EAW014015 ENGLAND (1948). Framlingham Castle, Framlingham, 1948. This image has been produced from a damaged negative.

© Copyright OpenStreetMap contributors and licensed by the OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2025. Cartography is licensed as CC BY-SA.

Nearby Images (22)

EAW014015
  0° 0m
EAW014019
  295° 16m
EAW037246
  190° 22m
EAW008408
  202° 23m
EAW008406
  205° 29m
EAW008413
  222° 31m
EAW008411
  215° 33m
EAW008410
  192° 40m
EAW008412
  260° 42m
EAW008407
  192° 47m
EAW030401
  152° 47m
EAW014018
  113° 54m
EAW014016
  223° 62m
EAW030402
  218° 71m
EAW008409
  158° 75m
EAW014014
  200° 78m
EAW014017
  182° 78m
EAW037245
  178° 84m
EAW014020
  137° 85m
EAW014013
  261° 107m
EAW037247
  194° 147m
EAW030400
  207° 187m

Details

Title [EAW014015] Framlingham Castle, Framlingham, 1948. This image has been produced from a damaged negative.
Reference EAW014015
Date 23-March-1948
Link
Place name FRAMLINGHAM
Parish FRAMLINGHAM
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 628684, 263758
Longitude / Latitude 1.3486690691977, 52.22406536356
National Grid Reference TM287638

Pins

Site of first great hall

totoro
Thursday 26th of June 2014 10:55:48 PM
The Red House, the first poor house, later a pub

totoro
Thursday 26th of June 2014 10:46:41 PM

totoro
Thursday 26th of June 2014 10:41:48 PM

User Comment Contributions

Panoramic photo of the inside of Framlingham Castle taken from the south wall

Copyright Evan Fetherolf

2009

Licenced under Creative Commons Attribution licence.

Source: [[File:Framlingham pan 2.jpg]]

totoro
Thursday 26th of June 2014 11:09:13 PM
FRAMLINGHAM CASTLE Post code IP13 9BS

Grade 1 listed building - English Heritage Building ID: 286297



The castle is open daily in Summer to the public for a fee (otherwise weekends only).



Castle ruins.

Battlemented curtain walls and 13 square towers built by Roger Bigod II in a reconstruction of 1190-1200, incorporating fragments, between the 6th and 7th towers,of walls and of a stone hall built in the early C12 by

Hugh Bigod.



Two large lakes, called meres, were formed alongside the castle by damming a local stream. The southern mere, still visible today, had its origins in a smaller, natural lake; once dammed, it covered 9.4 hectares (23 acres) and had an island with a dovecote built on it. It is uncertain exactly when the meres were first built.



Gateway and bridge built by Thomas Howard, 3rd Duke of Norfolk, circa 1520-30 to replace the earlier drawbridge.



Under Elizabeth it was used as a prison for Catholic priests, but upon her death it was once more returned to the Howards.



By 1600 the castle prison contained 40 prisoners, Roman Catholic priests and recusants.



In 1635 the castle was sold by Theophilus Howard, Earl of Suffolk, to Sir Robert Hitcham, who bequeathed it in the following year to Pembroke College, Cambridge, stipulating that the buildings within the walls (but not the walls) should be demolished and a Poor-House built. The buildings were gradually demolished during the course of the next century.



(The poorhouse itself is a separately listed Grade 1 building - English Heritage Building ID: 286298

There were three periods of use as a poor house. The first building was later used as a pub. Most of the remains now visible are of the 1st and third periods)



The poorhouse on the castle site was finally closed by 1839.



Following Hitcham's death the castle was used as a poorhouse, and later (1666), to house victims of the Plague. Over the intervening centuries Framlingham has been used variously as a courthouse, drill hall, meeting hall, workhouse, and a fire station, before finally passing into the hands of English Heritage, whose work it has been to preserve the castle.



See wikipedia article [[Framlingham Castle]]



Image: Photographer John Gay, 1975. Not to be reproduced without permission; Copyright English Heritage

The Prison Tower projecting from the curtain wall at Framlingham Castle.

Image source:

http://www.englishheritagearchives.org.uk/SingleResult/Default.aspx?

id=1659719&t=Quick&cr=framlingham&io=True&l=all&page=3

totoro
Thursday 26th of June 2014 10:32:42 PM