Uncovering the secrets of st quentins castle

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
  • St Quintins Castle (also known as St Quentins Castle and Llanblethian Castle, Welsh: Castell Llanfleiddan) is a castle located in the village of Llanblethian, Cowbridge, Wales. It is a scheduled monument and a Grade II* listed building and is under the care of Cadw.[3] The site was first occupied with a defensive structure in about 1102 and the gatehouse and further building work took place around 1312. It was later used as a prison and was reported as being in a ruinous state by 1741.
    Around 1102 Robert Fitzhamon, the first Norman Lord of Glamorgan bequeathed the lands of Llanblethian as a lordship to Herbert de St Quentin who is thought to have built the first fortification at the site of the castle. This initial construct was believed to have been a simple ringwork defence with timber walls, a bank and ditch. A rectangular stone keep was built in the late 12th century, whose remains can now be found within the later gatehouse. This keep may have replaced a similar wooden structure.[3]
    The lordship remained with the St Quentin family until 1233 when the land was seized by Richard Siward, but he then lost it to Earl Richard de Clare in 1245. Richard de Clare seized large areas of this part of Glamorganshire, from Cowbridge to Llantrisant, but it was his grandson, Earl Gilbert de Clare, who began to build the stone structure of St Quintins Castle which stands today. This was thought to have been roughly after 1307, but Gilbert de Clare was killed in the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 before the castle was completed. Modern historians believe that the lack of inner courtyard buildings and the weakness of the curtain wall points to the hypothesis that the castle was never fully completed.[3]
    The castle itself is a rectangular stone walled enclosure, roughly 64 metres East to West. The walls are roughly 120 centimetres in thickness. It is set on a spur above steep slopes on all sides apart from the East side. The weak East side of the fortification is protected by a twin-tower gatehouse and a further two towers East entrance facade. The best defensive side is the southern side which falls away sharply to the River Thaw. It was reported as being ruinous by 1741.[3]
    The base of a semi-octagonal tower can be seen at the southeast corner of the castle and parts of a tower at the southwest corner. The ivy-clad gatehouse is between these and is a substantial structure where you can see the slits for the two portcullises and the fittings for the sets of strong doors. The remains of the keep are largely rubble and little remains of the bailey walls on the east, north and south sides.[4] It is a scheduled monument and a Grade II* listed building.[1][2]
    #stquentinscastle #cowbridge #southwales #castlevlog #castle #history

Komentáře • 5

  • @joshschneider9766
    @joshschneider9766 Před 3 měsíci +1

    definitely look forward to more vids, this was a staggering way to tour a heritage site!! I cant believe they allowed you to drone record. a place like that in the states, youd be in the prison faster than your head could spin for flying a drone overhead LOL

    • @Drone_Man_Wales
      @Drone_Man_Wales  Před 3 měsíci

      Thanks for your lovely comments more interesting videos are coming up

  • @joshschneider9766
    @joshschneider9766 Před 3 měsíci +1

    here in the usa "san" quentin is the name of a maximum security prison in a town of the same name in california. i think you guys got the cooler building named after the good saint for sure LOL.

  • @popeye2sea
    @popeye2sea Před 3 měsíci

    You keep going on about all the "stories" and "myths" and "legends" and "secrets" preserved by this ancient structure, yet you never talk about or even mention a single one?