Pevensey Castle & Anderita Fort :: Shared Description

Pevensey Castle is a mediaeval castle surrounded by substantial Roman walls that remain from the time when a Saxon Shore Fort was situated here.
The Roman fort was known as Anderita and was one of a number that guarded the south-eastern coast of the Roman province in Britain against raids from pagans, such as the Saxons, that were prevalent in the 3rd Century AD. The walls remain impressively intact to a height of up to 27' (24m) for 2/3 of the circuit of the castle grounds, despite being 1,700 years old and having been twice abandoned. Anderita was the last Saxon Shore fort to be built in England and along with Portchester much further to the west, is one of the best surviving examples.
Between Roman and Norman times the fort was pretty-much abandoned, but the intact state of the Roman curtain walls, suggests that it was considered important enough a stronghold not to be dismantled and its stones used for building - a fate which befell most Roman structures during the "Dark Ages" (c.415AD - 800AD)
Pevensey was the landing place for William the Conqueror's invasion fleet, and shortly before his arrival Harold's army had been camped here awaiting his unwelcome arrival. However, the challenge from Harald Hardrada of Norway allied with Harold's own brother Tostig meant that Harold had to abandon the south and march his army northwards to defeat these northern enemies. This left Pevensey undefended when William finally managed to cross the Channel, having been severely delayed by storms and winds blowing from the wrong direction.
Knowing Pevensey's strategic importance, William ordered the construction of a castle here within the existing Roman defences soon after defeating the English a few miles away at Battle near Hastings.
So the origins of the mediaeval castle date back to Norman times, but little of the C11th construction remains as the castle was enlarged and altered almost continually for the next 300 years.
Most of what is now seen, including the moat, the main walls, buttresses and towers, date from the C13th, although the remains of the massive keep within the inner castle defences is somewhat older.
After the mediaeval period it was once again abandoned and from the C16th onwards it gradually decayed and collapsed in many places. Much of the stone of the mediaeval castle was plundered, but interestingly, once again, the Roman walls largely survived these depredations.
Finally, the castle had one more dramatic lease of life, when it was garrisoned during WWII and several "pill boxes" were built into its structure, made of stone like the castle, to blend into the ancient structure both as camouflage and to maintain the fabric of the ancient monument.
The castle is now in the care of English Heritage LinkExternal link

EH Ancient Monument listing here LinkExternal link


by Rob Farrow
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22 images use this description:

TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - The western flank by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - The moat from the bridge by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Anderita Fort - Eastern Gate by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle and moat by Malc McDonald
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Remains of the keep by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Looking south-eastwards by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : High Street, Pevensey by Stephen McKay
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Anderita Fort - Western Gate by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Inner Bailey by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Looking towards the Eastern Gate by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Verdant growth in the moat by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Through the gate by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Moat and western façade by Rob Farrow
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle by Ian Capper
TQ6404 : Pevensey Castle - Bridge to entrance by Rob Farrow


These Shared Descriptions are common to multiple images. For example, you can create a generic description for an object shown in a photo, and reuse the description on all photos of the object. All descriptions are public and shared between contributors, i.e. you can reuse a description created by others, just as they can use yours.
Created: Tue, 25 Apr 2017, Updated: Tue, 25 Apr 2017

The 'Shared Description' text on this page is Copyright 2017 Rob Farrow, however it is specifically licensed so that contributors can reuse it on their own images without restriction.

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