More information : [SO 61812258] PENYARD CASTLE [LB] (Remains of) (1)
Penyard Castle, house, ruins and earthworks. The castle was a building of considerable extent dating at least from the first half of the 14th c. It was evidently ruined in the 17th c. when the existing house was built incorporating part of the earlier building. The remains are of stone, those in the house forming parts of the S and W walls. Immediately adjoining the house on the S and extending to the W are remains of a 14th c. undercroft of at least four bays. It was about 17' wide and bases of some of the chamfered responds and a fireplace remain. About 24' W of the house and parallel to it are the foundations of a thick wall and still farther to the W are fragments of walling including remains of a short flight of stone stairs and a doorway with chamfered jambs and two-centred head. The remains stand on a natural terrace, with a scarped enclosure on the S and E sides, part of a ditch on the SW side and various other banks and foundation mounds remain. In bad condition. (2-3)
Those parts described by the Royal Commission can no longer be inspected. The Farmhouse has collapsed, and the 14th c. undercroft is filled with nettles and undergrowth. In the one end-gable of the farmhouse which stands up, is a two-light window with pointed trefoiled heads. (4)
There are now no intelligible remains of the castle, or its earthworks. (5)
An additional area of faint earthworks in the field to the west of the castle. Scheduled c. 1969. (6)
Penyard Castle. Ruins of castle and house. Early C14 and C17. Sandstone. North and south gable walls with chimneys, and part of east wall, remain of house. North wall has blocked window on first floor, of two trefoiled ogee lights. South wall has blocked chamfered doorway with canted head: To the west a detached wall remains to a height of approximately five metres. The site was over-grown and not fully visible at time of survey (April 1986). RCHM in 1932 recorded the remains of a C14 undercroft adjoining to the south of the house. Scheduled Ancient Monument No 126. Grade II. (7)
The sparse masonry remains of the ruins of Penyard Castle (described above) and a number of dispersed earthworks possibly associated with the site were seen centred at SO 6192 2259. To the south-west at SO 6167 2249 the earthwork remains of a possible former quarry were also recorded.
To the south of the main castle site three rectilinear depressions, which could be the undercrofts described by sources 2-3 above, were also recorded as earthworks. These features have been recorded separately in record SO 62SW 58.
These features were mapped from aerial photographs as part of the English Heritage: Gloucestershire NMP Project. (8)
The castle belonged to the Talbots of Liverpool in the 13th century and possibly earlier. What is inserted from the original castle and what is in situ is difficult to establish without detailed survey. Some similarities with Goodrich Castle have been noted and these need to be properly analysed bearing in mind the joint ownership. (9) |