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Clun Castle started life as a Norman motte-and-bailey Click to enlargearound the year 1090 when "Picot" de Say held the lands.  Castle building was not a Norman invention, nor was the idea of creating a mound or high place from which to fight but the Normans developed the technique.  The illustration shows a typical motte-and-bailey where the mound has been created by digging a ring ditch and throwing the resultant spoil into a mound in the middle.  A fighting tower with a palisade would be erected on the top of the mound and a bailey (a secure area) would be surrounded with a heavy wooden fence to protect the living quarters.  Access to the motte would be from the bailey via a protected bridge, or in some cases a drawbridge.

The border area, known as The Marches, was troublesome.  Welsh incursions were frequent and the Anglo-Saxon inhabitants of the area were not happy to be subjugated by these overlords from across the Channel.  The Normans therefore wished to assert their military power.  King William the Conqueror and his successors created a militarised buffer zone in the Marches by rewarding his loyal FrenClick to enlargech supporters with gifts of land and titles in this area.  Castles clearly showed the invader's strength and their intention to control the inhabitants' tendency to brigandage and revolt with military force if necessary.  The castle also provided secure living quarters for the soldiers and their lords.  Throughout the Welsh Marches, numerous castles were constructed, some great (like Ludlow or Goodrich) some small (Clun, Longtown, Hopton, Bishop's Castle) but all symbolizing the Norman domination of Britain

Clun was chosen as the site of a castle in order to control access to the rich Midland plains through the Clun Valley.  It could also control the movement on the Clun-Clee Ridgeway, an historic drove road where flocks and herds were driven from Wales to the markets in the Midlands and even to London.  Such controls also proved lucrative in extracting tolls.

The rocky mounds overlaid with morainic deposit from the last ice age existing east of the curve of the river Clun were easy to fashion into steep-sided defensive areas for a motte-and-bailey.  It is not certain when the castle was re-constructed in stone.  It would seem likely that the process started after its Click to enlargesacking by Price Rhys of South Wales in 1196.  After a long and bitter siege the castle was reduced to "ashes".  While this may have been a victor's exaggeration it is not impossible since at that time the castle was probably still a wooden structure.  The Welsh had not finished raiding.  Prince Llewelyn ap Iorwerth (Llewelyn the Great) captured and burnt the castle in 1214 but when he came again in 1234 was unable to take the castle and contented himself with burning the town.  By the time Edward I had conquered Wales in wars between 1277 and 1282 the castle had lost its significance.  Although Owain Glyndwr attacked the castle in the early 1400's it was no longer the formidable foe it would have been two centuries earlier.  After Glyndwr's assault, the castle vanishes from historical records.

For fuller information and good descriptive illustrations go to Castles of Wales - Clun
For more details of the various owners of the castle go to  Picot de Say and his heirs

For a chronology of castle events     Potted History