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Dunstanburgh Castle Beach

Castle • North East • NE66 3TT
Dunstanburgh Castle Beach

Dunstanburgh Castle on the Northumberland coast is the most dramatically positioned and most romantically evocative ruined castle in northeast England, a massive fourteenth-century fortification standing on a great basalt outcrop above the sea whose substantial remaining towers and walls can be reached only on foot along the beach from Craster to the south or Embleton Bay to the north, the absence of road access preserving the sense of remoteness and dramatic coastal situation that has made it one of the most painted and most photographed castles in England. Turner painted the castle on several occasions and the view across Embleton Bay to the silhouetted towers remains one of the finest in Northumberland.

The castle was built in 1313 by Thomas Earl of Lancaster, a rival of Edward II, as a statement of power and as a refuge against royal displeasure. The subsequent turbulent history of the castle through the Wars of the Roses, when it changed hands several times, and the progressive decay of the buildings following the Tudor period have reduced it to ruins that are nonetheless still substantial enough to convey the enormous scale of the original fortification. The gatehouse-keep, the largest and most impressive surviving structure, rises to considerable height above the basalt cliff.

The beach walk from Craster to the castle of approximately two miles along the rocky foreshore and the coastal grassland provides one of the finest short coastal walks in Northumberland, the growing drama of the castle profile as the walk progresses being one of the great approach experiences available at any English castle.

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