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| Nottingham castle, c.1500 (model by P Dixon and
D Taylor). |
Before 1500
Nottingham was first mentioned in the written record was in 868 when
the defensible position of the town attracted the Danes, but it was of
only minor importance until 920 when the first bridge over the River
Trent was built. The town quickly became a centre of royal administration.
The earliest settlement was on St Mary's Hill (now the Lace Market area),
and included various sites in the Halifax Place area. St Mary's Church
was originally a Saxon building, all trace of which has disappeared.
The Castle, built 1067-8, was originally an earthwork and timber defence.
It was transformed by Henry II into a royal palace regularly visited
by medieval monarchs. Part of the stone-built outer bailey is all that
survives of the Norman castle, together with the mid-thirteenth century
gateway, restored in the nineteenth century.
Although several monarchs spent lavishly on building, repairing and
reconstructing the buildings, royal visits were short and for most of
the time the castle was an empty. This was hardly the image to be expected
from the Robin Hood tales. Nor was there much communication with the
town, because craftsmen and builders were often brought from a distance
rather than hired locally.
Occasionally events connected with the castle had a significant impact
locally. In 1140 buildings were destroyed in a fire in the town after
the castle came under attack by Robert of Gloucester. Less important
for Nottingham, but perhaps the most dramatic incident in the history
of the castle, was the coup of 1330 in which Queen Isabella and Roger
Mortimer were overthrown. Conspirators supporting King Edward III entered
the castle through the underground passage subsequently known as ‘Mortimer's
Hole'. The castle was retaken, Mortimer was executed, and the king’s
authority was restored.
The important strategic position of the castle also meant that Nottingham
was a focal point during the Wars of the Roses, at the time of the Pilgrimage
of Grace in 1536, and during the civil wars in the 1640s.
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| St Mary's church (photo: A Nicholson, 2001). |
Perhaps the most lasting local influence of the castle was the development
of a French or Norman borough in the area now known as castle rock. This
affected the topography of the town. The Saxon settlement around St Mary's
Hill and the French borough around the castle gradually developed towards
each other to form a single town.
We know that between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries the town
was partially surrounded by a wall, and the medieval street pattern is
reasonably clear even today. Only a few medieval buildings have survived.
They include the Salutation and The Bell, both of which
have fifteenth century timbers and, like many Nottingham inns, extensive
cellars cut out of the sandstone. There were three parish churches, St
Mary’s, St Peter’s and St Nicholas’s, and a number of religious houses
and hospitals.
A series of charters granted to Nottingham by the Crown between 1155
and 1449 increased the powers of self-government, but the English (Saxon)
and French (Norman) boroughs retained separate administrations even after
the town acquired a mayor in 1284.
Late medieval Nottingham was moderately prosperous, and in 1449 Henry
VI granted the town self-governing powers through a corporate charter.
Local political power passed into the hands of a small group of men,
and a powerful oligarchy emerged which survived until the corporation
was reformed in 1835. |