Which areas for visiting medieval castles in England?
Posted by Ok-Boss-5118@reddit | AskABrit | View on Reddit | 119 comments
Hey all, I'm planning to visit England for two weeks during mid-April, the purpose of my travel is to visit medieval castles and medieval towns as I am passionate about medieval history. I've been told Wales is much better for castles but I would like to stick to England as I've always been a fan of the castles in England and this will be my first time in England. I would like to ask, which specific areas or places in England do you recommend me to visit? Are most castles open for visitors during April? And which airport do you recommend to land on? Thank you.
Hungry_Reward8822@reddit
Wales is better
silentv0ices@reddit
Northumberland is your destination. Base yourself in Durham or Newcastle and hire a car if using public transport Newcastle is the better option. Bonus both cities have castles. There's also roman history and a partial recreation of a roman fort in South Shields.
Current_Fly9337@reddit
Also segedunum in Wallsend
Puzzleheaded-Ad-4883@reddit
Also if you walk the course of Hadrian's Wall, there is a castle every mile. Not a very big castle, a Milecastle.
TheIronicDruid86@reddit
I second Newcastle - visited it while on holiday in Yorkshire as it was a short drive away and it was worth it.
StuartHunt@reddit
You'd be better off visiting Wales.
As we have more castles per square mile, than any other country in Europe, with over 600 to choose from.
Ok-Middle8656@reddit
The best castles in the UK are in Wales, because they didn’t get bombarded in the English civil war. Caernarfon, Conwy, and Beaumaris are all close together and three of the best. Then there’s Harlech, Raglan, Chepstow and Coch - which is small but intact/rebuilt.
The best I’ve found in England are in Kent: Dover which has a reconstructed keep, Leeds which is still a family home and Bodiam, which is the classic castle and moat. There’s Warwick in the midlands, but that’s is now more of a theme park.
In Scotland, Stirling castle is probably the best in the entire UK.
Inevitable_Land2996@reddit
I’d say Colchester castle is another good one (and a great example of a Norman castle design). The downside is that you have to go to Colchester to visit it
Cool_Doubt2152@reddit
I am Welsh and honestly you won’t notice the difference as to whether you’re in Wales or England. Many Welsh castles were also built by the English.
North Wales has a bunch of them in close proximity and some beautiful scenery to go with it. Conwy, Caernarfon, Beaumaris, Harlech, Gwrych, Chirk, Penrhyn, most of them being along the North Wales coast or not far inland, and that’s not even all of them. You can also go via Chester on the way for the largest preserved Roman amphitheater in the UK, some still standing Roman walls, and one of the oldest racecourses in the world.
kernowgringo@reddit
Fuck England, go to Wales
FishUK_Harp@reddit
Strictly speaking, Northumberland.
But I must advocate for North Wales: there are lasds of great castles and nearly all are English-built. It's, on balance, probably easier to get to than Northumberland due to proximity to Liverpool and Manchester, plus has a train connecting many of them (quite literally in the case of Conwy!)
Blue1994a@reddit
Northumberland, fly to Newcastle Airport.
Edward I built some impressive Welsh castles, you could easily get to them from Northumberland if you have two weeks.
Badknees24@reddit
Don't miss Lincoln for the castle (with surviving. copy of the Magma Carta) and Cathedral, and remains of the bishops palace. It's awesome for history fans!
Halfway-Competent@reddit
Not a castle, but if you find yourself in Yorkshire, try Fountains Abbey. It’s a glorious ruin but you get a real idea of what it was like. The wider park it is set in is beautiful too. Scarborough Castle is good too. I’m biased though as I like Scarborough. It was where we spent our summer holidays when I was a kid.
SameCollege4578@reddit
Yorkshire
Toc13s@reddit
Pretty much anywhere. There aren't too many places that don't have a bunch.
You might try around Gloucester & Hereford. This will give you a few castles either side of the Welsh border (Raglan, Hay, Chepstow spring to kind) Offa's Dyke, several cathedrals, & nearby access to Wiltshire for Neolithic stuff & a whole bunch of Anglo-Saxon locations
KonkeyDongPrime@reddit
Northumberland. Alnwick, Bamburgh, Raby, Durham and I think the newly restored Lindisfarne has now opened.
Escapedtothecountry@reddit
And Warkworth.
Ambitious_Jelly3473@reddit
Barnard Castle and Richmond Castle are also worth seeing. Definitely worth finding time for Durham Cathedral if you're going to see the Castle and as a bit of a wild card, Binchester Roman Fort is worth dropping in to see.
If you happen to be in the area in July/August, I'd also massively recommend seeing Kynren.
paradoxbound@reddit
OK you’re right but the three I mentioned are English built and many of the Welsh built castles were taken over and modified by the English.
actualinsomnia531@reddit
Spend some time trawling the English Heritage and National Trust websites. There are plenty of others outside these organisations, but it's a good start.
I assume you mean the old Motte & Bailey, Norman fortress type castle and not the palaces and hunting lodges? Because of its the latter, you don't have to leave London. The Tower of London is pretty awesome even though it is a tourist trap.
Kent has some lovely examples that can more or less be accessed from London by train.
Rowmyownboat@reddit
Why are you ignoring Wales? A) It is beautiful. B) It has 600 castles.
Substantial-Hotel493@reddit
Probably because they are a weird Anglophile yank would be my guess.
Winkered@reddit
Because they’re visiting England?
Onyx1509@reddit
Wales is next to England. If they're arriving in, say, London then Wales is closer than many parts of England.
On-Mute@reddit
"I've always been a fan of the castles in England"
So much so that they've had to come on to Reddit to ask which ones to visit. Seems reasonable to ask if they really know what they want if you ask me.
RealLongwayround@reddit
I’d tend to agree! It’s odd to have “always been a fan of the castles in England” to the extent that OP does not want to visit Wales but have no idea where in England to see these apparently superior castles.
Rowmyownboat@reddit
I was asking why. Is that a problem for you, toddler?
ezonas@reddit
That is the reason, don’t be so sensitive.
Substantial-Hotel493@reddit
Wales would be better for medieval castles than England.
Thanks Edward I.
MsLuciferM@reddit
Northumberland has so many castles. Hire a car and stay in Alnwick. Alnwick also has a castle and beautiful garden. Nearby is: Bamburgh Castle, Dunstanburgh Castle, Alnwick Castle, Warkworth Castle, there’s one on Holy Island, Chillingham Castle and Edlingham Castle.
If you’re flying into London you could get a train from Kings Cross to York- an ancient city with medieval streets. Then drive up to Northumberland from there.
ezonas@reddit
This is the way, took my Canadian relatives on a tour of most of these plus Durham a couple of years ago, had a great time.
MsLuciferM@reddit
I forgot about Durham. It’s a beautiful city.
thelilistchode@reddit
York
Rowmyownboat@reddit
York is good for several things, but the castle isn't one of them.
Cawoodarcher@reddit
York has the longest mediaeval city walls in England. You can walk around 90% of them. Clifford's tower, the surviving part of the castle is a really interesting site with lots of history going back to William the bastard. Great stop off on the way to Northumberland.
Itchy-Gur2043@reddit
Skipton Castle is one of the best preserved castles in England. Someone still lives in part of it. There are a few other ruined castles within a reasonable distance; Knaresborough, Spofforth. Also Ripley castle (bit more like a medieval fortified house than a full on castle)
Tricky-Canary2715@reddit
Alnwick, Northumbria. York, yorkshire. More a viking walled city than castle. Kenilworth, midlands Warwick, warwickshire lots to see and do Dover, kent. Again lots to see besides the castle
Otherwise-Plane8282@reddit
I’d say you’d be better off visiting Wales for castles , there’s over 600 which is more per square mile than any other country in the world, the most well known are Carernfon, Harlech, Conway and Beaumaris and form part of a UNESCO world heritage site
CallmeWill_1997@reddit
A few castles I can recommend are Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire, Goodrich Castle in Herefordshire and Berkeley Castle in Gloucestershire
Illustrious_Study_30@reddit
Just go to Wales already..
SarkyMs@reddit
Caernarfon castle in Wales is GOOD.
Illustrious_Study_30@reddit
Years ago my Welsh boyfriend was completely not amused by me shouting 'One of ours or one of yours' in my poshest English accent while driving past some Northern Welsh castles. I found it highly amusing .
I loved Harlech btw. Caernarfon is lovely too.
Loose_Acanthaceae201@reddit
tbf most of the big castles in Wales were built by or for Edward I, so if OP wants to see medieval English castles then it's a great base.
TheIronicDruid86@reddit
Probably my favourite castle to have visited, though this may be coloured by how much I enjoyed my Welsh holiday.
Grazza123@reddit
You really should consider Wales - it’s full of really well preserved English castles from when the English were suppressing wales
anabsentfriend@reddit
Sussex is good for castles. Easy to access from Gatwick.
Divewench@reddit
Kent. We have over 30 castles, ruins and fortified houses to choose from.
Winkered@reddit
Four or five hours isn’t it? Love me some wales I do. Dead near the major airports too.
Aggravating-Mousse46@reddit
Rochester is brilliant!
Aggravating-Mousse46@reddit
The castle anyway…
Westsidepipeway@reddit
Love me some Kent castles.
PARFT@reddit
When you go to Wales don’t forget to go to Ludlow the town is something else.
mtjnorth@reddit
North Wales for the highest concentration of castles in the UK. Northumberland and the Scottish boarders are close, but with the added bonus of the Roman ruins along Hadrian's Wall.
Tamihera@reddit
Ludlow is fantastic.
TheBladesAurus@reddit
But North Wales you're not far away from Chester, for Roman walls and medieval streets.
Phillyfuk@reddit
And half an Amphitheatre.
Sullyvan96@reddit
I see no mention of Berkhamsted castle. It’s not too far out of London and can be a stop on a journey to Warwick, maybe. Pretty sure that Oxford has a castle too
TheBeaverKing@reddit
You could do the the midlands, which has Warwick Castle, Dudley Castle, Kenilworth and Stratford-upon-Avon (medieval town). You can land at Birmingham Airport and most of these places are 30 minutes or so away. I did Warwick Castle the other day, absolutely beautiful, especially this time of year.
The issue is that you'll do those over a few days and then you'll need to travel further afield. Ideally you should rent a car, then you can use the midlands as your starting point and drive out from there on day trips. It's central within England and sat inbetween 3 major motorways, so you can get to the majority of the country in under 2 hours drive.
Few-Review3796@reddit
To get into Dudley Castle you need to visit the Zoo and it's poorly presented and interpreted. Ashby-de-la-Zouche castle run by English Heritage is much better. Avoid Warwick Castle as it's run by Merlin Entertainments and whilst an impressive structure they have made it into a medieval theme park. Merlin Entertainments is also a horrible company who discriminate against SEN children. There is also Weoley Castle ruins in Birmingham but never been. Also castles at Stafford and Tamworth (motte and bailey). But Wales is the best place to see castles with north Wales being the most obvious but also in South Wales; Goodrich, Usk, Chepstow, Cardiff, Castell Coch, Capherilly and Roman remains at Carleon too.
isearn@reddit
Kenilworth!
BG3restart@reddit
If the OP truly wants to see the best examples of mediaeval castles, he can't ignore Warwick just because you dislike Merlin. It is the best mediaeval castle in the country, fact.
SilyLavage@reddit
'Best' is subjective, but the main draws of Warwick for the medieval enthusiast are Guy's Tower and Caesar's Tower. The rest of the castle has been extensively restored and is substantially post-medieval.
Normal-Height-8577@reddit
Yup. If you want to see an extensively restored castle, then Cardiff and Castell Coch have to be considered as excellent for their type (I am such a big fan of Burgess's Aesop's Fable murals), and the recent Norwich Castle restoration/revamp has made a huge difference to the visitor experience.
Few-Review3796@reddit
It's a great building but it's just a medieval theme park which is a complete rip off and so gimmicky. They burnt down the boathouse a while back because they misfired the trebuchet!!. The visitor experience is crap.
Kenilworth Castle is a much better place to visit however it is all subjective. Prefer the English Heritage and National Trust approach where they let the history speak for itself rather than trying to fleece tourists with gimmicks.
Exact-Character313@reddit
Warwick Castle is a must see, it's still fully standing and functional thanks to heavy renovations and maintenance. It looks like it's growing out of the rock it's built on. You can get a full tour around it, including the dungeons
isearn@reddit
Also, Kenilworth and Tamworth are not a million miles away, even if not in the same condition.
Escapedtothecountry@reddit
But massively commercialised so hard to see the genuine castle beneath all of that. I prefer the ones you can wander round yourself and really get a sense of the place.
Exact-Character313@reddit
I agree with that, but you can still roam around it. And it's awesome to see standing from outside
Peteat6@reddit
There’s two great castles in the Midlands, Warwick castle and Kenilworth, fairly close to each other.
Warwick castle is still inhabited and you can look round many of the rooms. It’s also very historic.
Kenilworth is close by (maybe 20 minutes by car), and is a large ruin you can climb all over. It was built about 1120, and extended again and again. There’s one existing tower, built for Elizabeth I, and several other buildings. The castle’s very ancient, and where Robert Dudley, the Earl of Leicestershire, tried to woo Elizabeth the first in 1575. It was the major castle in this area until it chose the wrong side in the civil wars, after which it was deliberately destroyed in 1649.
There’s also Tamworth castle not too far away.
The two make an excellent contrast. Fly to Birmingham, maybe 20-30 minutes by car from both.
TheBladesAurus@reddit
Why are you ruling out Wales? North Wales has lots of great castles, and you can go across to Chester, which still has medieval (and earlier) features.
vzzzbxt@reddit
I love Tintagel. It's just ruins but it's beautiful and the setting is amazing.
The locals are really cashing in on the King Arthur legends
Delicious_Device_87@reddit
Absolutely unique setting, quite extraordinary really.
On the way to Cornwall, head to Corfe Castle as well - also quite a special setting
vzzzbxt@reddit
Ooh, not been there. Will try to check it out
br0wn0ni0n@reddit
How about flying into London (Heathrow or Gatwick), visiting Windsor castle and The Tower of London, then heading to The O2 to rent a car and heading South East to Kent (very, very simple journey), where there are many castles and medieval forts, stately homes and all kinds of attractions. Dover, Bodiam, Rochester, Leeds, Hever, Scotney and Deal castles are all good. Canterbury has a lot of history to explore, with castle ruins, city walls and various old buildings and towers around the city.
Would be an easy little tour.
captainsittingduck@reddit
Plenty in the north/north west. Lancaster Castle, Kendal Castle, Carlisle Castle, Bolton Castle, Middleham Castle, Skipton Castle, Beeston Castle, Peveril Castle, Pendragon Castle to name just some. Some are in good condition, some are ruins.
RedHeadRedemption93@reddit
Wales, Welsh Marches, Northumberland, Kent
ReySpacefighter@reddit
How can you be a big fan of "the castles in England" but not know which ones you actually want to see? Just go to Wales.
RDT_Reader_Acct@reddit
North and North West Wales has several good ones, all within easy driving distance
paradoxbound@reddit
Heathrow or Gatwick, they are London airports. Your first medieval castle is the Tower of London, actually parts of it are earlier Norman. While you are there you can see other sights that may interest you including world class museums full of priceless items looted during our colonial period. Next you catch a train or hire a car and go to Windsor Castle another royal castle and the favourite residence of the late queen. Your final destination on a tour of great English castles in England is Warwick Castle. It’s the most complete medieval castle in England and very impressive. All of these are a within easy reach of London.
You really should add Wales to your list. All the Welsh castles are English castles built in the medieval period after the conquest of Wales to control the country and suppress the Welsh. A great triple is Conway Harlech and Caernarfon, the later is where the English Princes of Wales are invested. You will also see some beautiful Welsh coastal views as they are all coastal castles.
If you are going to move beyond England then try and get up to Edinburgh, the old town and castle are amazing and will give you a great feeling of how castle and town fitted together. Have a great trip.
Normal-Height-8577@reddit
Um, no. Edward built a lot of them, but some of them are Welsh castles built by the Welsh princes to defend against the English.
TheGeordieGal@reddit
Northumberland has the most castles (still standing and ruins) in England so that’s a good place. You can get to many in public transport but it can be a faff so driving would be better. The roads aren’t exactly packed etc up here so as long as you’re willing to drive at a sensible pace on country roads you’d be fine. Should be plenty of parking in April too as it’s not peak tourist season.
Normal-Height-8577@reddit
Does it? I keep seeing Northumberland cited, and when I look for details, it's says the county has 70 castle sites - and then I look up Herefordshire, which has a listing of 131 castle sites.
Now granted Northumberland has some amazing and huge castles, and meanwhile half of Herefordshire's are probably mounds from wooden motte and baileys that never got rebuilt in stone and are now half forgotten in a tiny village (Hi Much Marcle!), but... I'm curious about where the figures and the hype are coming from. I've always previously been told that the Scottish Marches and Welsh Marches are equally good places to go castle-hunting.
MasterPreparation687@reddit
OP this is the answer, Northumberland is absolutely Castle Central.
Ok_Veterinarian2715@reddit
Seconded! There's also Lindisfarne and you can nip over the border to go Edinburgh - fantastic city + castle + a great train journey.
Past-Obligation1930@reddit
Go to Leeds Castle.
It’s in a different part of the country to Leeds.
mralistair@reddit
Rye is lovely
isntitobviousnow@reddit
Canterbury, no castle but there is the Cathedral and the city centre is beautiful.
Place of pilgrimage and the end point of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales.
There are nearby castles if that's your soul aim, including nearby Rochester, Leeds Castle and Reculver Towers.
Lost-Sausage@reddit
Canterbury does have a castle:
https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryMagazine/DestinationsUK/Canterbury-Castle/
dynze@reddit
Sack of England and go to Wales
Qwerty_mo-fu@reddit
Are you hiring a car? A live in the area with the least number, other than the islands, and i could get in my car and visit a hundred within two hours drive
Professional-Test239@reddit
Bit weird that you've ruled out Wales. That's like saying you want to meet Mickey Mouse but you've ruled out Disneyland.
Regthedog2021@reddit
They are all over - but they built loads in the Middle Ages in wales as those guys just wouldn’t let it lie…
Paulstan67@reddit
Depending on the time you have available I would do a road trip.
Start in Cumbria.
Where you can visit the lake district as well.
There are hundreds of castles, ruins, Pele towers, mote and bailey fortifications too numerous to mention.
Sizergh castle. And then up to Carlisle castle.
From there follow the line of Hadrian's wall , where you could visit.
Lannercost priory, I know not a castle, but it is fortified due to its position and was raided many times due to its position on the border. Edward I stayed here .
Then on to Thirlwall Castle. Noteworthy because it is built pretty much entirely of stone "recycled" from Hadrian's wall. And was built to protect against the Border Reivers who were prevalent in the area.
On to Prudhoe Castle. The only castle that never fell to the Scots, it has a rare bridge and gatehouse.
Keep going on to Warkworth castle. Home to the dukes of Northumberland, with an unusual cross shaped Keep.
From there on to Alnwick castle (and the town) the second largest inhabited castle. Although not necessarily of interest from a medieval point of view it has some magnificent opulent state rooms and has a Harry Potter connection as it appeared in the films as hogwarts.
Next Dunstanburgh Castle. Although not the most spectacular ruins, the remote location help you understand how difficult it would be to invade. The only access is by walking a mile from the village of Crater.
Finally visit Bamburgh castle. Some fantastic armour and a great hall. This castle was the first castle to fall due to gunpowder artillery.
Obviously there are other sights along this route including Hadrian's wall and some of its forts but this road trip would keep you busy for about a week.
llynglas@reddit
North Wales...... Sorry. But the combination of Caernarfon, Conwy, Harlech, Beaumaris and Cricceth Castles is unique. The first four being probably the apex of British medieval castle building. There is a reason they are a World Heritage Site.
In England, I love Dover and Bamburg Castles.
Extension_Sun_377@reddit
Lancaster Castle is worth a visit, right in the city centre, intact, used as a court and til recently, a prison. Where the Lancashire witches were tried, imprisoned and sentenced to hang and has a great cafe and daily guided tours.
No-Bobcat-4737@reddit
Northumberland and Durham . Castles Galore!
NotOnYerNelly@reddit
Wales. 🤣
Y_ddraig_gwyn@reddit
castles often cluster in reasonable proximity to one another, as they were built (sometimes by both sides) on borders or contested land.
FWIW, I’d still recommend Wales over England for the sheer concentration of incredible buildings in outstanding settings. Either way, you’ll probably find it cost effective to join either English Heritage or Cadw to mitigate entry costs.
PeriPeriTekken@reddit
Tbh, all of it. There's tonnes of medieval castles in the England and you'd be hard pressed to find an area that didn't have any worth visiting. Well preserved medieval towns will actually be more of a rarity. You've also got two weeks, so I would suggest:
As people have said, Northumberland might be one good base, Warwick castle is particularly worthwhile, Kent has got a lot of historically interesting ones.
You could fly to London, start off in Kent, head up to Warwickshire and end up in Northumberland, then drive back to London via an overnight in York.
hellopo9@reddit
You won't be able to visit all the castles in a region.
Id recommend the south east as it's close to major airports and a few nice cities.
The north east is pretty but harder to get to and has fewer major attractions.
Fly to London, stay in London a few days. Do a trip to Cambridge (it's lovely).
In the south east see Windsor castle/palace (where the royals have their country estate). See Arundel, Leeds castle (not in Leeds), maybe Hever. I'd also recommend all the cute villages.
ByronsLastStand@reddit
Siomedig that you're missing out Cymru!
Warwick castle is great, Alnwick and Bamburgh too.
BloodAndSand44@reddit
Research castles of Edward the first. Can’t go wrong with those as a starting point.
But think of 3 different types of castles.
Uninhabitable. Ruins with enough restoration to be safe and a good visit. Bodiam.
Houses. Small castles that are still in use as a home. Hever.
Maintained. Something that has been in pretty much constant use. Tower of London.
Sad_Firefighter_8407@reddit
Northumberland is littered with castles. Edinburgh airport with a journey down through to Newcastle. Then you can enjoy the historic stuff in Edinburgh first as well as its castle.
https://northumberlandsbest.co.uk/castles-in-northumberland/
Or Newcastle airport.
You’ll need a car to get to the places with castles tbh.
Bus will take too long and trains don’t get you near enough.
barrybreslau@reddit
The Welsh Marches (border), Snowdonia (not England, it's Wales), Northumbria. There are lots of castles that don't fit into that though.
NoCold3997@reddit
Shropshire march's area . Ludlow.shrewsbuy.clun.stokesay etc etc.
Winkered@reddit
Start with Dover castle. It’s the first one you come to in England. Well it would be if you came by ferry. Loads of history there from the Romans to the Second World War. Easy to get to by road or rail. You’d also get to see the white cliffs and France on a good day. Dover towns not great but your close to Canterbury which is worth a visit with the cathedral, city walls and st Augustine’s abbey.
cdp181@reddit
Downvoted but Dover castle is one of the best day trip castles I have visited in the UK.
Winkered@reddit
Unfortunately Dover town lets it down. Most people only ever see this part of the country from the A2.
Grendahl2018@reddit
Airport rather depends on your carrier, though it’s not a big deal either way.
I’d suggest assigning a day to Windsor and Warwick castles initially (Warwick does a lot of medieval recreation from memory), spend a day or so in Stratford-upon-Avon and do some weirdly revisionist Shakespeare from the RSC (last time I went, 10 years ago, R&J was in modern dress and a Glaswegian accent - and expect ALL the bits current productions cut out as we are no longer Tudor audiences with their specific sensibilities).
As you’re going to be around London, either coming or going, you need to do The Tower and the Jewel House. Very informative. Tickets need to be booked online.
I know nothing about Welsh castles.
You might also want to think about visiting stately homes, many of which are maintained by the National Trust
dowker1@reddit
I would also recommend Warwick castle and Stratford, and also suggest Kenilworth Castle alongside Warwick (as an example of an unreconstructed Norman castle), and Henley-in-Arden alongside Stratford (as an example of a village that retains much of its Tudor characteristics).
Dependent-Net-8208@reddit
I would suggest using Google and searching for something like, 'list of castles I can visit'. This will eliminate those castles that are just ruins and the ones that are privately owned and inaccessible. You can then refine your search to exclude those that are not medieval. Many castles are in ancient towns
Motor-Command-2680@reddit
Wales without a doubt in my opinion.
PassiveTheme@reddit
What castles in England are you a fan of? There are more castles in Wales due to the history of conquest of Britain - the Welsh fought back more than the people inhabiting what we now know as England, which is also the reason for England and Wales being separate countries.
Do you want to see ruins or restored castles?
I can't really answer your question, but people who can help you will likely need more information to give you the help you actually want
OrganizationOk5418@reddit
North Wales
thelilistchode@reddit
I mean they literally specified they don’t want to go to wales but sure.
Pure-Dead-Brilliant@reddit
https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/learn/histories/medieval-castles/
SnooDonuts6494@reddit
A week in London, and a week in Edinburgh.
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