I grew up visiting castles. As a child I loved their otherness, and got as good at identifying shell keeps and barbicans as imagining Sir Nigel and Ivanhoe rampaging around inside. Like old churches, medieval castles were a rapid and accessible escape route into the rich parallel world of history.
Ancient as they were, the castles of my youth had, for the most part, a particular quality that wasn’t much to do with their medieval origins. They were nearly all in the care of the Ministry of Public Building and Works. You found them by following official governmental signs. Once there, you found your way round using smaller signs and a guidebook, bound in blue and, if you were lucky, equipped with a fold-out map stuck into the back of the booklet. You unfolded this rather beautifully drawn map, and tried to work out where you were while it tried to blow away in the wind or invert itself like a flimsy umbrella. And it was quite easy to see where you were going because everything was so cared for. Lawns were manicured, paths were well laid, walls were pointed.
I’m very grateful to the Ministry of Public Building and Works, later the Department of the Environment, later English Heritage, for looking after our castles in this way, and for giving me enjoyment and education in equal measure. But wasn’t it all a bit too kempt? And how much did those lawns and concrete paths have to do with medieval history? There is another way: welcome to Wigmore Castle.
The fragmentary 12th-century ruins of Wigmore Castle are on a hill overlooking the Welsh-English border. When conservators looked at how best to preserve these isolated towers, arches, and bits of wall a few years ago, they decided to stabilize the masonry but not to clean up the growths of plant and bush that have invaded the place over the last few centuries. So an expert in nature conservation worked alongside those in building conservation.
The result is wonderful. Coming here you get a sense that you’re exploring as walls and towers loom out of the undergrowth. And my foraging wife found ripe blackberries for us to eat while I admired the masonry. Be warned: with its steep steps and muddy paths this isn’t a place for people who are unsteady on their legs. But if you can put up with the rough terrain, it’s a good place to come to witness the flowering of a ruin.
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4 comments:
What a fantastic find. I've just left a comment an the blog aesthete's lament (sorry I can't make a link, you'll have to follow the link on my blog, then look for House Proud), arguing that preserving ruination in the case of Chastleton House was a brilliant mistake. But at Wigmore, what could be better or more romantic?
Wonderful, very evocative blog. I came up here very early one autumn morning to catch the rising sun, and all the stones were wreathed in mist, with silver webs stretched-out between dried cow parsley stalks. And I loved the fact that I had to walk across a couple of fields to get here.
I'm pleased that this post is striking a chord. There is so much more to say about this place, not least the manner in which it is able to transport one back to the way people came across and appreciated ruins in the 18th and 19th centuries, before the age of conservation. I hope to return to this topic.
Our Community Interest Company has plans to encourage new visitors to Wigmore, including the wonderful castle. Check out our site www.thewigmorecentre.org. and enjoy the evocative photos of the area.
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