Northampton Castle

Northampton Castle

We are the Friends of Northampton Castle, we upload videos relating to the history and heritage of Northampton. Check out www.NorthamptonCastle.com for more!

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  • @IMMORTALDIO
    @IMMORTALDIO4 ай бұрын

    AS a kid in the early 1970s I used to live opposite the railway buffer area where the old guard carriages were placed/parked. Bottom end of Gladstone road. The walks down midsummer meadow were lovely. Where the old station lead to st Andrews road was not far from the old Friary that was built on to create the shopping centre [ said to be haunted by monks]. All the history of the town seems to be ignored by the thoughtless councils that have no interests in history it seems. Happily living at Great malvern for years now it is crazy how Northampton has changed so much.

  • @freebeerfordworkers
    @freebeerfordworkers4 ай бұрын

    Alas the Victorians didn't worry too much about history wiping out the castle to build a railway. The same happened in Manchester the Roman fort that had stood for almost 2000 years was used as a quarry before the Victorians drove a railway in canal through it.

  • @d.mfrost6801
    @d.mfrost68016 ай бұрын

    Just come across this, it seems you can find anything on KZread, ......thanks

  • @ballsabout...5065
    @ballsabout...50659 ай бұрын

    What a brilliant little video. I was looking to see if I could determine where the heads of Francis Tresham, Robert Catesby and Thomas Percy were placed after the Gunpowder plots. Does anyone have any thoughts of evidence as to where this might have been?

  • @davidfleming5233
    @davidfleming5233 Жыл бұрын

    Spark light keeps thinking it's summer not a cold freezing fall

  • @Bama5000
    @Bama50002 жыл бұрын

    “Progress”

  • @steveharris7938
    @steveharris79382 жыл бұрын

    See even back then they were demolishing significant buildings in Northampton ;)

  • @ashleyshin6623
    @ashleyshin66232 жыл бұрын

    timestamp for outer ward (outer bailey)?

  • @NorthamptonCastle
    @NorthamptonCastle2 жыл бұрын

    Hello Ashley - not sure what your question is here. But the evidence we have is for a Castle including outer bailey dating from post the Domesday Book ( so not an invasion castle), then we have the odd legal record of land purchase by the purchase by King's as they developed it into a Royal Palce. We have estimated buiding therefore around 1100 -1130. That having been said it is quite possible that there was an earlier fortification dating from pre Norman Conquest. There is still some aercheological investigation to be done.

  • @GodTierComments
    @GodTierComments2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this! Just one error I found at 9:40 where you say 1390 = Edward III.

  • @kevinbrooks8331
    @kevinbrooks83312 жыл бұрын

    I used to work in the castle yard sidings just up from the station, does anyone know where they lie in relation to the castle?

  • @mariedickie9258
    @mariedickie92582 жыл бұрын

    The sidings to North of station building would have been part of the castle outer bailey. The river had been diverted into a canal so some of the railway was actually built on river bed.

  • @kevinbrooks8331
    @kevinbrooks83312 жыл бұрын

    @@mariedickie9258 thank you Marie, so the castle yard sidings was inside the castle walls? im really interested to find out more about this as i worked there for years and never knew about the castle/

  • @mariedickie9258
    @mariedickie92582 жыл бұрын

    The castle walls changed over 400 years of existence, but it's likely that the sidings were within the castle boundary.

  • @kevinbrooks8331
    @kevinbrooks83312 жыл бұрын

    @@mariedickie9258 🙂👍 thank you

  • @mariedickie9258
    @mariedickie92582 жыл бұрын

    Northampton museum has an online lecture with the local archaeologist Andy Chapman on our lost castle 10th August.

  • @stevehancock5082
    @stevehancock50823 жыл бұрын

    Was soooo pleased to see this and find out more. Thanks. Now a kind of history guide book should be done as if it was still here, which I wish it was. Many thanks, appreciated!

  • @bobjackson4720
    @bobjackson47203 жыл бұрын

    Interesting and very well done. England had so many castles in it's history.

  • @Fjcc1971
    @Fjcc19713 жыл бұрын

    Amazing !!

  • @arsenarsen6450
    @arsenarsen64503 жыл бұрын

    Смбатаберд Киликия великая

  • @v.inc88
    @v.inc883 жыл бұрын

    Really cool. I was getting a bit motion sick watching this though.

  • @armaanmalkani
    @armaanmalkani3 жыл бұрын

    wHo CaME fRoM ScHOoL? cuZ i diD!

  • @ashleyshin6623
    @ashleyshin66232 жыл бұрын

    i did, lmao.

  • @mrseedjnr
    @mrseedjnr4 жыл бұрын

    great video thank you

  • @raedwald-red
    @raedwald-red5 жыл бұрын

    9:42 ""... from 1390 onwards during the reign of Edward III."" Rather a miraculous event given that Edward III died in 1377! I think the writer meant Richard III (until he was deposed in 1399).

  • @henryvagincourt
    @henryvagincourt4 жыл бұрын

    Raed Wald + Richard II, though it's already been mentioned in the comments some time ago.

  • @timothysmith8300
    @timothysmith83005 жыл бұрын

    That railway station is a freaking fish tank should have kept the original railway station the present one is an insult to the town looks like a fish tank.

  • @mateoglumac728
    @mateoglumac7286 жыл бұрын

    There are many wrong things in this reconstruction. The barbican would need at least portcullises to slow the attackers. It would be off-side to the entrance because its main purpose is to prevent enemy to get a battering ram to the door. There is no entrance to the barbican so I do not see how would solders get in it to protect it and its 3 entrenches are a missed opportunity to put arrow loops on the side to kill off the enemy. Murder holes were placed in it but it wouldn't be enough to defend it. Also the main entrance would have a door on it and one or two portcullises to trap the attacking troops underneath murder holes. And also another door would be on the other side of the doorway. Postern-gate would be put into the gateway and made out of tick wood and metal mash and guarded better by the adjacent tower. Many castles fell when the enemy breached postern-gate. And in the common bailey there would be a firewood storage and a loot of it and also granary and stables. Towers and rooms in them would have doors because people would have to live in them. NO TREBUCHETS on top of the walls. Towers are made out of stone wall and wooden floors so they wouldn't be able to cope with stress of firing a trebuchet. And also you expose your weapon that you can not replace to enemy fire. You would put it behind the wall. And tower you call a barbican in at 4:45 is not a barbican. Its a gatehouse. AND NO STONE FLOORS. I have no problem with inner bailey but the keep should have machicolations and arrow loops on it to improve its field of fire. What is with the wooden floors and stone supports in the keep? It makes no sense. ROOFs, we need roofs on buildings people live in or the rain would seep through.

  • @itkapatanka
    @itkapatanka6 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Victorians for destroying what was left of the castle.

  • @NorthamptonCastle
    @NorthamptonCastle6 жыл бұрын

    Yes its sad that the railway company over came local objections and demolished the ruins of our Castle. But there is the opportunity to tell the story of the castle and to make sure that archaeology of the Castle left on the east side of St Andrews Rd above the railway station gets treated with respect. So lets keep making the case.

  • @MasterJedi86
    @MasterJedi867 жыл бұрын

    Great job!

  • @NorthamptonCastle
    @NorthamptonCastle7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Derek - tell your friends and please look out for our 3d VR experience on a free app ( you will need a Samsung or googlecardboard headset) but you will be able to take part in a Christmas Feast at Northampton Castle in 1217.

  • @castellddu
    @castellddu8 жыл бұрын

    Yea gods. Have any one concerned with this read a book on castles written in the last hundred years! So much of the content is fanciful but the pouring boiling oil on attackers nonsense hasn't been suggested by anyone who know anything about castles ever! There is almost nothing correct about the reconstruction. The architectural forms owe more to the Victorian reconstruction of Newcastle castle great tower than to any medieval building. One could go on but this important castle site really does deserve better than this. The friends of the castle should not patronise the general public by feeding this populist pap from a 1950s schoolboys annual and shouldn't be afraid of challenging people with the, sometimes, difficult ideas of how castles functioned as psychological and sociological symbols of royal power.

  • @HTaff-gv1nm
    @HTaff-gv1nm8 жыл бұрын

    This is fantastic. I find it heartbreaking that Northampton has left the castle as just a memory. I would definitely like to get more involved with the FONC and learn more.

  • @ashnunya314
    @ashnunya3148 жыл бұрын

    This was cool

  • @NorthamptonCastle
    @NorthamptonCastle8 жыл бұрын

    Hi Lynda - we are so glad you enjoyed the tour. We are just about to release a new interactive walkthrough to the Castle's Great Hall. Please look out for information on our website and please do come along to our next meeting. We will be meeting in January - not our usual first Friday - but the second Friday in the month.

  • @lyndapinfold8796
    @lyndapinfold87968 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for that, have always been fascinated by the castle, wondering what it was like

  • @geoffreycarter2686
    @geoffreycarter26868 жыл бұрын

    Shame the commentary seems to think that Edward III was still king in 1390!

  • @NorthamptonCastle
    @NorthamptonCastle8 жыл бұрын

    +Geoffrey Carter You know, we spent so long going back and forth with the wording of the commentary, but we were bound to miss something! How embarrassing. Ah well, hopefully our upcoming immersive virtual tour will stand up a little better. Thanks!

  • @tris7
    @tris78 жыл бұрын

    Great video!

  • @mikehumphreys2541
    @mikehumphreys25418 жыл бұрын

    Loved this video, just shows how much history there is in town, if you only take the time to look. Thanks guys.

  • @37mnc37
    @37mnc378 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful - it brought the place properly to life. Thank you.

  • @whiskeyfoxpix
    @whiskeyfoxpix9 жыл бұрын

    Loved seeing this. The castle was built under the stewardship of my 26th Great Grandfather Simon DeSenlis, the Earl of Northhampton.

  • @NorthamptonCastle
    @NorthamptonCastle8 жыл бұрын

    +Will Fay Are you the keeper of the family history? We would be fascinated to hear from you about Simon de Senlis. We are trying to build up stories around the characters who were part of the Castle's history and Simon was certainly a significant figure.

  • @semw52
    @semw522 жыл бұрын

    @@NorthamptonCastle he is my x24 great grandfather and first husband of Matilda of Huntingdon

  • @beauregard8511
    @beauregard85119 жыл бұрын

    Good job on this.

  • @krnlg
    @krnlg9 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, very interesting.

  • @KennyWalkington
    @KennyWalkington9 жыл бұрын

    Interesting !

  • @DreamingOfInsanity
    @DreamingOfInsanity12 жыл бұрын

    as a Northamptonian I am pleased to see this. Cheers guys