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WEDDINGTON CASTLE - An
Online History
Other Halls and Castles Around
Nuneaton - Hartshill Castle
Click on thumbnail for larger
image. Scroll to bottom of page for
brief historical details of this building
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Hartshill Castle in 1927*
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Hartshill Castle from the North East. 1785. Drawn by J. Adkins and engraved by F. Cary.
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A drawing of Hartshill Castle from 1808-09
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A drawing of the ruins of Hartshill Castle By William Albert Green, a local artist (1907 - 1983)
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An image of the Castle from 1908. It is referred to as an abbey here.*
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Daryton's house at Hartshill, now demolished.*
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Another view of Drayton's house.*
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Faceplate of the Poly-olbion, or a chorographicall description of Great Britaine, digested in a poem by Michael Drayton, London, H.L. for Mathew Lowne
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The remains of the original Norman motte and
bailey castle can still be seen in woods below the centre of Hartshill village.
The Elizabethan construction that was later built in its grounds is no longer
standing. There may have been two baileys. A polygonal curtain wall overlies one
of the baileys.
The fortified manor house was probably built circa 1567. The remains of the
house occupy the north east angle of a C12 motte enclosed by the remains of a
circa 1330 wall. The remains of a C14th chapel are also within the walls. The
motte is not quite circular, measuring some 50m by 45m at the base, and tapering
to 10m in diameter at the top. it is 9m high and surrounded by a ditch. The
ditch is 5m wide and 1.5m deep. Sadly, the remains of the Manor House and Castle
are badly neglected and are diminishing with each passing year.
Hartshill village itself was the birthplace of poet Michael Drayton in 1563, who
is buried in Westminster Abbey. His house, pictured above, is now demolished.
Between 1597 and 1602 Drayton worked with Philip Henslowe and the actors known
as the Admiral's Men on about twenty plays. It was about this time that Drayton
and Shakespeare may have been acquainted. Drayton's most well-known poem
Polyolbion (1613) comprises thirty 'songs' which form a survey of England in
verse couplets.
Photos marked * are © Warwickshire County
Council, 2003


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