Rougemont Castle

[1] The castle is named after the red stone found in the hill, and used in the construction of the original buildings, of which the large early Norman gatehouse is the main remaining feature.After the Norman conquest of 1066, Gytha, mother of the defeated King Harold, was living in Exeter and this may have caused the city to become a centre of resistance to William the Conqueror.[5] A deep ditch and internal rampart were constructed between the north-western and north-eastern city walls, forming a roughly square enclosure with sides of about 600 feet (180 m).It has clear elements of Anglo-Saxon architecture, such as long-and-short quoins and double triangular-headed windows, suggesting that it was built very early by English masons on the Normans' orders.At this early stage the rampart was probably surmounted by a stockade, though two corner turrets were soon built where the bank met the city walls, the western one of which (mistakenly known as "Athelstan's Tower") is still present.Although Stephen's army moved quickly to besiege the castle, Redvers was able to resist for three months until the failure of his water supply, which had been provided by a well and probably a rainwater cistern.When last I was at Exeter, The mayor in courtesy show'd me the castle, And call'd it Rougemont: at which name I started, Because a bard of Ireland told me once I should not live long after I saw Richmond."[22] The castle was said to have been badly damaged during the Second Cornish uprising of 1497 when Perkin Warbeck and 6,000 Cornishmen entered the city, and by 1600 it was said to display "gaping chinks and an aged countenance.This lodge was threatened by the unsafe wall and during works to make it safe, excavations in its floor revealed a number of human skeletons which were assumed to have been buried in the grounds of the chapel.[35] Notable hearings in the Old Law Courts in the 20th century included the trial and conviction of an airline pilot, Andrew Newton, in March 1976, on charges of possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life: the charges resulted from a bungled attempt by Newton to shoot a former male model, Norman Scott, that resulted in the killing of Scott's Great Dane.[37][38] However difficulties over disabled access on the steep castle site had become a major problem, and new Law Courts were completed in Exeter's legal quarter in 2004.Following the failure of a scheme for Exeter City Council to purchase the site, it was sold by Her Majesty's Courts Service in early 2007 to GL50 Properties, whose managing director said "Rougemont Castle is an amazing building which we will transform into the Covent Garden of the South West of England.
A 19th-century engraving of Rougemont Castle from Charles Knight's Old England: A Pictorial Museum , 1845
A charcoal drawing of the traditional site of Athelstan’s Palace, 1914 by James Sparks
John Norden 's 1617 plan of the castle, annotated by George Oliver
The Old Law Courts, erected in 1773
John White Abbott 's pen and ink drawing of the remains of Exeter Castle
The plaque on the castle wall commemorating the executions of the Devon Witches in the 1680s
Rougemont Castle, WeetonRugemont CastleCastle Mont RougeExeterWilliam the ConquerorScheduled monumentKing Stephenouter baileyRichard IIIDevon Witchesnew siteRougemont GardensNorthernhay GardensExeter City CouncilSiege of Exeter (1068)Charles Knight'sNorman conquestKing Haroldoath of fealtyKing AthelstanBaldwin FitzGilbertcastellanDomesday BookAnglo-Saxon architecturequoinsstockadecurtain wallOrderic VitalisprebendariesCowickBaldwin de Redversbarbicanoutworksiege enginescity museumsally portKing Richard IIISecond Cornish uprising of 1497Perkin WarbeckJohn NordenGeorge Oliver"Devon witches"HeavitreeCivil Warartillery batteriesParliament of Great BritainLong titleCitation13 Geo. 3Royal assentPalladianJames Wyattcounty councilJohn White AbbottThomas WestcoteBishop Hallballoon ascentDevon County ShowDevon County HallGreat DaneLiberal PartyJeremy ThorpeGeorgiannew Law CourtsHer Majesty's Courts ServiceCovent Gardenlisted buildings1st Earl FortescueplanningColdplayViva la Vida TourWayback MachineAddleshaw, PercyHistoric EnglandNational Heritage List for EnglandSherborne MercuryBritish Newspaper ArchiveLinklater, MagnusBBC NewsHoskins, W. G.Pevsner, NikolausPenguin Booksgrid reference