The 50 Greatest Castles and Palaces of the World - Gilly Pickup - E-Book

The 50 Greatest Castles and Palaces of the World E-Book

Gilly Pickup

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Beschreibung

Castles and palaces around the world are structures of grandeur, might and beauty.  From the flamboyance of Germany's fairy tale-Neuschwanstein Castle to the gothic, Dracula-inspiring Bran Castle, perched high in the craggy peaks of Romania's Carpathian Mountains; Tokyo's Imperial Palace, previously home to samurai warriors to Ireland's Blarney Castle, where 'the gift of the gab' will be granted to any who kiss its stone, the world's castles and palaces are steeped in history and stories to tell.  Travel writer and journalist Gilly Pickup shares these stories, providing a tour of 50 of the world's greatest castles and palaces, filled with humour, interesting facts and tips on how best to visit them.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2019

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Love and thanks to Mike for the never-ending supply of encouragement and input.

 

Sweet memories of my mum.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gilly Pickup is an award-winning journalist specialising in travel and cruise but also publishing features on the arts, history, wellbeing, animals, food, alternative health, heritage, gardens and the supernatural. Her bylines appear in national newspapers, newsstand magazines, specialist and trade titles and inflight publications. She is also the sole author of nine books.

Before becoming a writer, she worked in the Palace of Westminster (Houses of Parliament) as a senior political researcher.

Gilly was born and brought up in north-east Scotland and lives in London.

See more at www.gillypickup.co.uk

 

DISCLAIMER

The descriptions given in these articles are for general guidance only, and should not be used as a substitute for a proper travel guide. Neither the author nor the publisher shall be liable or responsible for any loss, injury or damage allegedly arising from any information contained in this book.

CONTENTS

TITLE PAGEACKNOWLEDGEMENTSABOUT THE AUTHORINTRODUCTIONTHE 50 GREATEST CASTLES AND PALACES OF THE WORLDUNITED KINGDOMEnglandAlnwick Castle, NorthumberlandBlenheim Palace, OxfordshireBuckingham Palace, LondonChillingham Castle, NorthumberlandCorfe Castle, DorsetHampton Court Palace, SurreyLeeds Castle, KentPalace of Westminster (Houses of Parliament), LondonTower of London, LondonWarwick Castle, WarwickshireWindsor Castle, BerkshireIrelandBlarney Castle, County CorkMalahide Castle, County DublinNorthern IrelandHillsborough Castle, County DownScotlandBalmoral Castle, AberdeenshireDunvegan Castle, SkyeEdinburgh Castle, EdinburghEilean Donan Castle, Kyle of LochalshGlamis Castle, AngusPalace of Holyroodhouse, EdinburghStirling Castle, StirlingWalesCaernarfon Castle, CaernarfonConwy Castle, ConwyEUROPEAustriaSchönbrunn Palace, ViennaBelgiumRoyal Palace of Brussels, BrusselsChannel IslandsCastle Cornet, GuernseyCzech RepublicPrague Castle, PragueDenmarkKronborg Castle, HelsingørFranceChâteau de Fontainebleau, FontainebleauChâteau de Pierrefonds, PicardyPalace of Versailles, VersaillesGermanyNeuschwanstein Castle, SchwangauHungaryBuda Castle, BudapestItalyDoge’s Palace, VenicePolandMalbork Castle, MalborkPortugalMateus Palace, Vila RealRomaniaBran Castle, BranRussiaPeterhof Palace, St PetersburgSloveniaPredjama Castle, PredjamaSpainRoyal Palace of Madrid, MadridSwedenStockholm Palace, StockholmSwitzerlandChâteau de Chillon, VeytauxTurkeyTopkapi Palace, IstanbulASIAChinaThe Forbidden City, BeijingIndiaMysore Palace, KarnatakaJapanHimeji Castle, HyōgoThailandGrand Palace, BangkokAFRICASouth AfricaCastle of Good Hope, Cape TownNORTH AMERICACanadaCraigdarroch Castle, British ColumbiaUnited States of America‘Iolani Palace, HawaiiALSO AVAILABLECOPYRIGHT

INTRODUCTION

What is the difference between a castle and a palace? Generally speaking, a castle was built for defence purposes with battlements, thick walls, arrow slits, gatehouses and moats, all designed to protect the inhabitants. A palace shows the world how powerful and wealthy the inhabitants are or were and were usually built as royal residences.

There are so many fascinating castles and palaces in the world that it is hard to choose just 50 to include in this book.

Many thrill with their flamboyancy – indeed, some look as if they have been plucked directly from the pages of a fairy tale. Take Germany’s fantasy Neuschwanstein Castle for instance, home to that delightfully eccentric monarch, Ludwig II. Then there’s Picardy’s Château de Pierrefonds, a blend of Gothic and romantic Renaissance styles. This multi-level turreted showstopper has starred in several swashbuckling French films including The Messenger: Story of Joan of Arc. It stood in for Camelot in the BBC series Merlin too.

Others are forbidding places, harbouring all manner of dark secrets and, naturally, a ghost or two. Seriously spooky 13th-century Chillingham Castle in Northumberland falls into this category with one of the highest levels of paranormal activity in Britain. Countless spectres and apparitions have been recorded by visitors over the years and regular ghost tours are held for those who dare to be scared. If you’re really brave, you can stay for an all-night vigil. Another creepy fortress is the intriguing 14th-century Bran Castle, perched high among craggy peaks in Romania’s Carpathian Mountains. Often referred to as ‘Dracula’s Castle’ because it closely fits Bram Stoker’s description, it is actually one of several castles linked to the legend.

Some are still royal residences including India’s grey granite and pink marble Mysore Palace, official residence of the Wadiyar dynasty. Other royal residences include the Royal Palace of Brussels and Madrid’s Palacio Real, though these days both families prefer to live their daily lives in more modest surroundings.

Others are as big as, well, entire towns. Take for instance the Forbidden City (Old Palace) in Beijing, home to China’s emperors from the Ming dynasty to the end of the Qing dynasty. Comprising around 1,000 buildings, up to 1 million workers were involved in its construction. Occupying an area of 700,000 square metres, Topkapi Palace in Turkey is another supersize structure as is Poland’s UNESCO-listed Malbork Castle, Europe’s largest Gothic pile.

I have included one of my personal favourites, Glamis Castle, located a few miles from where I was born and brought up in the county of Angus in Scotland. It is almost Disneyesque in appearance with witch-hat turrets and links to Macbeth. It was the birthplace of the late Queen Mother and historic seat of her family, the Bowes-Lyons. Still in Scotland, Edinburgh Castle, Scotland’s number one visitor attraction is perched on an extinct volcano. This powerful national symbol is home to the Scottish Crown Jewels. Speaking of Crown Jewels, the Tower of London, royal palace and secure fortress, has served as an armoury, treasury, menagerie and home of the Royal Mint. It simply drips with history.

Let me say that if I have missed out your particular favourite palace or castle, then my apologies. There are so many worthy contenders out there that I would need to write another book to include all of them! The ones I chose to write about either have a fascinating story to tell or make a great day out. Or indeed both.

UNITED KINGDOM

– ENGLAND –

ALNWICK CASTLE, NORTHUMBERLAND

If you think you recognise this magnificent pile as Hogwarts from the Harry Potter films, you’d be right. Alnwick Castle is the second-largest inhabited castle in England. Windsor Castle is the first, in case you’re wondering.

 

Home to the Percys, the Dukes of Northumberland, the castle dates back to around 1100 when a castle was founded by de Vesci, a nobleman from Normandy. His daughter married Eustace Fitz John who became Baron of Alnwick. Eustace saw to it that the castle’s fortifications were impregnable and it survived an attack by William the Lion, King of Scotland in 1172. Not that William gave up, he tried again a couple of years later but, bad luck – the English captured him and later he signed a treaty acknowledging fealty to King Henry II to regain his freedom. However, that was rescinded in 1189 by King Richard I for 10,000 silver marks, to pay for Richard’s participation in the third crusade.

The castle has witnessed several new brooms – perhaps apt considering its connection to Harry Potter – having a series of owners, and was purchased in 1309 from the Bishop of Durham by wealthy Henry Percy. Henry and his son spent years developing the castle and made it a significant fortress, an important military post against Scottish and border reivers – that is those people who raided and stole goods in the area where Scotland meets England. Things were so fraught between the two countries that in 1433 King Henry VI granted a licence to the town of Alnwick to be enclosed in a wall to help protect it from attack by the Scots.

In the 17th century the castle fell into disrepair but in the mid-18th century architects Daniel Garrett, James Paine and Robert Adam set about transforming it and the grounds. In the mid-19th century the castle was done up again, with the exterior reflecting its medieval origins.

Over the years Alnwick has served as a military outpost, a teaching college, a refuge for evacuees and of course as a family home. One of its most glamorous functions is as a film set. It first appeared in Prince Valiant in 1954, and there have been twelve more productions featuring the site since then. After all, it does have a dramatic appearance. It has appeared in television programmes Downton Abbey (2014 and 2015) and Blackadder (1983), and had star appearances in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991), Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets (2002) and Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (2001).

Following in Harry’s footsteps it was felt it would be a good idea to introduce broomstick flying training for visitors from the resident wizards. And for those who decide to have a go, they can take home photos of their successful flight, to show other muggles. Lessons are as popular with adults as they are with kids and take place several times a day, but ideally should be booked online in advance. The castle holds special events throughout the year and it’s probably no surprise that one of these is Wizard Week, where visitors can enjoy all sorts of spell-binding sorcery and visit locations where scenes from the Harry Potter films were shot.

Coming back down to earth, visitors can see the magnificent richly-decorated State Rooms with ceilings inspired by the Vatican and Castle St Angelo in Rome. There are two baroque cabinets which were made especially for the Palace of Versailles and an explosion of paintings with works by Titian, Canaletto and Van Dyke. A library of 15,000 books is said to be the family’s favourite room. The see-and-be-seen drawing room has a painted and gilded ceiling, silk wall hangings and a huge mirror above an ornate marble fireplace. Besides all that, the castle has a prestigious display of Meissen and Chelsea ceramics.

When you’ve had enough of the serious side of visiting, you can have a bit of fun in the artisan’s courtyard, a representation of life in the 14th century. There you can dress up and create your own family fairy tale.

There are three museums in the castle. One is the Museum of the Northumberland Fusiliers, not just an educational museum but hands-on too. There is another dressing-up room here where visitors can try on various uniforms. The Castle Museum was founded in 1826 by the 4th Duke of Northumberland and the Constable’s Tower, re-opened in 2018, has three floors of exhibits including items collected by various dukes from far flung places including America and Polynesia. One area is devoted to the Percy Tenantry Volunteers, a regiment set up at the end of the 18th century during the Napoleonic Wars. It displays lots of weaponry.

The grounds of the castle are worth seeing too. Much of the area was designed by Capability Brown and more recently Jane Percy, the present Duchess, founded the Alnwick Garden. Inspired by the Medici poison garden in Italy, the Duchess also opened a Poison Garden in 2005. It is full to the brim with some seriously deadly poisonous and hallucinogenic plants, many of which have to be kept under lock and key. There is hemlock, deadly nightshade, digitalis, foxglove, mandrake, ricin and strychnine and what’s more, a copper snake sprays mist into the air to add a sense of mystery. And would you believe, despite being warned not to touch or smell the plants, it is not unheard of to find visitors who have ignored the warnings lying unconscious in the garden.

Interesting facts about Alnwick Castle:

• Famous warrior Harry Hotspur was born at Alnwick Castle around 1365, and was the son of the 1st Earl of Northumberland.

• Algernon Percy, 4th Duke (1792–1865) was only twelve years old when he joined the navy.

• One of the world’s largest wooden tree houses is in the garden and functions as a restaurant. It comes with wooden walkways and wobbly rope bridges.

Address: Alnwick Castle, Greenwell Lane, Alnwick, NE66  1NQ

Website:https://www.alnwickcastle.com

Visitor information: The castle is open daily between the end of March and October. Although there are around 150 rooms in the castle, only six of them are open to the public, including the lavish State Rooms, Drawing Room, Dining Room, and Library. Regular events take place in the castle and gardens, see website for details.

BLENHEIM PALACE, OXFORDSHIRE

Home to the 12th Duke of Marlborough and birthplace of Sir Winston Churchill, Blenheim Palace is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the only non-royal, non-episcopal English country house to hold the title of palace.

 

Blenheim Palace was originally Woodstock Manor, a royal hunting lodge. Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth I) was once imprisoned here for her alleged role in the Wyatt plot, which aimed to prevent Queen Mary’s marriage to King Philip of Spain.

The manor house and grounds were given to John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, as a gift from Queen Anne and a grateful nation. A nice present to honour his victory as the military commander who led allied forces in the battle of Blenheim in the War of the Spanish Succession on 13 August 1704. Although the manor was in ruins, he was also granted the sum of £240,000 so that he could have a house built to commemorate what he had achieved.

The Duke’s wife Sarah was a close friend of Queen Anne’s and became her Lady of the Bedchamber. Indeed it is suggested that there was a passion between the two women that went far beyond mere friendship. Anne’s father did not approve of the appointment, perhaps fearing that Sarah would dominate his daughter. Before long, lovesick Anne was at Sarah’s beck and call. Letters from Anne to Sarah show the extent of her feelings: ‘If I writ whole volumes I could never express how well I love you,’ she gushed. The formidable Sarah later wrote that Anne ‘desired to possess [me] wholly’. However, in those days attitudes to friendship and love were different than they are today, so although one can surmise, no one can actually be 100 per cent certain of the true nature of their relationship. It wasn’t all plain sailing though, because Sarah had a violent temper, and on one occasion there was a quarrel between her and the queen in St Paul’s Cathedral. The reason was that Sarah noticed Anne was not wearing the jewellery she had laid out for her. Sarah turned huffy and bickered with the queen inside the cathedral. Over time their arguments became more frequent, and the final straw to end the relationship was when Sarah tried to control how the queen mourned her dead husband.

During the 1800s, the family’s financial woes meant the 2nd Duke of Marlborough auctioned several books, paintings and furniture to clear his debts. The family’s financial situation then improved, indeed probably saving Blenheim from ruin, when during the 19th century two of the men married rich American heiresses. Jennie Jerome, daughter of a wealthy New Yorker became the wife of Lord Randolph Churchill, and then mother to Winston Churchill. In 1896 the 9th Duke of Marlborough also married a rich American, eighteen-year-old Consuelo Vanderbilt, who came on board with a dowry – and a large one at that – $2.5 million. She was a kindly person who regularly got involved with charity works and became known as the ‘Angel of Woodstock’. However, unfortunately it wasn’t a happy marriage, and the couple divorced. The 9th Duke remarried; his second wife was also American and a friend of Consuelo’s but they also later separated.

There is a painting on view of the Marlborough Gem collection, items which were acquired by the 4th Duke in the mid-18th century. Unfortunately the gems themselves are no longer at Blenheim, since the 7th Duke sold the lot for £10,000 in 1875.

Of course, the palace’s most famous occupant was Winston Churchill, grandson of the 8th Duke. He was born in a small room off the Great Hall. The birthplace was unintentional – his parents had decided the child should be born at their London home, however his premature arrival left them unprepared. His father, Randolph Churchill, described the unexpected nature of Winston’s birth in a letter to his mother-in-law: ‘She [Jennie] had a fall on Tuesday walking with the shooters, and a rather imprudent and rough drive in a pony carriage brought on the pains on Saturday night. We tried to stop them, but it was no use. They went on all Sunday. Of course the Oxford physician did not come. We telegraphed for the London man, Dr Hope, but he did not arrive till this morning. The country Dr is however a clever man, and the baby was safely born at 1.30 this morning after about eight hours of labour.’

Between the saloon – a state dining room used by the family once a year on Christmas Day – and the Long Library are three interconnecting areas known as the First, Second and Third State Rooms. All three rooms have the Victory Tapestries hanging on the walls. These were commissioned by the 1st Duke of Marlborough from designer de Hondt and Brussels weaver Judocus de Vos and depict battlefield scenes in intricate and often gory detail.

The magnificent Long Library was originally designed as a picture gallery, but now contains a collection of 10,000 books – an extraordinary treasure trove, largely compiled by the 9th Duke. Full-length portraits of Queen Anne, King William III and John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, hang on the walls. At one end are marble sculptures of Queen Anne and the 1st Duke. Just outside the Green Drawing Room meanwhile, a china cabinet holds Meissen porcelain which the 3rd Duke acquired in exchange for a pack of staghounds.

Surrounding the palace are over 2,000 acres of Capability Brown parkland, lakes, fountains and formal gardens. A miniature train connects the palace to the pleasure gardens, where, among a range of fun activities for children, is the Marlborough maze, butterfly house, lavender garden and various exhibitions.

Interesting facts about Blenheim Palace:

• Productions filmed here include Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix (2007), Gulliver’s Travels (2010), Spectre (2015), The BFG (2016) and Transformers: The Last Knight (2017).

• The palace has 200 rooms and 1,000 windows. When it was first built, window size was decided according to the importance of the person who lived in the room. Servants had smaller windows while family members of the duke and duchess were provided with large windows.

• Blenheim Palace was turned into a convalescent home for wounded soldiers during the First World War and during the Second World War more than 400 boys were evacuated from Malvern College to the palace. For one academic year the state rooms became dormitories and classrooms. Blenheim Park and lake was used by the Home Guard in preparation for the D-Day landings.

Address: Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire, OX20 1PP

Website:www.blenheimpalace.com

Visitor information: Open to the public daily with events held throughout the year. The palace continues to develop new experiences and attractions each season and hosts special exhibitions, displays of contemporary art and seasonal specialist talks.

BUCKINGHAM PALACE, LONDON

More than 50,000 people visit Buckingham Palace each year as guests of Her Majesty the Queen at banquets, lunches, dinners, receptions and garden parties.

 

In the 11th century, after the Norman Conquest, the site of Buckingham House was passed to Geoffrey de Mandeville, who donated it to the monks of Westminster Abbey, whose hands it stayed in until the 1500s. Previously known as Goring House and Arlington House, the 18th-century Tory politician John Sheffield, 3rd Earl of Mulgrave and Marquess of Normanby thought that it was old fashioned, and so demolished it, or most of it, to create Buckingham House, a grand London home. He named his home after himself, as he became the Duke of Buckingham in 1703. It stood where the palace is today.

Further down the line, George III bought Buckingham House in 1762 for his wife Queen Charlotte to use as a family home. It wasn’t too far from St James’s Palace where many court functions were held. This was why at that time Buckingham House was known as the Queen’s House and fourteen of George and Charlotte’s fifteen children were born there.

It wasn’t until 1826 when unpopular George IV was monarch that the house became a ‘palace’, although he never moved in. Even though the Duke of Wellington called George and his brothers ‘the damnedest millstones about the neck of any government that may be imagined’, the King generously said the Palace could be a new home for Parliament when the Palace of Westminster was destroyed by fire in 1834. The offer was declined.

Queen Victoria took up residence in July 1837 and in June 1838 was the first British sovereign to leave for a coronation from Buckingham Palace. When she married Prince Albert in 1840, the Palace’s shortcomings were highlighted. One problem was a lack of nurseries, although obviously George III hadn’t found it a problem – and besides that, there weren’t enough bedrooms for visitors. After much deliberation, it was decided that the only thing to be done was to move the marble arch which now stands at the corner of Hyde Park and build a fourth wing, creating a quadrangle. That’s the kind of thing you can do if you’re a monarch.

Edward VII was the only monarch to be born and die at Buckingham Palace. One of his dogs, a terrier named Caesar, having outlived the King, walked behind His Majesty’s coffin in the funeral procession. Both Prince Charles and Prince Andrew were born here and royal birth and death notices are still attached to the railings for the public to read, although they are also now announced on the royal website.

Over the years, many distinguished figures have visited Buckingham Palace, after it became the sovereign’s London residence. Roll those credits for: Felix Mendelssohn, American President J.F. Kennedy, first man on the moon Neil Armstrong, Johann Strauss the Younger, Charles Dickens, Alfred Lord Tennyson, actor Laurence Olivier, Nelson Mandela and Mahatma Gandhi, who, it is recorded, wore a loin cloth and sandals to tea with King George V.

Secret tunnels under London’s streets connect Buckingham Palace to the Palace of Westminster. The story goes that the Queen Mother once explored them with King George VI and while in the tunnels they came upon a man who said he was a friend of a friend who worked in the Palace. The Queen Mother is recorded as saying he was ‘a Geordie’ and ‘most courteous’.

Like many old buildings, Buckingham Palace has the odd phantom or two, one of which is the ghost of a monk who died in the monastery’s punishment cell all those centuries ago. He is said to wear heavy chains and is dressed in brown, but for some reason only appears on the terrace over the gardens to the rear of the building on Christmas Day. Another ghost reputed to haunt the palace is that of Major John Gwynne, a private secretary to King Edward VII. Fearing disgrace in an upcoming divorce case, he shot himself in his office on the first floor and has been seen and heard at various times by members of staff.

These days the palace, which is the venue for royal ceremonies, state visits and investitures, has 775 rooms, including nineteen state rooms, 52 royal and guest bedrooms, 188 staff bedrooms, 92 offices and 78 bathrooms. It also has its own post office, swimming pool, staff cafeteria, doctor’s surgery and cinema. Over 800 staff members are based at the palace, including caterers, housekeepers, horticulturalists and office staff. Some more unusual jobs include that of the fendersmith, whose job it is to clean and repair the metal fenders behind the fireplaces, and because there are more than 350 clocks and watches in the palace, two full-time horological conservators wind them up every week and keep them in good order.

There is a helicopter landing area in the palace garden, as well as a lake and tennis courts and although this is in the middle of London, 30 different bird species live there with many varieties of wild flowers flourishing in the peaceful setting.

Interesting facts about Buckingham Palace:

• In 1914 suffragettes seeking votes for women took their campaign to Buckingham Palace and two women chained themselves to the palace railings, as the royal family were seen to be against women having the right to vote.

• A few years later Buckingham Palace was in the news again when it had nine direct bomb hits during the Second World War. PC Steve Robertson, a policeman on duty, was killed by flying debris in March 1941 when the north side of the palace was wrecked. A plaque in the garden commemorates him.

• In 1608 King James I had the idea of planting a Mulberry Garden to the north of the present palace, in an attempt to foster the cultivation of silk worms. His idea was to make money by producing silk in England. However the idea was a non-starter and the Mulberry Garden was turned into a public recreation ground.

Address: Buckingham Palace, Westminster, London SW1

Website:www.royalcollection.org.uk/visit/the-state-rooms-buckingham-palace

Visitor information: The State Rooms are open to the public from July to September and on selected dates from September to May.

CHILLINGHAM CASTLE, NORTHUMBERLAND

The 12th-century stronghold became the fully fortified Chillingham Castle in 1344 and was continuously owned by one family line, the Grey family and their descendants, the Earls of Tankerville, from the 1200s until 1932. The many commanding generals of the castle include a record eighteen Knights of the Garter.

 

After the death of the 7th Earl in 1931, financial problems meant the castle fell into decay. Dry rot took hold; tower roofs collapsed, burst pipes meant flooding, windows lost their glass. It was awful. Then in the 1980s it was bought by Sir Humphry Wakefield and his wife, Katharine. Katharine, daughter of the former Lady Mary Grey, is a descendant of the family who established Chillingham.

From the outside, Chillingham Castle looks rather like you might expect a medieval castle to look: massive stone walls topped with battlements overlooking the grounds. A fantastic example of medieval strength.

King James’ drawing room is Chillingham’s finest apartment. Famous for its Elizabethan ceiling with finely moulded pendants, its walls are hung with tapestries and floral silk, copied from an antique design at Chatsworth. When renovations were underway after Sir Humphry’s purchase, an entire staircase was discovered which had been hidden inside a wall, while in an upper room, a walled-up fireplace was uncovered, containing a wonderful cache of more than 100 Tudor documents. These included papers relating to James VI of Scotland’s succession to Elizabeth I. The reason they were at Chillingham was because Lord Burghley, Elizabeth’s chief minister, used his godson, Ralph Grey, as a go-between.

The Edward I room is named after the so-called ‘Hammer of the Scots’, and he paid a visit here in 1298. King Henry III also stayed here when he came by for his Scottish forays. The room has been restored to its 13th-century format and a gallery, weapons, armour and furnishings of the time added. One wall is dominated by two huge stone fireplaces – or so it seems. The fireplaces are actually set props, brought there for the filming of Elizabeth starring Cate Blanchett, in 1998.

Today the castle is probably best known for its reputation as one of England’s most haunted castles. Well, it certainly seems to have a surplus of ghosts. The castle has its own paranormal team called ‘Chillingham Castle Uncovered’. Reports from visitors include: ‘I felt this hand on my arm. It was a most friendly feeling and I believe someone was trying to guide me to see something.’ Another said: ‘My camera just would not take a picture of the orbs and lighting I actually saw. Yet, when I developed my film, there were those same orbs, but in different places and rooms. Literally, all over the place!’ Another visitor said: ‘The guide told me not to be frightened and funnily I was quite happy, even with the distinct whispering I heard in the King Edward Room.’ Wow.

One spectre is called the White Pantry Ghost. Long ago, when the family silver was stored in the pantry, a footman was employed to sleep there and guard it. He said a ghost, a lady dressed in white, begged him for water. This same pale figure is still seen at times and it is thought the longing for water suggests poisoning. In the chapel, voices of two men have been heard but never seen. More famous though is the ‘Radiant Boy’, who used to haunt the Pink Room and whose heart rending cries of fear or pain echoed through the corridors. As the cries faded away, a bright halo of light would appear and the figure of a boy dressed in blue is known to approach those sleeping in the room, so the story goes.

Years later a child’s skeleton surrounded by scraps of blue cloth was found behind the wall during repair work. After a Christian burial, the ghost was seen no more – until Sir Humphry began letting the room. Some guests have spoken of a blue flash that comes from the wall and although it has been attributed to an electrical fault, Sir Humphry explains that there is no electrical wiring in that wall section. His home seems to be full of ghosts who he said were initially hostile to him but became friendlier as restoration progressed. They even saved him from potential serious injury when he fell off a ladder, by hurling him on to bales of hay some feet away.

Another unquiet soul stalking the castle is Lady Berkeley, wife of Lord Grey, whose husband ran off with her sister, Henrietta. Lady Berkeley was left with only her baby daughter for company. The rustle of her dress is sometimes heard as her spirit sweeps along the corridors, presumably looking for her husband. A guide in the castle has encountered her several times. Spooky …

The castle’s torture chamber is not for the squeamish, packed with torture instruments including a spiked chair and a stretching rack. All manner of grisly things took place here in years gone by and I have spoken to a medium who visited. She told me that it is haunted by barbaric torturer John Sage who did his terrible deeds around AD 1200. She said that while on a visit to the castle, when the guide was telling the group about him, she heard a creaking noise, saw the heavy door open and saw a dark shadow standing by the torture rack. Isn’t that scary?

Interesting facts about Chillingham Castle:

• The surrounding parkland is home to the historic Chillingham cattle, only survivors of the oldest known breed