Bigods Castle - Bungay, Suffolk, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 52° 27.352 E 001° 26.145
31U E 393710 N 5812893
Bigods Castle, Bungay, was originally a Norman castle built by Roger Bigod of Norfolk, around 1100.
Waymark Code: WM10P4T
Location: Eastern England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 06/05/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member pmaupin
Views: 2

"a late 12th-century castle erected by Hugh Bigod, the powerful Earl of Suffolk. Bigod was one of the strongest opponents of King Stephen, who tried to buy his loyalty by granting him the earldom. Henry II seized Hugh's lands, including Bungay, but later returned them. Around 1163 Bigod started building a strong keep at Bungay, standing over 33 metres high (100 feet) and surrounded by walls 5-7 metres thick.

The castle was probably complete by 1173 when Bigod joined with the Earl of Leicester in a revolt against the crown. It is at this point that Bungay Castle enters the popular imagination in a rhyming verse said to have been uttered by Bigod:

"Were I in my Castle
Upon the River Waveney,
I wouldne give a button
For the king of Cockney"


But all Bigod's bluster could not protect him from the ire of Henry II. Henry raised an army and tracked Hugh down at Syleham where the truculent earl was forced to submit. Henry seized Bigod's estates and ordered his castles at Bungay and Framlingham to be demolished.

The royal engineers began to cut a mine gallery under the walls of Bungay Castle in order to bring the fortress down, but Hugh forestalled them by paying the king a hefty fine of 1000 marks to cancel the destruction.

The turbulent life of Hugh Bigod came to an end a few years later in Syria, where he died while on Crusade. Richard I restored the Bigod estates to Hugh's descendants, but they settled at Framlingham and left Bungay Castle to decay.

In 1269 Roger Bigod became the 5th Earl and embarked on a rebuilding programme at Bungay. He built a strong gatehouse and enclosed the keep inside a high curtain wall. When Earl Roger died without heirs in 1269 Bungay reverted to the crown, and though it was tenanted on numerous occasions, the fortifications became so decrepit that in 1382 it was described as 'worth nothing a year'.

It finally passed to the Howards, Dukes of Norfolk, in whose hands it remained (with a few short exceptions) until the Duke of Norfolk presented it to the town in 1987. It is now operated by a civic trust, who have erected a combination cafe and visitor centre at the castle entrance."

SOURCE - (visit link)
Wikipedia Url: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
To post a visit log to this waymark you need to visit and write about the actual physical location. Any pictures you take at the location would be great, as well.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Wikipedia Entries
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
MeerRescue visited Bigods Castle - Bungay, Suffolk, UK 07/17/2022 MeerRescue visited it