It has circular chambers at four levels, and originally had a fifth storey at wall-walk level. The entrance is at ground-floor ...

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