Gwydir Castle

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Gwydir Castle

Caernarfonshire


Gwydir Castle
Type: Fortified manor house
Location
Location: 53°7’58"N, 3°48’4"W
History
Built c. 1500
Information
Owned by: Private

Gwydir Castle is situated in the Conwy valley, on the west side of the valley in Caernarfonshire, a mile to the west of Llanrwst and a mile and half south of Trefriw.

The castle dates back to c1500 and is a good example of a fortified manor house. Its location has been fortified for many centuries in various forms, standing on the edge of the floodplain of the River Conwy, overlooked from the west by Gwydir Forest.

History

There has been a fortification of some sort on the site since AD 600, and in the Middle Ages a large number of skirmishes were fought in this area between the various rival Welsh princes and their forces, the most significant being in 610 and 954.

The entrance of the castle

By the 14th century some form of manorial house had evolved, and the first recorded owner was Howell ap Coetmor, who fought in the Hundred Years' War and was a commander of longbowmen under Edward, the Black Prince at the Battle of Poitiers in 1356.

Gwydir became the ancestral home of the powerful Wynn family, descended from the Kings of Gwynedd, and one of the most significant families of north Wales during the Tudor and Stuart periods. The shield of the Gwynn family, vert three eagles displayed in fess or is that attributed to King Owain Gwynedd and has since become the pattern of the Flag of Caernarfonshire.

After the Wars of the Roses the castle was rebuilt by Meredith ap Ieuan ap Robert, the founder of the Wynn dynasty. The house incorporated re-used mediæval material from the dissolved Abbey of Maenan. The square turret at the rear of the Solar Tower contains a spiral staircase taken from the Abbey and many elaborately carved stones can also be seen. The turret was added around 1540 and Sir John Wynn's initials can be seen above the main entrance in the courtyard gatehouse along with the date of 1555. The surviving buildings date from around the year 1500, and there were alterations and additions in c1540, c1600 and c1828, the latter after Lord Willoughby had done a fair bit of demolishing in c1819.

Although called a castle, it is an example of a Tudor architecture courtyard house or fortified manor house, rather than a traditional castle, such as those built in North Wales by Llywelyn the Great and Edward I.

Gwydir was home to Katheryn of Berain. King Charles I is said to have visited Gwydir in 1645 as the guest of Sir Richard Wynn, 2nd Baronet, Treasurer to Queen Henrietta Maria, and Groom of the Royal Bed Chamber.

More recently King George V and Queen Mary stayed here as the Duke and Duchess of York, in April 1899.

The Gwydir Estate

The yew walk

During the 16th and 17th centuries the Gwydir Estate under the Wynn family dominated north Wales, and at the centre of this huge Estate, Gwydir itself stood in a deer park of some 36,000 acres. In 1678 it passed by marriage to the Barons Willoughby de Eresby, based in Lincolnshire (and from 1892 also to the Earls of Ancaster). The 18th century consequently saw a period of some neglect, and by the early 19th century the Estate largely comprised the parishes of Dolwyddelan (where the Wynns also had an ancestral home), Llanrhychwyn, Trefriw, and Gwydir, totalling some 55 square miles. This land, however, was mostly mountainous and of poor quality, and although there were some 30 slate mines on the land, of varying sizes, this slate was not of a particularly good standard, much of it more suited to slabs than roofing slate. Nor was production high, and the output of all the quarries over the 150 years of their existence totalled, for instance, just two years' worth of output from the Blaenau Ffestiniog quarries. Until the arrival of the railway in the 1860s, most slate was carried by cart to the quays at Trefriw. The Estate also owned a number of mineral mines, mostly in the area of today's Gwydir Forest.

Much of the Estate was, however, under continuous mortgage, and in 1894 Dolwyddelan was sold off, followed in the next two years by most of Llanrhychwyn and Trefriw. The sale of the house in 1921 by the Earl Carrington saw it passing out of inherited ownership for the first time in over 400 years, and virtually all other lands were subsequently sold off. Today the Estate comprises just the 10 acres in which Gwydir Castle sits.

The 20th Century

In 1921 the castle was desecrated. The 1640s panelled main dining room was totally stripped, the carved and gilded panelling being bought at auction by William Randolph Hearst, the American press baron. On his death, the panels were inherited by the Metropolitan Museum of Art and until recently languished in storage. The new owners of Gwydir, Peter Welford and Judy Corbett, succeeded in tracing these long lost panels and negotiated with the museum, which generously allowed their return to Wales.[1] They have been carefully replaced in their original setting, and the restored dining room was re-opened in 1998 at a ceremony attended by the Prince of Wales.

In 1922 a fire broke out and gutted the Solar Tower,[2] leaving it roofless. A subsequent fire in the West Wing made the place untenable, and it was abandoned, remaining unoccupied until 1944. In this year it was bought by Arthur Clegg, a retired bank manager, who, together with his wife and son, started a 20-year programme of renovation.

The castle is now privately owned by Peter Welford and his wife, Judy Corbett. They purchased the castle in 1994. They then began a programme of conservation with authenticity as the main consideration. The story of the restoration is told in Judy Corbett's book Castles in the Air. [3]

The Gardens

The Dutch garden

The castle is set within a Grade-I listed, 10-acre garden, which contains some ancient cedars, one of which was planted in 1625 to commemorate the wedding of King Charles I to Queen Henrietta Maria. One yew tree, known as the "Lovers Tree" or "Giant Yew", is estimated to be between 600 and 1,000 years old, and therefore pre-dates the castle itself.

The raised terrace contains an imposing Renaissance arch, probably dating from the 1590s.

The Old Dutch garden contains ancient yew topiary and an octagonal fountain.

The Royal and Statesman's gardens contain Welsh Oaks planted during the royal visit of 1899, and in 1911.

An Elizabethan causeway called the Chinese Walk runs across the fields to the River Conwy, where the remains of the Gwydir Quay can be seen. The river Conwy is tidal up to this point.

Ghost legends

Like many an old castle, stories have arisen of resident ghosts. The "Grey Lady" is the most commonly reported, together with the ghost of a monk said to have been trapped in a tunnel leading from the secret room, and Sir John Wynn himself.[4]

Gwydir Uchaf Chapel

Gwydir Uchaf Chapel, in the woods above Gwydir Castle, was built in 1673 by Sir Richard Wynn as a family memorial chapel for the Wynns of Gwydir. The simple exterior provides a direct contrast with its beautifully painted ceiling, depicting the Creation, the Trinity and the Last Judgement.

This chapel should not be confused with the one adjoining Llanrwst Church, called Gwydir Chapel. (This was built in 1633 by an earlier Sir Richard Wynn, and is said to have been designed by Inigo Jones. It has elaborate wood panelling, several family tombs and a stone coffin said to be that of Llywelyn ab Iorwerth, moved from Maenan Abbey at the Dissolution.) The chapel is still owned by the Willoughby family who were the hereditary owners of Gwydir Castle. It is now managed by Cadw.

See also

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Gwydir Castle)

References

  • Gwydir Castle — A Brief History and Guide, by Peter Welford, 2000
  • Gwydir Castle Published by Arthur Clegg.
  • Gwydir Slate Quarries, by M.C. Williams & M.J.T. Lewis, 1989
  • Castles in the Air, by Judy Corbett, Ebury Press, 2004