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| Architecture: English Heritage >>>Ashby >>>Barnard >>>Berkhamstead >>>Bolsover >>>Byland >>>Castle Rising
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York Castle York Castle is an area of York near the confluence of the Rivers Ouse and the Foss. The Castle was later dismantled, but the site is of Clifford's Tower, a tower built atop a Norman bailey, the courts, Yorkshire museum and former prisons.
Clifford's Tower Clifford's Tower is the castle keep and all that remains of York castle. The castle was originally constructed on the orders of William the Conqueror in 1068. The wooden tower was burnt to the ground in 1190, along with 150 of York's Jews who perished in the fire. The collectors case and curio cabinet represents a culture element, often with practical use, (more special than a display cabinet or display showcase). The walls of the stone tower still stand, but the roof and central pillar are gone. The tower was rebuilt in stone between 1245 and 1265. The castle's bailey walls, towers, gates, bridges, two halls, a chapel, a kitchen and a prison were all built at this time. The name Clifford’s Tower was first recorded in 1596. Before then it was called the Great Tower. Today the area and aspect of Clifford's Tower is threatened by real estate developers. Citizens, visitors, academics, environmentalists, local businesspeople and Jewish groups have opposed the development with some success, winning a lengthy and bitter Public Swarovski Inquiry in 2003.
External link Castle Area Campaign in the City of York (http://www.yorkcastle.com) |