Grantham Castle
Has been described as a Questionable Timber Castle (Other/Unknown), and also as a Questionable Masonry Castle, and also as a Questionable Fortified Manor House
There are no visible remains
Name | Grantham Castle |
Alternative Names | |
Historic Country | Lincolnshire |
Modern Authority | Lincolnshire |
1974 Authority | Lincolnshire |
Civil Parish | Grantham |
{Marginal} Grantham Castle was granted to Edmund, Duke of York, in 1363. It stood N.E. of the church near the then confluence of the Mowbeck and Witham. There is no trace of it now. (PastScape ref. Street 1867)
Grantham Castle and defences are entirely a mis-reading of various C14 Patent Roll entries referring to the 'castle (castra) and towns of Stamford and Grantham'. There is a Castlegate in Grantham, but it is late and, I suspect, a function of conscious antiquianizing. There may have been humps and bumps in the open space to the east of the church, but these would have related to the manor house.
It's tenurial profile is all wrong for a castle - it was always the fag end of the Stamford deal, and, of course, Stamford had a real castle. I accept that high status sites can leave a gap in urban topography - I call the phenomenon urban fall out - but it is not only castles that do it. Manor houses can also, and I have always thought that that was the case in Grantham. (Roffe 2006 pers. corr. )
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SK915363 |
Latitude | 52.9168891906738 |
Longitude | -0.639289975166321 |
Eastings | 491590 |
Northings | 336360 |