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Brougham Castle

Castle • Westmorland and Furness • CA10 2AA
Brougham Castle

Brougham Castle stands at the confluence of the rivers Eamont and Lowther in Cumbria near the market town of Penrith, a substantial Norman and medieval fortress whose ruins retain considerable height and architectural detail and provide an important and atmospheric insight into the military history of the northern Marches and the route between England and Scotland that passed through this river crossing. The castle was first built by Robert de Vieuxpont in the early thirteenth century using the strategic position at the river confluence to control movement through the Eden valley, a function that had been performed by a Roman fort on the same site many centuries earlier.

The castle passed through various hands before coming into the possession of the Clifford family, who became the most significant owners in its history. The Cliffords were one of the most powerful baronial families of the north of England during the medieval period, and their ownership of Brougham, Brough, Appleby and Skipton castles gave them control over the approaches to the Lake District and the Eden valley throughout the later Middle Ages. Lady Anne Clifford, who recovered her family's hereditary estates in the 1640s after a long legal battle and spent the remainder of her long life restoring and occupying the Clifford castles, made extensive repairs to Brougham in the 1660s. The Roman tower that survives within the castle enclosure is largely her work.

Lady Anne Clifford is one of the most remarkable figures in seventeenth-century English history, a woman whose determination to recover and maintain her inheritance in the face of sustained legal opposition, and whose lifelong investment in restoring and inhabiting the ancient Clifford castles, represents an extraordinary assertion of identity and continuity. Her diary and her Great Picture recording her life and family history are among the most significant personal documents of the period.

The castle is managed by English Heritage and the ruins of the great tower, the gatehouse and the inner ward are open to visitors throughout the year.

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