Arundel Castle Sussex
Arundel Castle in West Sussex is one of the most imposing and most completely realised medieval castle complexes in England, a seat of the Dukes of Norfolk and their Howard ancestors that dominates the town of Arundel and the Arun Valley in a composition of towers and battlements restored and augmented in the Victorian period to create one of the most romantically appealing castle silhouettes in the south of England. The castle is among the few remaining in England still occupied by the same family as in the medieval period, the Howards having held the castle and the hereditary office of Earl Marshal of England for over 400 years.
The castle has medieval origins in the Norman conquest, when Roger de Montgomery built the original motte and bailey castle shortly after 1066. The subsequent development over several centuries produced the combination of keep, gatehouse, walls and residential buildings that form the core of the current complex, substantially augmented and restored by the fifteenth Duke of Norfolk in the late nineteenth century in one of the most ambitious Victorian Gothic restoration projects in the country. The result is a castle that appears more completely medieval than the original fabric alone would justify but that achieves a visual coherence and dramatic quality that makes it one of the most impressive castle experiences in England.
The interior of the castle contains a remarkable collection of paintings, furniture and heraldic objects reflecting the long history of the Norfolk family, and the grounds include a Victorian walled garden and a glasshouse of considerable horticultural interest.