Barry Castle
Barry Castle in the Vale of Glamorgan in South Wales is one of the lesser-known medieval fortifications of the Welsh coastal lowlands, a site that speaks to the Anglo-Norman settlement of this fertile and strategically important area south of the Glamorgan uplands. The castle was associated with the Barry family, who took their name from the locality and were among the lesser Anglo-Norman lords who established themselves in South Wales following the conquest of Glamorgan in the late eleventh and twelfth centuries. Though smaller and less well-preserved than the great Edwardian castles of north Wales, Barry Castle represents the local tier of Norman defensive architecture that made the conquest of Wales a reality on the ground.
The Vale of Glamorgan is one of the most anglicised parts of Wales, its fertile limestone farmland having attracted dense Norman settlement from the earliest period of the conquest. A network of manor houses, small castles and fortified churches created a landscape of controlled agricultural territory extending from Cardiff to the coast, and Barry Castle was one node in that network. Its coastal position gave it some significance in relation to the Bristol Channel crossings and the maritime connections that were important to the Norman lords of Glamorgan throughout the medieval period.
The castle's remains are fragmentary but the site retains enough to give a sense of its original form and the position it occupied within the medieval settlement pattern of the Vale. Barry has grown considerably as a town and resort since the Victorian period, when the development of Barry Docks as one of the principal coal exporting ports in the world transformed a small village into a major industrial settlement. The castle predates that transformation by many centuries and represents the much older history of this part of Glamorgan.
Barry Island and the adjacent coastline provide good opportunities for combining a visit to the castle with the beaches, rock pools and coastal scenery that make Barry a popular destination from Cardiff and the surrounding valleys. The Vale of Glamorgan also contains the well-preserved Norman castle of Ogmore and the picturesque ruins of Ewenny Priory within easy reach.