Isle of Purbeck. Welcome to the Isle of Purbeck Visitors Guide. Corfe Castle Accommodation, Swanage, Wareham
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  Welcome to the Corfe Castle Information  
 

Corfe Castle is situated between Swanage and Wareham on the A351, nestled between the Purbeck hills on the Isle of Purbeck in Dorset. The history of Corfe Castle dates back to the 9th century and the ruins you see today date back to the 11th century. Corfe Castle is a popular tourist attractions with many people visiting the village and Castle. As well as these attractions Corfe Castle is home to the smallest Town Hall in England as well as the Swanage - Corfe Castle Steam Railway which operates most of the year.

The Steam Railway also serves as a Park & Ride for the Isle of Purbeck with the Park & Ride based at Norden just outside of Corfe Castle with the Steam Railway running from Norden to Corfe then across the Isle of Purbeck until it reaches Swanage. Corfe Castle is also well known for its Christmas lights. Every year more lights are added and last year Corfe Castle won Dorset Christmas Lights of the Year.

View of Corfe Castle
 
     
Steam Train passing through Corfe Castle   Wareham qauy and river
 
     
  Dominating a breach in the Purbeck hills, the castle has been an important stronghold since
 

before the time of William the Conqueror. Edward, the Saxon boy king, was murdered here in 978 and King John kept important prisoners and valuable treasures in the towers. Defended for the Royalists during the Civil War by the redoubtable Lady Bankes, the castle fell to treachery from within and was heavily slighted afterwards by the Parliamentarians. However, many fine features survive, including the gloriette, which features some of the best early Gothic architecture in England. Living history weekends and frequent medieval and Civil War re-enactments bring the castle alive for visitors. There is an interactive exhibition at the Castle View Visitor Centre.

Corfe Castle Opening Times

1 Mar–31 Mar 10am – 5pm Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su
1 Apr–30 Sep 10am – 6pm Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su

1 Oct–31 Oct

10am – 5pm

Mo

Tu

We

Th

Fr

Sa

Su

1 Nov–28 Feb

10am – 4pm

Mo

Tu

We

Th

Fr

Sa

Su

A Brief History of Corfe Castle

From the Cretaceous and Jurassic periods when dinosaurs roamed the Isle of Purbeck, right up to the modern day, nearly all periods of history are celebrated in and around the village of Corfe, unequalled in the UK.

PRE-HISTORY

Evidence exists on Corfe Common on the southern edge of the village, of a civilisation in 6000 BC. Several barrows (burial mounds) can be seen after leaving West Street onto the common. These people would no doubt have migrated from Europe on the ‘land bridge’ of which the Purbeck hills formed a part.

CELTIC

All around the village there is evidence of Celtic habitation. The Common is an excellent example of a Celtic field system. The primary tribe were the Durotriges (High Kings) who were also evident in Ireland. These peoples migrated from the Middle East and were part of the Kimmiri (Cymri), around 1300 BC. Apart from their abilities as warriors, they were excellent farmers, potters and craftsmen. The local cove of Kimmeridge would probably have been their port.

ROMAN

The Romans probably dominated Corfe around AD50; however, there is strong evidence of a trading relationship, primarily in copper and pottery, perhaps 100 years earlier. The Romans seemed to have co-existed with the Durotriges as trading partners. There is a Villa under the fields at Bucknowle, and several Roman industrial sites surround the Castle. However, there is legend – later chronicled by Thomas Hardy - of a whole Roman legion disappearing in Purbeck; only its ghost remains. Nevertheless, a massive battle ensued between the two at Maiden Castle resulting in the destruction of these Celts.

VIKING/SAXON

Early in the 5th century, as the Romans left our shores, fierce tribes began attacking from Scandinavia and Germany. The Saxons settled here but the Danes plundered for many centuries. It wasn't until AD875 that things came to a head; King Alfred the Saxon King struck an agreement with Hubba the Dane, a marriage of convenience, but two years later Halfden broke the truce. A decisive naval battle took place; attacked by Alfred’s ships and hindered by a furious storm, 120 Viking ships sank off Peveril Point near Swanage. To prevent further attacks, Alfred built a castle at “Corfe’s Gate”. In AD978 Queen Elfrida murdered her stepson, King Edward the martyr, here; this was in order to put her own son on the throne, subsequently Ethelred the Unready. This triggered many years of Danish plundering. There is a small section of wall in the West of the Inner Bailey of the Castle of a herring-bone design which is probably part of Elfrida’s palace.

NORMAN

In AD 1090 following William’s conquest of Britain, the Corfe Norman Castle was begun. William’s son Henry I was crowned in 1100 and developed the castle keep and inner bailey. Henry left no legitimate male heir; his daughter Matilda claimed the throne, reinforced by an alliance with the House of Anjou through her husband Geoffrey Plantagenet. King Steven claimed the throne for the House of Blois and Civil War ensued. Corfe was besieged by Stephen, but Baldwin de Redvers held the castle for the Empress.

MEDIEVAL

For the whole of the Medieval period, Corfe was a Royal Castle. Kings used it as one of the five royal castles. King John kept his crown jewels here. Edward II was imprisoned here. Much torturing and murder took place. Henry VII gave it to his mother but later it reverted to Henry VIII. Queen Elizabeth sold it to her Chancellor, Christopher Hatton, who fortified it further in readiness for the Spanish Armada.

CIVIL WAR

The Hatton Family sold the castle to the Bankes family. Sir John Bankes was Lord Chief Justice to King Charles I. Civil war broke out and it was left to Lady Bankes (Brave Dame Mary) to defend the castle in 1643 and 1645 through two sieges. She was finally overcome by the treachery of one of her own officers, Colonel Pitman. Following an Act of Parliament, the Castle was then blown up from the inside by engineers.

Getting There

Corfe Castle is reached by the B3531 from Wareham, or it is accessible from Swanage or from Poole via the Sandbanks ferry. There are three car parks, some free, with spaces for the disabled.

The nearest train stations are Poole and Bournemouth. The Swanage Railway runs from Corfe Castle to Swanage. Buses go to Studland from Poole, Bournemouth and Swanage.

 
   
   
 

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