The
original name of Ruthin Castle granted to De Grey was Castlell c´ch yn
Gwern-f´r, so called from the red colour of its exterior masonry; and it
is observable that a portion of land contiguous is still called Gwern-f´r,
implying a tradition that it was once covered by the sea. The name of Ruthin
is, probably, Rhudden, Red Earth, which is quite descriptive of its
soil, and not Rhudd-ddinas, as sometimes asserted. Llanrhudd,
the name of the parish, is the church of this red tract of land. More
properly it should be Llanrhudden.
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On investigating the present
ruins, much of which have been lately brought to light, at the expense of
their present possessor, it is no difficult matter to conjecture what must
have been the appearance of this Castle in the days of its grandeur.
It consisted,
as its present appearance shows, of a larger and smaller court, standing east
and west of each other, and separated by a deep dry Foss cut through the red
stone rock. Old Churchyard begins his description as follows:
"This
Castle stands on a rock much like red brick,
"The Dykes are cut with
tools thro' stonye cragge."
Over this
dry ditch was a wooden bridge of communication, by means of which the garrison
commanded a retreat if either court were surprised, on which emergency this
bridge could readily be cut away. The larger or Entrance court, usually called
the Ballium, was pentagonal. or five sided, and contains an area of
about 300 feet.
The Wooden Bridge Today
The
Eastern part of this court had two sides meeting in an angle. The remaining
three sides were at right angles to each other. In the south-eastern side of
this projection was the great gate of entrance, flanked by two towers of a
round form to the exterior and square to the court within. Under these, and
extending to the north-east, are vaults and long passages, which were used for
prisons and cellars. Probably more would be found if an excavation were made.
Dungeon Entrance
To The Dungeons
The Whipping Pit
Old Staircase
On the
north side was the Baronial Hall, where the Lordship Court might have been
held. Here too, the Lord of the Castle sat occasionally, decreeing summary
justice, or for the mere acceptable purpose of feasting his superior officers
and inferior retainers. This hall we may imagine decorated with banners,
coatarmour, casques, battleaxis, spears, bows and arrows, suspended in trophies
on its walls. In later times, we may imagine pictures of martial chiefs, and
fire arms, to be added.
Site of Long Hall
The
western extremity may have been furnished with a huge oaken table raised on a
dais, where the Baron himself sat at the board with a select few, while
inferior persons regaled themselves at the tables in the lower part of the
hall. Adjoining to this end of the hall, and communicating with the chapel on
the west side of the court, were rooms, or parlours, to which he retired, and,
with their apartments above, were his usual residence.
In short,
the arrangements, divested of their military look, were similar to those of our
colleges in the Universities, as they exist to this day. The foundation stones
of these rooms lately appeared on clearing away the soil. There were five great
embattled round towers in this court, besides the smaller ones at the gate of
entrance, one at each angle, which were connected by a gallery running between
a double wall, above and below, on which the guards plied their work of keeping
watch, or assaulting the enemy outside, with arrows and other missiles, through
the loopholes or over the battlements.
"It
shews within, by double walls and wales,
"A
deep devise did first erect the same."
(Written
by Churchyard)
Sloping
down towards the court from this running platform or way, were the roofs of
sheds and buildings which the inferior soldiers inhabited, and were used in
part for other purposes of economy. Such was the eastern court, or ballium.
The
western court before-mentioned, as connected with this by the wooden
draw-bridge, was used for inferior purposes. A fragment of an ancient MS. among
the papers of the late eminent ancient British Antiquary the Rev. John Lloyd,
of Caerwys, which describes the Castle in its later days, harmonizes with the
present appearance of the ruins.It calls it:
"A
faire lardge rome castel-like, encompassed with a strong wale, having a great
towre wherein ys a gate, the waye beinge oute thereof to the ulter mote, in which
rome are two greate and lardge howses, sometymes used for barnes and stables,
built with tymber and covered with slattes, and underneath the one of them a
rome for twenty greate horses with bayes made of stones, these romes beinge
beneathe and under grownde. The same romes servith for the ulter warde of the
Castle, beinge far gone in dekaye, the Castle being built of redde asheler
stones the same beinge imbattled, the walle mowche in dekaye."
Gate To Inner Ward
The
forest is described as spreading over certain mountains "wherein
sometyme doth lie both redde and fallow deere, over which mountaines doth growe
by estimation thousands of oaks, worth to be sold a hundred marks sterling.
There are also within the said lordship certain pastures and tillage grounds
called Parkes, which are farmed to divers people at yearly rents."
It
proceeds to say, that the Lords of the Castle had the tolls of faires held in
Ruthin on the feasts of Saint Matthew, Pentecost and Allhallows, and of the
markets held every Monday and Friday, worth yearly twenty marks.
As it is conjectured that a
fortified post stood here before the Norman Castle was built on its site, so is
it as possible there was also a Town adjoining, some centuries before the
arrival of Lord Grey; for ancient accounts speak of a feat of the
renowned King Arthur performed in Ruthin, where a rude block of
lime-stone, called Maen Huail, is still shewn, on which that
Prince beheaded a rival of the name of Huail, son of Caw of Edernion,
and brother of Gildas the historian. Perhaps the former
inhabitants were displaced to make way for the English retainers of the Castle,
a tyranny of which its founder was fully capable.
He either
made an addition to the Town immediately contiguous to his Castle, which he
surrounded with a wall, or threw that fence round the ancient one for the
protection of his followers, to whom he himself granted, or obtained from the
crown, a charter of incorporation, from the privileges of which the natives
were excluded, for it was not till the reign of Henry V11, who
was of ancient British extraction, that all oppressive laws of exclusion were
repealed.
An Entrance To Ruthin Castle
Three Kids Gripped By Evil By Polly Mullaney
Amazon Kindle, Amazon paperback |
Friday, 8 November 2013
The Remains of Ruthin Castle
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