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Coordinates: 51°29′0″N 00°36′15″W / 51.48333°N 0.60417°W / 51.48333; -0.60417
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→‎top: Want to clarify that it is basically in the London area, not far out in the country; was not clear from maps, and hella people don't know where Berkshire is
 
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{{short description|Official country residence of British monarch}}
{{otheruses1|the castle in [[Windsor, Berkshire|Windsor]]}}
{{About|the castle in Windsor, Berkshire}}
[[Image:Windsor Castle Sunset - Nov 2006.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Windsor Castle, a thousand-year-old [[fortress]] transformed into a royal palace. This well-known silhouette of a seemingly [[Middle Ages|medieval]] castle was not created, however, until the 1820s by [[Jeffry Wyatville]].]]
{{pp-pc1}}
[[Image:Windsor_Castle_from_the_air.jpg|thumb|right|400px|Aerial view of the castle]]
{{Use British English|date=December 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2013}}
{{featured article}}
{{Infobox military installation
| name = Windsor Castle
| location = [[Windsor, Berkshire]],
| country = England
| image = Windsor Castle at Sunset - Nov 2006.jpg
| caption = Round Tower and Upper Ward viewed from the Long Walk in [[Windsor Great Park]]
| pushpin_map = Berkshire
| pushpin_label = Windsor Castle
| pushpin_map_caption = Location within [[Berkshire]]
| coordinates = {{Coord|51|29|0|N|00|36|15|W|region:GB_type:landmark|display=inline,title}}
| type = Three [[Bailey (castle)|bailey]] wards with a round [[keep]]
| ownership = [[Charles III|King Charles III]] in right of [[the Crown]]
| operator = [[Royal Households of the United Kingdom|Royal Household]]
| open_to_public = Limited access
| used = Late 11th century – present
| materials = [[Bagshot Heath]] stone
| events = {{plainlist|
* [[First Barons' War]]
* [[English Civil War]]
}}
{{Infobox designation list
| designation1 = Scheduled Monument
| designation1_offname = Windsor Castle
| designation1_number = {{Listed building England|1006996}}
| designation2 = Grade I Listed Building
| designation2_offname = Windsor Castle Including All The Buildings Within The Walls
| designation2_date = {{Start date and age|df=yes|1975|10|2}}
| designation2_number = {{Listed building England|1117776}}
| embed = yes
| designation3 = National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens
| designation3_offname = The Royal Estate, Windsor: Windsor Castle and Home Park
| designation3_date = {{Start date and age|df=yes|1999|8|31}}
| designation3_number = {{Listed building England|1001434}}
}}
| past_commanders = <!-- past notable commander(s) -->
}}


'''Windsor Castle''' is a [[List of British royal residences|royal residence]] at [[Windsor, Berkshire|Windsor]] in the English county of [[Berkshire]], about {{convert|25|miles|km}} west of central London. It is strongly associated with the [[Kingdom of England|English]] and succeeding [[British royal family]], and embodies almost a millennium of [[History of architecture|architectural history]].
'''Windsor Castle''', in [[Windsor, Berkshire|Windsor]] in the [[England|English]] county of [[Berkshire]], is the largest inhabited [[castle]] in the world and, dating back to the time of [[William I of England|William the Conqueror]], is the oldest in continuous occupation. The castle's floor area is approximately 484,000 [[square foot|square feet]] (about 45,000 [[square metre]]s).<ref name="size">Calculated based on report of area destroyed in [[1992 Windsor Castle fire|1992 fire]] as being 9,000 metres squared, which was reported to be about one-fifth of the total area of the castle. See * [http://www.royal.gov.uk/OutPut/Page574.asp]</ref>


The original castle was built in the 11th&nbsp;century, after the [[Norman invasion of England]] by [[William the Conqueror]]. Since the time of [[Henry I of England|Henry&nbsp;I]] (who reigned 1100–1135), it has been used by the reigning monarch and is the longest-occupied palace in Europe. The castle's lavish early 19th-century [[state room|state apartment]]s were described by the art historian [[Hugh Roberts (art historian)|Hugh Roberts]] as "a superb and unrivalled sequence of rooms widely regarded as the finest and most complete expression of later Georgian taste".<ref name="Hugh Roberts p. 79">Hugh Roberts, ''Options Report for Windsor Castle'', cited Nicolson, p. 79.</ref> Inside the castle walls is the 15th-century [[St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle|St&nbsp;George's Chapel]], considered by the historian [[John Martin Robinson]] to be "one of the supreme achievements of English [[Perpendicular Gothic]]" design.<ref name="Robinson, p.27">Robinson, p. 27.</ref>
Together with [[Buckingham Palace]] in [[London]] and [[Holyrood Palace]] in [[Edinburgh]], it is one of the principal official residences of the [[British monarchy|British monarch]]. [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]] spends many weekends of the year at the castle, using it for both state and private entertaining. Her other two residences, [[Sandringham House]] and [[Balmoral Castle]], are the Royal Family's private homes.


Originally designed to project [[Norman dynasty|Norman]] dominance around the outskirts of London and oversee a strategically important part of the [[River Thames]], Windsor Castle was built as a [[motte-and-bailey]], with three wards surrounding a central mound. Gradually replaced with stone [[fortification]]s, the castle withstood a prolonged siege during the [[First Barons' War]] at the start of the 13th&nbsp;century. [[Henry III of England|Henry&nbsp;III]] built a luxurious royal palace within the castle during the middle of the century, and [[Edward III of England|Edward&nbsp;III]] went further, rebuilding the palace to make an even grander set of buildings in what would become "the most expensive secular building project of the entire Middle Ages in England".<ref name=BrindleKerrP39/> Edward's core design lasted through the [[Tudor period]], during which [[Henry&nbsp;VIII]] and [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth&nbsp;I]] made increasing use of the castle as a royal court and centre for diplomatic entertainment.
Most of the [[List of monarchs in the British Isles|Kings and Queens of England]] have had a direct influence on the construction and evolution of the castle, which has been their [[garrison]] [[fortress]], home, official [[palace]], and sometimes their prison. The castle's history and that of the British monarchy are inextricably linked. Chronologically the history of the castle can be traced through the reigns of the monarchs who have occupied it. When the country has been at peace, the castle has been expanded by the additions of large and grand apartments; when the country has been at war, the castle has been more heavily fortified. This pattern has continued to the present day.


Windsor Castle survived the tumultuous period of the [[English Civil War]], when it was used as a military headquarters by [[Roundhead|Parliamentary]] forces and a prison for [[Charles I of England|Charles&nbsp;I]]. At the [[Restoration (England)|Restoration]] of the monarchy in 1660, [[Charles II of England|Charles&nbsp;II]] rebuilt much of Windsor Castle with the help of the architect [[Hugh May]], creating a set of extravagant [[Baroque]] interiors. After a period of neglect during the 18th&nbsp;century, [[George&nbsp;III]] and [[George&nbsp;IV]] renovated and rebuilt Charles II's palace at colossal expense, producing the current design of the state apartments, full of [[Rococo architecture|Rococo]], [[Gothic architecture|Gothic]] and Baroque furnishings. [[Queen Victoria]] made a few minor changes to the castle, which became the centre for royal entertainment for much of her reign. During the [[First World War]], the historic estate inspired the naming of the royal [[House of Windsor]]. In the reign of [[George VI]], it was used as a refuge by the royal family during the [[The Blitz|Luftwaffe bombing campaigns]] of the [[Second World War]]. An extensive restoration of several state rooms took place after the castle survived a [[1992 Windsor Castle fire|fire in 1992]]. It is a popular tourist attraction, a venue for hosting [[state visit]]s, and was the main residence of [[Elizabeth II]] from 2011 to 2022.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/queen-elizabeth-II/12056883/Buckingham-Palace-could-become-Queens-third-home-as-she-opts-for-more-time-at-Windsor-and-Balmoral.html|title=Buckingham Palace could become Queen's 'third home' as she opts for more time at Windsor and Balmoral|author=Gordon Rayner|date=26 December 2015|work=The Telegraph|quote=The Queen spent 10 more nights at Windsor Castle than Buckingham Palace in 2011, 35 in 2012, 59 in 2013, 52 in 2014, and 71 in 2015}}</ref>
==Environs==
===Layout===
Over its 1,000-year history, the design of Windsor Castle has changed and evolved according to the times, tastes, requirements and finances of successive Monarchs. Nevertheless, the positions of the main features have remained largely fixed and the modern plan below is a useful guide to locations. The castle today, for example, remains centred on the [[motte-and-bailey|motte]] or artificial hill ("A" on the plan) on which William the Conqueror built the first wooden castle.


== Architecture ==
<span id="Layout-image">[[Image:Windsorcastleplan.png|thumb|right|400px|Plan of Windsor Castle. Throughout this article the letters marked in red on this plan will be used to reference locations discussed.]]</span>
[[File:Windsorcastleplan.png|thumb|upright=1.5|alt=A schematic map, with dark green parts of the castle on a light green background, individual locations marked out in red letters.|Plan of Windsor Castle:
'''Key to plan''' (right)
{{image key
|'''A''': The Round Tower
|'''B''': The Upper Ward, The Quadrangle
|'''C''': The State Apartments
|'''D''': Private Apartments*
|'''E''': South Wing
|'''F''': Lower Ward
|'''G''': [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle|St George's Chapel]]
|'''H''': Horseshoe Cloister
|'''K''': King Henry VIII Gate
|'''L''': The Long Walk
|'''M''': Norman Gate
|'''N''': North Terrace
|'''O''': Edward III Tower
|'''T''': The Curfew Tower
|*to the right of "D" (not shown) is the East Terrace created in the 17th century
}}]]


Windsor Castle grounds cover {{convert|13|acres|abbr=off}}<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.rct.uk/sites/default/files/Windsor_Castle_Fact_Sheet.pdf |title=Royal Collection Trust – Windsor Castle Fact Sheet|author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |publisher=Royal Collection Trust |access-date=10 January 2021}}</ref> and combines the features of a fortification, a palace, and a small town.<ref>Robinson, pp. 7, 156.</ref> The present-day castle was created during a sequence of phased building projects, culminating in the reconstruction work after a [[1992 Windsor Castle fire|fire in 1992]].<ref>Nicolson, pp. 3–4.</ref> It is in essence a [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]] and [[Victorian architecture|Victorian]] design based on a medieval structure, with [[Gothic architecture|Gothic]] features reinvented in a modern style. Since the 14th century, architecture at the castle has attempted to produce a contemporary reinterpretation of older fashions and traditions, repeatedly imitating outmoded or even antiquated styles.<ref name="Nicolson, p.123">Nicolson, p. 123.</ref> As a result, architect Sir [[William Whitfield (architect)|William Whitfield]] has pointed to Windsor Castle's architecture as having "a certain fictive quality", the [[Picturesque]] and Gothic design generating "a sense that a theatrical performance is being put on here", despite late 20th century efforts to expose more of the older structures to increase the sense of authenticity.<ref>Nicolson, p.78; Brindle and Kerr, p. 61.</ref> Although there has been some criticism, the castle's architecture and history lends it a "place amongst the greatest European palaces".<ref>Robinson, p. 156.</ref>
*A: The round tower
*B: The Upper Ward, The Quadrangle (as this courtyard is known)
*C: The State Apartments
*D: Private Apartments, overlooking the East terrace
*E: South Wing, overlooking The Long Walk
*F: Lower Ward
*G: [[St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle|St George's Chapel]]
*H: Horseshoe Cloister
*K: King Henry VIII Gate (principal entrance)
*L: The Long Walk
*M: Norman Gate
*N: North Terrace
*O: Edward III Tower
*T: The Curfew Tower


=== Middle Ward ===
The highly visible landmark of the castle, the Round Tower ("A"), is in reality far from cylindrical, its shape being dictated by the irregular, but seemingly round, man-made hill on which it sits. The castle's layout dates back to the mediaeval fortifications. The Round Tower divides the castle into two distinct sections known as wards. The Lower Ward ("F") is home to St George's Chapel ("G"), while the upper ward ("B") contains the private Royal Apartments ("D") and the more formal [[state room]]s ("C"), which include St George's Hall, a vast room which has a ceiling decorated with the [[coat of arms|coats of arms]] of past and present members of the [[Order of the Garter]].
At the heart of Windsor Castle is the Middle Ward, a bailey formed around the [[motte-and-bailey|motte]] or artificial hill in the centre of the ward. The motte is {{convert|50|ft|m}} high and is made from [[chalk]] originally excavated from the surrounding ditch. The [[keep]], called the Round Tower, on the top of the motte is based on an original 12th-century building, extended upwards in the early 19th century under architect [[Jeffry Wyatville]] by {{convert|30|ft|m}} to produce a more imposing height and silhouette.<ref name=RobinsonP142>Robinson, p. 142.</ref> The interior of the Round Tower was further redesigned in 1991–1993 to provide additional space for the [[Royal Archives]], an additional room being built in the space left by Wyatville's originally hollow extension.<ref name=RobinsonP142/> The Round Tower is in reality [[epitrochoid|far from cylindrical]], due to the shape and structure of the motte beneath it. The current height of the tower has been criticised as being disproportionate to its width; archaeologist Tim Tatton-Brown, for example, has described it as a mutilation of the earlier medieval structure.<ref>Tatton-Brown, p. 14.</ref>


The western entrance to the Middle Ward is now open, and a gateway leads north from the ward onto the North Terrace.<ref name=MackworthYoungP1>Mackworth-Young, p. 1.</ref> The eastern exit from the ward is guarded by the Norman Gatehouse.<ref name=MackworthYoungP1/> This [[gatehouse]], which, despite its name, dates from the 14th century, is heavily vaulted and decorated with carvings, including surviving medieval [[lion mask]]s, traditional symbols of majesty, to form an impressive entrance to the Upper Ward.<ref>Nicolson, p. 120.</ref> Wyatville redesigned the exterior of the gatehouse, and the interior was later heavily converted in the 19th century for residential use.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 234.</ref>
===Park===
The immediate environs of the castle, known as the [[Home Park, Windsor|Home Park]], comprise parkland and two working farms along with many estate cottages mainly occupied by employees. The estate of [[Frogmore]] also lies within the Home Park. [[Frogmore House]] and Gardens are open to the public on certain days of the year (the remainder of the Home Park is private). The Home Park adjoins the northern edge of the more extensive—though now sadly depleted—[[Windsor Great Park]].


===Elsewhere===
=== Upper Ward ===
[[File:Windsor Castle Upper Ward Quadrangle Corrected 2- Nov 2006.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|alt=A photograph of a grey Gothic quadrangle with a green grass square in the middle. On the left, a block of the building makes up the near ground. A gatehouse is in the middle of the right hand part of the quadrangle.|The South Wing of the Upper Ward; the Official Entrance to the State Apartments is on the left, the monarch's entrance to private apartments is left-centre in the corner, and the gateway near centre leads to the Long Walk in the Home Park. A statue of Charles II on horseback is at right.]]
In the Home Park, to the north of the castle, stands a private school, ''St George's, Windsor Castle'', which provides choristers to the Chapel.<ref>The location can be seen from this [http://www.stgwindsor.co.uk/file/aerial/02.html aerial photograph]</ref> [[Eton College]] is located about a mile north of the castle.
The Upper Ward of Windsor Castle comprises a number of major buildings enclosed by the upper bailey wall, forming a central quadrangle. The State Apartments run along the north of the ward, with a range of buildings along the east wall, and the private royal apartments and the King George IV Gate to the south, with the Edward III Tower in the south-west corner. The motte and the Round Tower form the west edge of the ward. [[Equestrian statue of Charles II, Windsor Castle|A bronze statue of]] [[Charles II of England|Charles&nbsp;II]] on horseback sits beneath the Round Tower.<ref name=RobinsonP55>Robinson, p. 55.</ref> Inspired by [[Hubert Le Sueur]]'s statue of [[Charles I of England|Charles&nbsp;I]] in London, the statue was cast by Josias Ibach in 1679, with the marble plinth featuring carvings by [[Grinling Gibbons]].<ref name=RobinsonP55/> The Upper Ward adjoins the North Terrace, which overlooks the [[River Thames]], and the East Terrace, which overlooks the Home Park; both of the current terraces were constructed by [[Hugh May]] in the 17th century.<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 31.</ref> The East Terrace has a private formal rose garden, first laid out by George IV in the 1820s. The present garden was updated by Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, after it was used for [[victory garden]] production during World War II, tended in part by Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret. In 2020 it was announced that for a limited time the garden would be open to the public for the first time in 40 years.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2020-08-06 |title=Windsor Castle's East Terrace Garden opens to public |work=Evening Standard |url=https://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/travel/uk-holidays/windsor-castle-s-east-terrace-garden-opens-to-public-a4518156.html |access-date=2020-08-06}}</ref>


Traditionally the Upper Ward was judged to be "to all intents and purposes a nineteenth century creation&nbsp;... the image of what the early nineteenth-century thought a castle should be", as a result of the extensive redesign of the castle by Wyatville under [[George IV]].<ref>Colvin, p. 392, cited Brown (1984), p. 230.</ref> The walls of the Upper Ward are built of [[Swinley Forest|Bagshot Heath]] stone faced on the inside with regular bricks, the gothic details in yellow [[Bath stone]].<ref name=RobinsonP92>Robinson, p. 92.</ref> The buildings in the Upper Ward are characterised by the use of small bits of flint in the mortar for [[Gauged brickwork|galletting]], originally started at the castle in the 17th century to give stonework from disparate periods a similar appearance. The skyline of the Upper Ward is designed to be dramatic when seen from a distance or silhouetted against the horizon, an image of tall towers and battlements influenced by the [[picturesque]] movement of the late 18th century.<ref name=RobinsonP92/> Archaeological and restoration work following the 1992 fire has shown the extent to which the current structure represents a survival of elements from the original 12th-century stone walls onwards, presented within the context of Wyatville's final remodelling.<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 61.</ref>
==History==
{{seealso|List of historical events at Windsor Castle}}
===1070–1350===
Windsor Castle was originally built by [[William I of England|William the Conqueror]], who reigned from 1066 until his death in 1087. His original wooden castle stood on the site of the present Round Tower ("[[#Layout-image|A]]"). The castle formed part of his defensive ring of castles surrounding London, the site chosen in part because of its easily defensible position.


==== State Apartments ====
Early in William's reign he had taken possession of a [[manorialism|manor]] in what today is [[Old Windsor]], probably a [[Anglo-Saxons|Saxon]] royal residence. A short time later between [[1070]] and [[1086]], he leased the site of the present castle from the Manor of [[Clewer]] and built the first [[motte-and-bailey]] castle. The motte is fifty feet (15 metres) high and consists of [[chalk]] excavated from a surrounding ditch, which then became a [[moat]].
[[File:Windsor Castle Upper Ward Quadrangle 2 - Nov 2006.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|alt=A photograph of a grey Gothic building stretching across the picture; the nearest parts have windows in a white stone, the furthest parts in a yellow stone. Three soldiers in grey uniforms and black hats are marching past the building.|The State Apartments in the Upper Ward – (l to r) King's Audience and Presence Chambers, the Official Entrance, St George's Hall, the Guest's Entrance<ref>Emery, p. 200.</ref>]]
The State Apartments form the major part of the Upper Ward and lie along the north side of the quadrangle. The modern building follows the medieval foundations laid down by [[Edward III of England|Edward&nbsp;III]], with the ground floor comprising service chambers and cellars, and the much grander first floor forming the main part of the palace. On the first floor, the layout of the western end of the State Apartments is primarily the work of architect [[Hugh May]], whereas the structure on the eastern side represents Jeffry Wyatville's plans.<ref group="nb">The Queen's Drawing Room, Queen's Ballroom, Queen's Audience Chamber, Queen's Presence Chamber, Queen's Guard Chamber, King's Presence Chamber, King's Audience Room, King's Drawing Chamber and King's Dining Chamber residing in May's 17th-century structure; Wyatville transformed the layout of the eastern end of the State Apartments, forming the Grand Reception Room, White Drawing Room, Green Drawing Room, Crimson Drawing Room, the Waterloo Chamber, State Dining Room and Octagonal Dining Room.</ref>


The interior of the State Apartments was mostly designed by Wyatville in the early 19th century. Wyatville intended each room to illustrate a particular architectural style and to display the matching furnishings and fine arts of the period.<ref>Nicolson, p. 79.</ref> With some alterations over the years, this concept continues to dominate the apartments. Different rooms follow the [[Neoclassical architecture|Classical]], [[Gothic Revival|Gothic]] and [[Rococo]] styles, together with an element of [[Jacobethan]] in places.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 79, 172–173.</ref> Many of the rooms on the eastern end of the castle had to be restored following the 1992 fire, using "equivalent restoration" methods&nbsp;– the rooms were restored so as to appear similar to their original appearance, but using modern materials and concealing modern structural improvements.<ref name=NicholsonP78>Nicolson, p. 78.</ref>{{refn|"Authentic restoration" involves using original materials and methods; "equivalent restoration", as at Windsor, can integrate modern "fire compartmentation, service ducting, hygienic materials and strengthened floors", provided they cannot be seen.<ref name=NicholsonP78/>|group="nb"}} These rooms were also partially redesigned at the same time to more closely match modern tastes. Art historian [[Hugh Roberts (art historian)|Hugh Roberts]] has praised the State Apartments as "a superb and unrivalled sequence of rooms widely regarded as the finest and most complete expression of later Georgian taste."<ref name="Hugh Roberts p. 79" /> Others, such as architect Robin Nicolson and critic [[Hugh Pearman (architecture critic)|Hugh Pearman]], have described them as "bland" and "distinctly dull".<ref>Nicolson, p. 70.</ref>
At this time the castle was defended by a wooden [[palisade]] rather than the thick stone walls seen today. The original plan of William the Conqueror's castle is unknown, but it was purely a military base, and nothing structural survives from this early period. From that time onwards the castle has remained in continuous use and has undergone numerous additions and improvements. His successor [[William II of England|William II]] is thought to have improved and enlarged the structure, but the Conqueror's youngest son King [[Henry I of England|Henry I]] was the first sovereign to live within the castle.


[[File:Windsor Castle Crimson Drawing Room.jpg|thumb|left|upright|alt=A photograph of a large room with a long red carpet stretching through the middle of it and windows on the right hand side. Furniture fills both sides of the room. The ceiling contains ornate plasterwork and a chandelier hangs down from the middle of the picture.|The Crimson Drawing Room in 2007, following the [[1992 Windsor Castle fire|1992 fire]] and subsequent remodelling]]
Concerned for his own safety due to the instabilities of his reign, he took up residence there and celebrated [[Pentecost|Whitsuntide]] at the castle in [[1110]].<ref name="asc">{{Cite book |first=Raymond |last=South |title=The Book of Windsor |publisher=Barracuda Books |year=1977 |isbn=0-86023-038-4 |pages=p. 35 |quote=Eodem anno [1110] rex curiam suam tenuit ad Pentecosam apud novam Windlesores}}</ref> His marriage to [[Adeliza of Louvain|Adela]], the daughter of [[Godfrey I of Leuven, Duke of Lower Lotharingia|Godfrey of Louvain]], took place in the castle in [[1121]].
Wyatville's most famous work are those rooms designed in a Rococo style. These rooms take the fluid, playful aspects of this mid-18th century artistic movement, including many original pieces of [[Louis XV style]], but project them on a "vastly inflated" scale.<ref>Ireland, p. 93; Nicolson, p. 191.</ref> Investigations after the 1992 fire have shown though that many Rococo features of the modern castle, originally thought to have been 18th-century fittings transferred from [[Carlton House, London|Carlton House]] or France, are in fact 19th-century imitations in plasterwork and wood, designed to blend with original elements.<ref>Nicolson, p. 176.</ref> The Grand Reception Room is the most prominent of these Rococo designs, {{convert|100|ft|m}} long and {{convert|40|ft|m}} tall and occupying the site of Edward III's great hall.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 123, 174; Brindle and Kerr, p. 28.</ref> This room, restored after the fire, includes a huge French Rococo ceiling, characterised by Ian Constantinides, the lead restorer, as possessing a "coarseness of form and crudeness of hand&nbsp;... completely overshadowed by the sheer spectacular effect when you are at a distance".<ref name=NicholsonP190>Nicolson, p. 190.</ref> The room is set off by a set of restored [[Gobelins Manufactory|Gobelins French tapestries]].<ref name=NicholsonP190/> Although decorated with less gold leaf than in the 1820s, the result remains "one of the greatest set-pieces of Regency decoration".<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 28; Nicolson, p. 184.</ref> The White, Green and Crimson Drawing Rooms include a total of 62 [[Trophy (architectural)|trophies]]: carved, gilded wooden panels illustrating weapons and the spoils of war, many with [[Freemasonry|Masonic]] meanings.<ref name=NicolsonPP197-8>Nicolson, pp. 197–198.</ref> Restored or replaced after the fire, these trophies are famous for their "vitality, precision and three-dimensional quality", and were originally brought from Carlton House in 1826, some being originally imported from France and others carved by Edward Wyatt.<ref name=NicolsonPP197-8/> The soft furnishings of these rooms, although luxurious, are more modest than the 1820s originals, both on the grounds of modern taste and cost.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 206–207.</ref>


Wyatville's design retains three rooms originally built by May in the 17th century in partnership with the painter [[Antonio Verrio]] and carver [[Grinling Gibbons]]. The Queen's Presence Chamber, the Queen's Audience Chamber and the King's Dining Room are designed in a Baroque, Franco-Italian style, characterised by "gilded interiors enriched with florid murals", first introduced to England between 1648 and 1650 at [[Wilton House]].<ref>Watkin, p. 345.</ref> Verrio's paintings are "drenched in medievalist allusion" and classical images.<ref>Nicolson, p. 128.</ref> These rooms were intended to show an innovative English "baroque fusion" of the hitherto separate arts of architecture, painting and carving.<ref>Rowse, p. 95.</ref>
The earliest surviving buildings at Windsor date from the reign of [[Henry II of England|Henry II]] who came to the throne in [[1154]]. He replaced the wooden palisade surrounding the old fortress with a stone wall interspersed with square towers; a much-altered part of this defensive wall can be seen on what is today the east terrace. Henry II also built the first stone [[keep]] on the irregular mound at the centre of the castle.


[[File:Windsor Castle Private Chapel.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=Two designs for a ceiling, one showing a side view of structure and decoration; the bottom showing how it would appear from below. The ceiling is decorated with a network of gothic arches in gold on a blue background.|A [[Architectural drawing#Presentation drawings|presentation drawing]] for the new Private Chapel, showing a Gothic design by [[Giles Downes]]]]
[[Image:Kip and Knyff Windsor.JPG|thumb|300px|An early 18th-century view of Windsor Castle by [[Jan Kip and Leonard Knyff|Kip and Knyff]]]]
A handful of rooms in the modern State Apartments reflect either 18th-century or Victorian Gothic design. The State Dining Room, for example, whose current design originates from the 1850s but which was badly damaged during the 1992 fire, is restored to its appearance in the 1920s, before the removal of some of the gilded features on the pilasters.<ref>Nicolson, p. 191.; Brindle and Kerr, p. 56.</ref> [[Anthony Salvin]]'s Grand Staircase is also of mid-Victorian design in the Gothic style, rising to a double-height hall lit by an older 18th-century Gothic [[vault (architecture)|vaulted]] lantern tower called the Grand Vestibule, designed by [[James Wyatt]] and executed by [[Francis Bernasconi]].<ref>Robinson, p. 74.</ref> The staircase has been criticised by historian [[John Martin Robinson|John Robinson]] as being a distinctly inferior design to the earlier staircases built on the same site by both Wyatt and May.<ref>Robinson, p. 118.</ref>


Some parts of the State Apartments were completely destroyed in the 1992 fire and this area was rebuilt in a style called "Downesian Gothic", named after the architect, [[Giles Downes]].<ref>Nicolson, p. 212.</ref><ref group="nb">The rooms completely or largely destroyed in the fire were St George's Hall, the Lantern Lobby, the Octagonal Dining Room, the Private Chapel, and the Great Kitchen.</ref> The style comprises "the rather stripped, cool and systematic coherence of modernism sewn into a reinterpretation of the Gothic tradition".<ref>Nicolson, p. 233.</ref> Downes argues that the style avoids "florid decoration", emphasising an organic, flowing Gothic structure.<ref>Nicolson, p. 234.</ref> Three new rooms were built or remodelled by Downes at Windsor. Downes' new [[hammer-beam roof]] of St George's Hall is the largest green-oak structure built since the Middle Ages, and is decorated with brightly coloured shields celebrating the heraldic element of the [[Order of the Garter]]; the design attempts to create an illusion of additional height through the gothic woodwork along the ceiling.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 211, 214, 218.</ref> The Lantern Lobby used to welcome guests features flowing oak columns forming a vaulted ceiling, imitating an [[arum lily]], and is where the pre-fire chapel built for Queen Victoria was located.<ref>Nicolson, p. 235.</ref><ref name=ITV>{{Cite news |date=2019-07-06 |title=Private chapel for Archie's christening was rebuilt after Windsor Castle fire |work=ITV News |url=https://www.itv.com/news/2019-07-06/private-chapel-for-archies-christening-was-rebuilt-after-windsor-castle-fire/ |access-date=2020-05-26}}</ref> The new Private Chapel is relatively intimate, only able to fit thirty worshippers, but combines architectural elements of the St George's Hall roof with the Lantern Lobby and the stepped arch structure of the Henry VIII chapel vaulting at [[Hampton Court]].<ref>Nicolson, pp. 244–246.</ref> The result is an "extraordinary, continuous and closely moulded net of tracery", complementing the new stained glass windows commemorating the fire, designed by Joseph Nuttgen,<ref>Nicolson, pp. 246, 264.</ref> based on an idea of [[Prince Philip]]'s.<ref name=ITV/> The Great Kitchen, with its newly exposed 14th-century roof lantern sitting alongside Wyatville's fireplaces, chimneys and Gothic tables, is also a product of the reconstruction after the fire.<ref>Nicolson, p. 146; Brindle and Kerr, p. 26.</ref>
In 1189, the castle was [[siege|besieged]] during the [[First Barons' War|revolt of the English barons]] against [[John of England|Prince John]]. The King's [[Wales|Welsh]] troops (little more than private mercenaries) took flight, and the Prince escaped to [[France]]. Later in 1215 at [[Runnymede]], close to the castle, the Prince, now King, was forced to sign [[Magna Carta]]. In 1216, again during the First Barons' War, the castle was again besieged, but this time withheld despite severe damage to the structure of the lower ward.


The ground floor of the State Apartments retains various famous medieval features. The 14th-century Great Undercroft still survives, some {{convert|193|ft|m}} long by {{convert|31|ft|m}} wide, divided into 13 bays.<ref>Emery, p. 197.</ref> At the time of the 1992 fire, the Undercroft had been divided into smaller rooms; the area is now opened up to form a single space in an effort to echo the undercrofts at [[Fountains Abbey|Fountains]] and [[Rievaulx Abbey]]s, although the floor remains artificially raised for convenience of use.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 166–167.</ref> The "beautifully vaulted" 14th-century Larderie passage runs alongside the Kitchen Courtyard and is decorated with carved royal roses, marking its construction by Edward III.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 125, 152.</ref><ref group="nb">"Larderie" means "meat passage".</ref>
This damage was immediately repaired in 1216 by King John's successor [[Henry III of England|Henry III]], who further strengthened the defences with the construction of the western curtain wall, much of which survives today. The oldest existing parts of the castle include the curfew tower ("[[#Layout-image|T]]"), constructed in 1227. The interior of the tower contains the former castle prison, and also the remnants of a "[[Sally port]]", a secret exit for the occupants in a time of siege. The upper storey contains the castle bells placed there in 1478, and the castle clock of 1689. The French-style [[cone (geometry)|conical]] roof is, however, a 19th-century addition. Henry III died in 1272, and there seems to have been little further building carried out at the castle until the reign of King Edward III (1327–1377).


===1350–1500===
=== Lower Ward ===
[[File:Windsor Lower Ward.jpg|thumb|upright=1.5|alt=A photograph of a large Gothic chapel on the left, with tall thin windows. On the right is a line of stone buildings, pointing towards a circular tower in the middle of the picture. In the centre are two paths surrounded by grass, with a number of people walking around.|The Lower Ward, (l to r) [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle|St George's Chapel]], the Lady Chapel, the Round Tower, the lodgings of the [[Military Knights of Windsor|Military Knights]], and the residence of the [[Governor of the Military Knights of Windsor|Governor of the Military Knights]]]]
[[Edward III of England|King Edward III]] was born in the castle on [[13 November]] [[1312]], and was often referred to as "Edward of Windsor". Beginning in 1350, he initiated a 24-year rebuilding program by demolishing the existing castle, with the exception of the Curfew Tower ("[[#Layout-image|T]]") and some other minor outworks. In overall charge of the rebuilding and design of the new castle he placed [[William of Wykeham]]. Henry II's keep (the Round Tower) was replaced by the present keep, although it was not raised to its present height until the 19th century. The fortifications too were further increased. The castle's [[chapel]] was substantially enlarged, but plans to build a new church were not executed, probably due to the scarcity of manpower and resources following the [[Black Death]]. Also dating from this time is the Norman Gate ("[[#Layout-image|M]]"). This large and imposing gate at the foot of the Round Tower is the last bastion of defence before the Upper Ward ("[[#Layout-image|B]]") where the Royal Apartments are situated.
The Lower Ward lies below and to the west of the Round Tower, reached through the Norman Gate. Originally largely of medieval design, most of the Lower Ward was renovated or reconstructed during the mid-Victorian period by [[Anthony Salvin]] and [[Edward Blore]], to form a "consistently Gothic composition".<ref name="Robinson, p.121">Robinson, p. 121.</ref> The Lower Ward holds [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle|St George's Chapel]] and most of the buildings associated with the Order of the Garter.


On the north side of the Lower Ward is St George's Chapel. This huge building is the spiritual home of the [[Order of the Garter|Order of the Knights of the Garter]] and dates from the late 15th and early 16th century, designed in the [[Gothic architecture|Perpendicular Gothic]] style.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 20.</ref> The ornate wooden [[Choir of St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle|choir stalls]] are of 15th century design, having been restored and extended by [[Henry Emlyn]] at the end of the 18th century, and are decorated with a unique set of brass plates showing the arms of the Knights of the Garter over the last six centuries.<ref>Robinson, pp. 18, 28.</ref> On the west side, the chapel has a grand Victorian door and staircase, used on ceremonial occasions.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP80>Mackworth-Young, p. 80.</ref> The east stained glass window is Victorian, and the [[oriel window]] to the north side of it was built by [[Henry&nbsp;VIII]] for [[Catherine of Aragon]].<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 22.</ref> The vault in front of the altar houses the remains of Henry&nbsp;VIII, [[Jane Seymour]] and [[Charles I of England|Charles&nbsp;I]], with [[Edward IV of England|Edward&nbsp;IV]] buried nearby.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 22; Rowse, p. 37.</ref> The chapel is considered by historian John Robinson to be "one of the supreme achievements of English Perpendicular Gothic" design.<ref name="Robinson, p.27"/>
In 1348 Edward III established the [[Order of the Garter]], whose annual ceremony still takes place in [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor|St George's Chapel]], the principal chapel of the castle. In 1353–1354, he had the [[Aerary]] Porch built.


[[File:Windsor horseshoe cloister 01.JPG|thumb|left|upright|alt=A close-up photograph of a building made with black timbers and red brick. The building has four tall, brick chimneys. A relatively modern drainpipe comes down the middle of the building.|The Horseshoe Cloister, built in 1480 and reconstructed in the 19th century]]
[[Image:WindsorLowerBaileyJosephNash1848 edited.jpg|thumb|300px|The lower ward in the 1840s. St George's Chapel is on the left and the Round Tower is centre right.]]
At the east end of St George's Chapel is the Lady Chapel, originally built by [[Henry III of England|Henry&nbsp;III]] in the 13th century and converted into the Albert Memorial Chapel between 1863 and 1873 by [[George Gilbert Scott]].<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP80/> Built to commemorate the life of [[Albert, Prince Consort|Prince Albert]], the ornate chapel features lavish decoration and works in marble, glass mosaic and bronze by [[Henri de Triqueti]], [[Susan Durant]], [[Alfred Gilbert]] and [[Antonio Salviati]].<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP80/> The east door of the chapel, covered in ornamental ironwork, is the original door from 1246.<ref name="Tatton-Brown, p.26">Tatton-Brown, p. 26.</ref>
In 1390, during the reign of [[Richard II of England|Richard II]], it was found that St George's chapel was close to collapse, and a restoration process was undertaken. The clerk of the works was one of King Richard's favourites, [[Geoffrey Chaucer]], who served as a diplomat and Clerk of The King's Works. Their relationship encompassed all of Richard's reign. In the decade before Chaucer's death, Richard granted him several gifts and annuities, including twenty [[pound sterling|pounds]] a year for life in 1394, and 252 gallons of wine per year in 1397. Chaucer died on [[25 October]] [[1400]]. Whatever his skills as a [[surveying|surveyor]] and builder were, within 50 years of his restoration the chapel was again ruinous.


At the west end of the Lower Ward is the Horseshoe Cloister, originally built in 1480, near to the chapel to house its clergy. It houses the vicars-choral, or [[lay clerk]]s of the chapel.<ref name=RobinsonP26P121>Robinson, pp. 26, 121.</ref> This curved brick and timber building is said to have been designed to resemble the shape of a [[fetlock]], one of the [[livery badge|badges]] used by Edward IV. [[George Gilbert Scott]] heavily restored the building in 1871 and little of the original structure remains.<ref name=RobinsonP26P121/> Other ranges originally built by Edward III sit alongside the Horseshoe, featuring stone perpendicular [[tracery]].<ref name=RobinsonP26>Robinson, p. 26.</ref> As of 2011, they are used as offices, a library and as the houses for the Dean and [[canon (priest)|Canons]].<ref name=RobinsonP26/>
[[Edward IV of England|King Edward IV]] (1461–1483), the first [[House of York|Yorkist]] King, who was said to be addicted to ''"the advauncement of vaine pompe" (sic)'', began the construction of the present [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor|St. George's Chapel]]. In reality the chapel, begun in 1475, is more a miniature [[cathedral]] and royal [[mausoleum]] than a chapel. Its architecture is an exercise in the [[Gothic architecture|Perpendicular Gothic]] style. During the reign of [[Henry VII of England|Henry VII]], some of the original chapel of St. George was demolished to make way for the [[Lady Chapel]], which the King then abandoned. The building was one of the first truly grand pieces of architecture within the castle [[precinct]]s.


Behind the Horseshoe Cloister is the Curfew Tower, one of the oldest surviving parts of the Lower Ward and dating from the 13th century.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP80/> The interior of the tower contains a former dungeon, and the remnants of a [[sally port]], a secret exit for the occupants in a time of siege.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 81.</ref> The upper storey contains the castle bells placed there in 1478, and the castle clock of 1689. The French-style [[cone (geometry)|conical]] roof is a 19th-century attempt by Anthony Salvin to remodel the tower in the fashion of [[Eugène Viollet-le-Duc]]'s recreation of [[Carcassonne]].<ref>Robinson, pp. 14, 121.</ref>
The construction of the chapel marked a turning point in the architecture of the castle. The more stable political climate following the end of the [[Wars of the Roses]] meant that future building tended to be more considerate of comfort and style than of fortification. In this way the castle's role changed from that of royal [[bastion]] to that of a royal palace. One example of this is the "Horseshoe Cloister" ("[[#Layout-image|H]]") from 1480, built near the chapel to house its clergy. This curved brick building is said to be in the shape of a [[fetlock]]: one of the badges used by Edward IV. Restoration work in 1871 was heavy, and little of the original building remains.


On the opposite side of the chapel is a range of buildings including the lodgings of the [[Military Knights of Windsor|Military Knights]], and the residence of the [[Governor of the Military Knights of Windsor|Governor of the Military Knights]].<ref>Robinson, p. 30.</ref> These buildings originate from the 16th century and are still used by the Knights, who represent the Order of the Garter each Sunday.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 27.</ref> On the south side of the Ward is King Henry VIII's gateway, which bears the coat of arms of [[Catherine of Aragon]] and forms the secondary entrance to the castle.
===Fortress to palace===
[[Image:Windsor_CastleDE.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Windsor Castle and the Thames.]]
While it is accepted that Edward III was the monarch who began the transformation of the castle from a fortress to a comfortable residence, when compared to the other royal palaces at [[Palace of Whitehall|Whitehall]] and [[Nonsuch Palace|Nonsuch]] Windsor remained a very bleak residence.<ref name="williams">{{Cite book |first=Neville |last=Williams |title=Royal Homes |publisher=Lutterworth Press |year=1971 |isbn=0-7188-0803-7}}</ref> [[Henry VIII of England|Henry VIII]] (who reigned from [[1509]]–[[1547]]) rebuilt the principal castle gateway in about [[1510]], siting it in such a place that, should the gateway fall in an attack, further invasion into the castle would involve an uphill battle. The [[coat of arms]] above the arch and [[portcullis]] bears the pomegranate badge of the king's first queen, [[Catherine of Aragon]].


=== Park and landscape ===
Henry VIII's successor and son, the boy King [[Edward VI of England|Edward VI]] (who reigned from [[1547]]–[[1553]]), wrote while staying in the castle "Methink I am in a prison, here are no galleries, nor no gardens to walk in."<ref name="williams" />
Windsor Castle's position on top of steep ground has meant that the castle's gardens are limited in scale.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 42.</ref> The castle gardens stretch east from the Upper Ward across a 19th-century terrace.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 72.</ref> Windsor Castle is surrounded by extensive parkland. The immediate area stretching to the east of the castle is a 19th-century creation known as the [[Home Park, Windsor|Home Park]].<ref name=RobinsonP122/> The Home Park includes parkland and two working farms, along with many estate cottages mainly occupied by employees and the [[Frogmore]] estate. The Long Walk, a double lined avenue of trees, runs for {{convert|2.65|mi|km|}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.windsor-berkshire.co.uk/the-long-walk/ |title=The Long Walk |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |website=Windsor Berkshire UK |publisher=WordPress |access-date=25 March 2015}}</ref> south of the castle, and is {{cvt|240|ft}} wide.<ref>Cantor, p. 105.</ref> The original 17th century elms were replaced with alternating [[chestnut]] and [[Platanus|plane]] trees. The impact of [[Dutch elm disease]] led to large-scale replanting after 1945.<ref>Robinson, pp. 55, 122.</ref>


The Home Park adjoins the northern edge of the more extensive [[Windsor Great Park]], occupying some {{convert|2020|ha|acre|order=flip}}<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.thecrownestate.co.uk/windsor/windsor-great-park/ |title=The Crown Estate – Windsor Great Park |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |date=2015 |publisher=The Crown Estate |access-date=25 March 2015}}</ref> and including some of the oldest [[Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests|broadleaved woodlands]] in Europe.<ref>Brown (1989), p. 230; Cantor, p. 105.</ref> In the Home Park, to the north of the castle, stands a private school, [[St George's School, Windsor Castle|St George's]], which provides [[choir|choristers]] to the chapel. [[Eton College]] is located about half a mile from the castle, across the [[River Thames]], reflecting the fact that it was a royal foundation of [[Henry VI of England|Henry&nbsp;VI]].
Edward VI's sister [[Elizabeth I of England|Queen Elizabeth I]] (who reigned [[1558]]–[[1603]]) spent much of her time at Windsor and regarded it as the safest place in her realm and would retire here in moments of anxiety, as she described it: "knowing it could stand a siege if need be".<ref name="williams" /> While her statement suggests the castle was still very much a fortress, she too contributed to the transformation by constructing the north terrace ("[[#Layout-image|N]]") as a place to exercise, and over it she built a covered gallery, a very early example of what was later to be known as a [[conservatory (greenhouse)|conservatory]]. This building has survived relatively unaltered. Still containing an enormous [[Tudor Style architecture|Tudor]] fireplace, it today houses the Royal Library.


{{wide image|cmglee_Windsor_Castle_aerial_view.jpg|600px|Aerial view of the castle from the south, '''from left to right''': the Lower Ward and St George's Chapel, the Middle Ward and Round Tower, the Upper Ward and East Terrace garden, with the Long Walk, lower right. The [[River Thames]] can be seen in the upper left of the picture.}}
===The Civil War===
Elizabeth I was followed by [[James I of England|James I]], and he by his son [[Charles I of England|Charles I]], neither of whom made significant changes to the castle. However, following the deposition of Charles in the [[English Civil War]], the castle became the headquarters of [[Oliver Cromwell]]'s [[New Model Army]]. Windsor Castle fell to Cromwell's [[Roundhead|Parliamentarians]] early in the hostilities due to the cunning of Colonel [[John Venn (regicide)|John Venn]]. [[Prince Rupert of the Rhine]] arrived to retake the town and castle a few days later, but though he severely battered the town, he was unable to retake the castle. Venn remained Governor of the castle until 1645.


== History ==
Under Parliamentarian jurisdiction the castle suffered, but not as badly as such an [[icon]]ic symbol of monarchy could have been expected to. However, the garrison stationed there was underpaid and was allowed to loot the castle's treasures.<ref name=hils">{{Cite book |first=B J W |last=Hill |title=Windsor Castle |publisher=Pitkin Pictorials Ltd. |year=1972}}</ref> For the duration of the [[Commonwealth of England|Commonwealth period]], the castle remained a military headquarters, and a prison for more important [[Cavalier|Royalists]] captured. For a short time prior to his execution in 1649, Charles was imprisoned in the castle, although in today's terminology [[house arrest]] would be a more accurate term. Following the King's execution, Britain was ruled by Cromwell until the restoration of the monarchy in 1660. Charles' body was smuggled back to Windsor in the dead of night through a snowstorm to be interred without ceremony in the [[tomb|vault]] beneath the [[quire (architecture)|choir]] in St George's Chapel, next to the coffins of Henry VIII and his wife [[Jane Seymour]].


===The Restoration===
=== 11th and 12th centuries ===
[[File:Windsor round tower 03.JPG|thumb|upright|alt=A photograph showing the left hand side of a circular stone tower made of grey stone and with small windows.|The Round Tower in the Middle Ward, built by [[Henry II of England|Henry&nbsp;II]] and remodelled in the 19th century]]
[[Image:Windsor 1.gif|thumb|right|200px|Drawing by [[Jeffry Wyatville|Wyatville]] showing his Gothic transformation to the buildings of the upper ward of Windsor Castle]]
Windsor Castle was originally built by [[William I of England|William the Conqueror]] in the decade after the [[Norman conquest of England|Norman conquest]] of 1066.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP6>Mackworth-Young, p. 6.</ref> William established a defensive ring of [[motte and bailey]] castles around London; each was a day's march&nbsp;– about {{convert|20|mi}}&nbsp;– from the [[City of London|City]] and from the next castle, allowing for easy reinforcements in a crisis.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP6/> Windsor Castle, one of this ring of fortifications, was strategically important because of its proximity to both the [[River Thames]], a key medieval route into London, and [[Windsor Great Park|Windsor Forest]], a royal hunting preserve previously used by the Saxon kings.<ref>Rowse, p. 12; Robinson, p. 13.</ref> The nearby settlement of Clivore, or [[Clewer]], was an old [[Anglo-Saxons|Saxon]] residence. The initial wooden castle consisted of a [[keep]] on the top of a man-made [[motte and bailey castle|motte]], or mound, protected by a small [[Ward (fortification)|bailey]] wall, occupying a chalk [[Inliers and outliers (geology)|inlier]], or bluff, rising {{cvt|100|ft}} above the river.<ref>Emery, p. 193; Tatton-Brown, p. 18; Robinson, p. 11.</ref> A second wooden bailey was constructed to the east of the keep, forming the later Upper Ward.<ref name=EmeryP193>Emery, p. 193.</ref> By the end of the century, another bailey had been constructed to the west, creating the basic shape of the modern castle.<ref name=EmeryP193/>{{refn|Tim Tatton-Brown argues that only the initial, middle bailey was built by William I, suggesting a later construction date for the two larger baileys.<ref>Tatton-Brown, p. 18.</ref>|group="nb"}} In design, Windsor most closely resembled [[Arundel Castle]], another powerful early Norman fortification, but the double bailey design was also found at [[Rockingham Castle|Rockingham]] and [[Alnwick Castle]].<ref>Brown (1989), p. 227; Robinson, p. 11.</ref>


Windsor was not initially used as a royal residence. The early Norman kings preferred to use the former palace of [[Edward the Confessor]] in the village of [[Old Windsor]].<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 32.</ref> The first king to use Windsor Castle as a residence was [[Henry I of England|Henry&nbsp;I]], who celebrated [[Pentecost|Whitsuntide]] at the castle in 1110 during a period of heightened insecurity.<ref name="asc">South, p. 35.</ref> Henry's marriage to [[Adeliza of Louvain|Adela]], the daughter of [[Godfrey I of Leuven, Duke of Lower Lotharingia|Godfrey of Louvain]], took place in the castle in 1121. During this period the keep suffered a substantial collapse&nbsp;– archaeological evidence shows that the southern side of the motte [[Subsidence|subsided]] by over 6&nbsp;ft (2&nbsp;m).<ref>Brindle and Kerr, pp. 32–33.</ref> Timber piles were driven in to support the motte and the old wooden keep was replaced with a new stone [[shell keep]], with a probable gateway to the north-east and a new stone well.<ref name=BrindleKerrP33>Brindle and Kerr, p. 33.</ref> A [[Chemise (wall)|chemise]], or low protective wall, was subsequently added to the keep.<ref name=BrindleKerrP33/>
[[Image:Windsor 2.gif|thumb|right|200px|[[Jeffry Wyatville|Wyatville]]'s drawing showing the intended changes to the Prince of Wales Tower at Windsor castle]]


[[Henry II of England|Henry&nbsp;II]] came to the throne in 1154 and built extensively at Windsor between 1165 and 1179.<ref name=EmeryP193/> Henry replaced the wooden palisade surrounding the upper ward with a stone wall interspersed with square towers and built the first King's Gate.<ref name=EmeryP193/> The first stone keep was suffering from subsidence, and cracks were beginning to appear in the stonework of the south side.<ref name=BrindleKerrP33/> Henry replaced the keep with another stone shell keep and chemise wall, but moved the walls in from the edge of the motte to relieve the pressure on the mound, and added massive foundations along the south side to provide additional support.<ref name=BrindleKerrP33/> Inside the castle Henry remodelled the royal accommodation.<ref name=EmeryP193/> [[Bagshot Heath]] stone was used for most of the work, and stone from [[Bedfordshire]] for the internal buildings.<ref>Robinson, p. 14.</ref>
[[The Restoration]] of the monarchy in 1660 was to prove the first period of significant change to Windsor Castle for many years. [[Charles II of England|Charles II]] did much to restore and refurnish the castle from the damage suffered during the civil war. At this time [[Palace of Versailles|Versailles]] was being constructed in France, and with this in mind Charles II laid out the avenue known as the Long Walk ("[[#Layout-image|L]]") (''see illustration right''). Running south from the castle, this avenue runs for three [[mile]]s (5 km) and is 240 feet (75 metres) wide. The original [[elm]]s the King planted have since been replaced with [[chestnut]]s and [[Platanus|planes]]. The Long Walk was not the only part of Windsor to be inspired by Versailles. Charles II commissioned the architect [[Hugh May]] to rebuild the Royal Apartments and St George's Hall. May replaced the original [[Angevin#Plantagenet|Plantagenet]] apartments on the north terrace with the cube-like Star Building. The interiors of these new apartments were decorated with ceilings by [[Antonio Verrio]] and carving by [[Grinling Gibbons]]. The King also acquired tapestries and paintings to furnish the rooms. These artworks were to form the core of what was to become known as the [[Royal Collection Department|Royal Collection]]. Three of these rooms survive relatively unchanged: the Queen's Presence Chamber and the Queen's Audience Chamber, both designed for Charles II's wife [[Catherine of Braganza]], and the King's Dining Room. These retain both their Verrio ceilings and Gibbons' [[panelling]]. Originally there were twenty rooms in this style. Some of Gibbons' carvings were rescued at various times when alterations were being made in the name of change or restoration, and in the 19th century these carvings were incorporated into new interior design themes in the Garter Throne Room and the Waterloo Chamber.


===The 18th and 19th centuries===
=== 13th century ===
[[File:Curfew Tower, Windsor Castle.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=A photograph of a castle tower, the tower is pierced by small windows and has a coned, red-tiled roof, with a clock built into one side. The sky behind the wall is pale blue.|The Curfew Tower, part of the Lower Ward, built under [[Henry III of England|Henry&nbsp;III]] and remodelled in the 19th century]]
[[Image:Plan of Windsor Castle in 1743 by Batty Langley.jpg|250px|left|thumb|Plan of Windsor Castle in [[1743]] by Batty Langley]]
[[John, King of England|King John]] undertook some building works at Windsor, but primarily to the accommodation rather than the defences.<ref name=Tatton-BrownP24>Tatton-Brown, p. 24.</ref> The castle played a role during the [[First Barons' War|revolt of the English barons]]: the castle was besieged in 1214, and John used the castle as his base during the negotiations before the signing of [[Magna Carta]] at nearby [[Runnymede]] in 1215.<ref name=Tatton-BrownP24/> In 1216 the castle was besieged again by baronial and French troops under the command of the [[Hervé IV of Donzy|Count of Nevers]], but John's [[Constable#United Kingdom|constable]], [[Engelard de Cigogné]], successfully defended it.<ref name=Tatton-BrownP24/>


The damage done to the castle during the second siege was immediately repaired in 1216 and 1221 by Cigogné on behalf of John's successor [[Henry III of England|Henry&nbsp;III]], who further strengthened the defences.<ref name="Brindle and Kerr, p.34">Brindle and Kerr, p. 34.</ref> The walls of the Lower Ward were rebuilt in stone, complete with a gatehouse in the location of the future Henry VIII Gate, between 1224 and 1230.<ref name=EmeryP193/> Three new towers, the Curfew, Garter and the Salisbury towers, were constructed.<ref name=Tatton-BrownP24/> The Middle Ward was heavily reinforced with a southern stone wall, protected by the new Edward III and Henry III towers at each end.<ref name=EmeryP193/>
Following the death of Charles II in 1685, the Castle fell slowly into a state of neglect. Needless to say, while the precincts and park remained a complex of inhabited royal mansions, the sovereigns themselves preferred to live elsewhere. During the reign of [[William and Mary]] (1689–1702), [[Hampton Court Palace]] was enlarged and transformed into a huge modern palace. Later [[Anne of Great Britain|Queen Anne]] preferred to live in a small house close to the walls of the castle. It was not until 1804 &ndash; when [[George III of the United Kingdom|King George III]], the father of 13 children, needed a larger residence than could be found elsewhere &ndash; that the castle was once again fully inhabited. The work carried out by Charles II had been on the contemporary, more classical, style of architecture popular at the time. [[Inigo Jones]] had introduced [[Palladian architecture|Palladianism]] to England during the time of Charles I; George III felt this style was not in keeping with an ancient castle, and had many of Charles II's windows redesigned and given a pointed [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic]] arch, and thus the castle began once again to acquire its original medieval appearance. During this period Windsor Castle was once again to become a place of royal confinement. In 1811 King George III became permanently deranged and was confined to the castle for his own safety. During the last nine years of his life he seldom left his apartments at Windsor.


Windsor Castle was one of Henry III's three favourite residences and he invested heavily in the royal accommodation, spending more money at Windsor than in any other of his properties.<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 34; Robinson, p. 15.</ref>{{refn|The other two residences favoured by Henry III were the [[Palace of Westminster]] and [[Clarendon Palace]].<ref name="Brindle and Kerr, p.34"/>|group="nb"}} Following his marriage to [[Eleanor of Provence]], Henry built a luxurious palace in 1240–1263, based around a court along the north side of the Upper Ward.<ref>Nicolson, p. 123; Emery, p. 193.</ref> This was intended primarily for the queen and Henry's children.<ref name=EmeryP193/> In the Lower Ward, the king ordered the construction of a range of buildings for his own use along the south wall, including a 70&nbsp;ft (21&nbsp;m) long chapel, later called the [[Lady Chapel]].<ref name=Tatton-BrownP25>Tatton-Brown, p. 25.</ref> This was the grandest of the numerous chapels built for his own use, and comparable to the [[Sainte-Chapelle]] in Paris in size and quality.<ref>Robinson, p. 15.</ref> Henry repaired the Great Hall that lay along the north side of the Lower Ward, and enlarged it with a new kitchen and built a covered walkway between the Hall and the kitchen.<ref name=Tatton-BrownP25/> Henry's work was characterised by the religious overtones of the rich decorations, which formed "one of the high-water marks of English medieval art".<ref>Robinson, p. 17.</ref> The conversion cost more than £10,000.<ref name="Brindle and Kerr, p.34"/> The result was to create a division in the castle between a more private Upper Ward and a Lower Ward devoted to the public face of the monarchy.<ref name="Tatton-Brown, p.26"/> Little further building was carried out at the castle during the 13th century; the Great Hall in the Lower Ward was destroyed by fire in 1296, but it was not rebuilt.<ref name=SteaneP110>Steane, p. 110.</ref>
It was during the reign of [[George IV of the United Kingdom|King George IV]] between 1820–1830 that the castle was to undergo the greatest single transformation in its history. George IV, known for his extravagant building at both [[Carlton House]] and the [[Royal Pavilion]] during his [[English Regency|regency]], now persuaded [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|Parliament]] to vote him £300,000 for restoration. The architect [[Jeffry Wyatville]] was selected, and work commenced in 1824.


=== 14th century ===
The work took twelve years to complete and included a complete remodelling of the Upper Ward ("[[#Layout-image|B]]"), private apartments ("[[#Layout-image|D]]"), Round Tower ("[[#Layout-image|A]]"), and the exterior facade of the South Wing ("[[#Layout-image|E]]") which gave the castle its near symmetrical [[facade]] seen from the Long Walk.
[[File:Puerta normanda del castillo de Windsor.jpg|thumb|alt=A photograph of a stone gatehouse, with two large, circular towers on each side of the gateway dominating the picture. A stone wall stretches alongside the left hand side of the picture.|The Norman Gate in the Middle Ward, built by [[Edward III of England|Edward&nbsp;III]] and remodelled in the 19th century]]


[[Edward III of England|Edward&nbsp;III]] was born at Windsor Castle and used it extensively throughout his reign.<ref name=SteaneP110/> In 1344 the king announced the foundation of the new Order of the Round Table at the castle.<ref name=BrindleKerrP39>Brindle and Kerr, p. 39.</ref> Edward began to construct a new building in the castle to host this order, but it was never finished.<ref name=BrindleKerrP39/> Chroniclers described it as a round building, 200&nbsp;ft (61&nbsp;m) across, and it was probably in the centre of the Upper Ward.<ref>Tatton-Brown, p. 23; Barber, p. 41.</ref> Shortly afterwards, Edward abandoned the new order for reasons that remain unclear, and instead established the [[Order of the Garter]], again with Windsor Castle as its headquarters, complete with the attendant [[Military Knights of Windsor|Poor Knights of Windsor]].<ref name=BrindleKerrP39/> As part of this process Edward decided to rebuild Windsor Castle, in particular Henry III's palace, in an attempt to construct a castle that would be symbolic of royal power and chivalry.<ref name=NicolsonPP118-9>Nicolson, pp. 118–119.</ref> Edward was influenced both by the military successes of his grandfather, Edward I, and by the decline of royal authority under his father, Edward II, and aimed to produce an innovative, "self-consciously aesthetic, muscled, martial architecture".<ref name=NicolsonP121>Nicolson, p. 121.</ref>
[[Image:St George's Hall Windsor from W.H. Payne's Royal Residences (1819).jpg|thumb|300px|St George's Hall Windsor from W.H. Pyne's ''Royal Residences'' (1819). This shows the [[Baroque architecture|baroque]] style of the work carried out at Windsor for [[Charles II of England|Charles II]] by architect [[Hugh May]], painter [[Antonio Verrio]], carver [[Grinling Gibbons]] and others. St George's Hall was redecorated in the early 19th century, but several smaller interiors from this period survive.]]


Edward placed [[William of Wykeham]] in overall charge of the rebuilding and design of the new castle and while work was ongoing Edward stayed in temporary accommodation in the Round Tower.<ref name=SteaneP110/> Between 1350 and 1377 Edward spent £51,000 on renovating Windsor Castle; this was the largest amount spent by any English medieval monarch on a single building operation, and over one and a half times Edward's typical annual income of £30,000.<ref name="Nicolson, p.106">Nicolson, p. 106.</ref> Some of the costs of the castle were paid from the results of ransoms following Edward's victories at the battles of [[Battle of Crécy|Crécy]], [[Siege of Calais (1346)|Calais]] and [[Battle of Poitiers (1356)|Poitiers]].<ref name=SteaneP110/> Windsor Castle was already a substantial building before Edward began expanding it, making the investment all the more impressive, and much of the expenditure was lavished on rich furnishings.<ref>Brown (1984), p. 91; Nicolson, p. 122.</ref> The castle was "the most expensive secular building project of the entire Middle Ages in England".<ref name=BrindleKerrP39/>
[[Image:WindsorStGeorgesHallJosephNashPub1848 edited.jpg|thumb|300px|St George's Hall in 1848 by Joseph Nash, showing the alterations made for [[George IV of the United Kingdom|George IV]] by Sir [[Jeffry Wyatville]]]]


Edward's new palace consisted of three courts along the north side of the Upper Ward, called Little Cloister, King's Cloister and the Kitchen Court.<ref name=EmeryP196>Emery, p.196.</ref> At the front of the palace lay the St George's Hall range, which combined a new hall and a new chapel. This range had two symmetrical gatehouses, the Spicerie Gatehouse and the Kitchen Gatehouse. The Spicerie Gatehouse was the main entrance into the palace, while the Kitchen Gatehouse simply led into the kitchen courtyard.<ref>Nicolson, p. 121; Emery, p. 196.</ref> The great hall had numerous large windows looking out across the ward.<ref>Nicolson, p. 124.</ref> The range had an unusual, unified roof-line and, with a taller roof than the rest of the palace, would have been highly distinctive.<ref>Nicolson, p.120; Brindle and Ward, p. 40.</ref> The Rose Tower, designed for the king's private use, set off the west corner of the range.<ref name=EmeryP196/> The result was a "great and apparently architecturally unified palace&nbsp;... uniform in all sorts of ways, as to roof line, window heights, cornice line, floor and ceiling heights".<ref>Steven Brindle, cited Nicolson, p. 125.</ref> With the exception of the Hall, Chapel and the Great Chamber, the new interiors all shared a similar height and width.<ref name=BrindleKerrP44>Brindle and Kerr, p. 44.</ref>{{refn|The interiors were approximately 22&nbsp;ft 11 in (7&nbsp;m) in height, and 23&nbsp;ft 7 in (7.2&nbsp;m) wide.<ref name=BrindleKerrP44/>|group="nb"}} The defensive features, however, were primarily for show, possibly to provide a backdrop for jousting between the two-halves of the Order of the Garter.<ref name=NicolsonP121/>
Wyatville was the first architect to view the castle as one composition, rather than a collection of buildings of various ages and in differing styles. As an architect he had a preference for imposing [[Symmetry#Symmetry in architecture|symmetry]], whereas the castle which had evolved piecemeal over the previous centuries had no symmetry at all. Wyatville imposed a symmetry of sorts on the existing buildings of the Upper Ward, by raising the heights of certain towers to match others, and refacing the Upper Ward in a Gothic style complete with castelated [[battlement]]s to match the mediæval buildings, including St George's Chapel in the Lower Ward. The Round Tower had always been a squat structure, and now this was further accentuated by the new height of the buildings in the Upper Ward. Wyatville surmounted this problem by building on top of the Round Tower a hollow stone crown, basically a false upper storey. Some 33 feet (10 metres) high, this crown gives the entire castle its dramatic [[silhouette]] from many miles away.


[[File:Windsor Castle Edwardian Frontage.jpg|thumb|left|300px|alt=A drawing of the front of a castle hall, with two towers at either end and a row of high windows running along with the middle. The drawing is in shades of grey.|A reconstruction of the St George's Hall range built by [[Edward III of England|Edward&nbsp;III]]: (l to r) the Spicerie Gatehouse, the chapel, the hall, and the Kitchen Gatehouse]]
Much of the interior of the Castle was given the same makeover treatment as the exterior. Many of the Charles II state rooms which remained after George III's redecorations were redesigned in the Gothic style, most notably St George's Hall (''see illustration right''), which was doubled in length. Wyatville also roofed over a courtyard to create the Waterloo Chamber. This vast hall lit by a [[clerestory]] was designed to celebrate the victors of the [[Battle of Waterloo]] and was hung with portraits of the allied sovereigns and commanders who vanquished [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleon]]. The large dining table at the centre of the chamber seats 150 people.
Edward built further luxurious, self-contained lodgings for his court around the east and south edges of the Upper Ward, creating the modern shape of the quadrangle.<ref name="Nicolson, p.123"/> The Norman gate was built to secure the west entrance to the Ward.<ref name=SteaneP110/> In the Lower Ward, the chapel was enlarged and remodelled with grand buildings for the canons built alongside.<ref name=SteaneP110/> The earliest weight-driven mechanical [[Clock#A new mechanism|clock]] in England was installed by Edward III in the Round Tower in 1354.<ref>Brown (1989), p. 230.</ref> William of Wykeham went on to build [[New College, Oxford]] and [[Winchester College]], where the influence of Windsor Castle can easily be seen.<ref name=SteaneP110/>


The new castle was used to hold French prisoners taken at the [[Battle of Poitiers]] in 1357, including [[John II of France|King John&nbsp;II]], who was held for a [[Ransom of King John II of France|considerable ransom]].<ref>Ritchie, p. 100.</ref> Later in the century, the castle also found favour with [[Richard II of England|Richard&nbsp;II]]. Richard conducted restoration work on St George's Chapel, the work being carried out by [[Geoffrey Chaucer]], who served as a diplomat and Clerk of The King's Works.
The work was unfinished at the time of George IV's death in 1830, but was virtually completed by Wyatville's death in 1840.


===The Victorian era===
=== 15th century ===
[[File:St. Georges Chapel, Windsor Castle (2).jpg|thumb|alt=A photograph of a huge stone chapel, with tall stained glass windows and stone detailing. A patch of green grass can be seen in the foreground with several people walking by the door of the chapel.|[[St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle|St George's Chapel]], begun in 1475 by [[Edward IV of England|Edward&nbsp;IV]]]]
[[Image:Queen_Victoria_1887.jpg|thumb|left|200px|[[Victoria of the United Kingdom|Queen Victoria]]'s retreat into the privacy of the castle after the death of [[Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha|Prince Albert]] acquired her the soubriquet "The Widow of Windsor".]]
Windsor Castle continued to be favoured by monarchs in the 15th century, despite increasing political violence.<ref name=RowseP28>Rowse, p. 28.</ref> [[Henry IV of England|Henry&nbsp;IV]] seized the castle during his coup in 1399, although failing to catch [[Richard II of England|Richard&nbsp;II]], who had escaped to London.<ref name=RowseP28/> Under [[Henry V of England|Henry&nbsp;V]], the castle hosted a visit from the [[Sigismund, Holy Roman Emperor|Holy Roman Emperor]] in 1417, a massive diplomatic event that stretched the castle's accommodation to its limits.<ref>Rowse, p. 29.</ref>


By the middle of the 15th century England was increasingly divided between the rival royal factions of the [[House of Lancaster|Lancastrians]] and the [[House of York|Yorkists]]. Castles such as Windsor did not play a decisive role during the resulting [[Wars of the Roses]] (1455–1485), which were fought primarily in the form of pitched battles between the rival factions.<ref>Pounds, p. 249.</ref> [[Henry VI of England|Henry&nbsp;VI]], born at Windsor Castle and known as Henry of Windsor, became king at the young age of nine months.<ref>Wolffe, pp. 27–28</ref> His long period of minority, coupled with the increasing tensions between Henry's Lancastrian supporters and the Yorkists, distracted attention from Windsor.<ref name=RowseP30>Rowse, p. 30.</ref> The Garter Feasts and other ceremonial activities at the castle became more infrequent and less well attended.<ref name=RowseP30/>
[[Victoria of the United Kingdom|Queen Victoria]] and [[Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha|Prince Albert]] made Windsor Castle their principal royal residence. Many of their changes were to the surrounding parklands rather than the buildings. In particular, the "Windsor Castle and Town Approaches Act", passed by Parliament in 1848, permitted the closing and re-routing of the old roads which previously ran through the park from Windsor to [[Datchet]] and [[Old Windsor]]. These changes allowed the Royal Family to undertake the enclosure of a large area of parkland to form the private "Home Park" with no public roads passing through it.


[[Edward IV of England|Edward&nbsp;IV]] seized power in 1461. When Edward captured Henry's wife, [[Margaret of Anjou]], she was brought back to be detained at the castle.<ref>Rowse, p. 31.</ref> Edward began to revive the Order of the Garter, and held a particularly lavish feast in 1472.<ref>Rowse, p. 39.</ref> Edward began the construction of the present [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor|St. George's Chapel]] in 1475, resulting in the dismantling of several of the older buildings in the Lower Ward.<ref>Rowse, p. 34.</ref> By building the grand chapel Edward was seeking to show that his new dynasty were the permanent rulers of England, and may also have been attempting to deliberately rival the similar chapel that Henry VI had ordered to be constructed at nearby [[Eton College]].<ref name=RowseP30/> [[Richard III of England|Richard&nbsp;III]] made only a brief use of Windsor Castle before his defeat at the [[Battle of Bosworth Field]] in 1485, but had the body of Henry VI moved from [[Chertsey Abbey]] in Surrey to the castle to allow it to be visited by pilgrims more easily.<ref>Rowse, p. 41; Rubin, p. 284.</ref>
Queen Victoria had retreated to the castle for privacy following the death in 1861 of Prince Albert, who had in fact died at the castle. Albert was buried in a Mausoleum built at [[Frogmore]], within the [[Home Park, Windsor|Home Park]] of the Castle (and eventually Victoria was buried beside him).


Henry VII made more use of Windsor. In 1488, shortly after succeeding to the throne, he held a massive feast for the Order of the Garter at the castle.<ref name=RowseP43>Rowse, p. 43.</ref> He completed the roof of St George's Chapel, and set about converting the older eastern [[Lady Chapel]] into a proposed shrine to Henry VI, whose canonisation was then considered imminent.<ref name=RowseP43/> In the event, Henry VI was not canonised and the project was abandoned, although the shrine continued to attract a flood of pilgrims.<ref>Rowse, p. 43; Knox and Leslie pp. 3–7, cited Hoak p. 72.</ref> Henry VII appears to have remodelled the King's Chamber in the palace, and had the roof of the Great Kitchen rebuilt in 1489.<ref name=BrindleKerrP46>Brindle and Kerr, p. 46.</ref> He also built a three-storied tower on the west end of the palace, which he used for his personal apartments.<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 46; Rowse, p. 43.</ref> Windsor began to be used for international diplomatic events, including the grand visit of [[Philip I&nbsp;of Castile]] in 1506.<ref name=RowseP43/> [[Edmund de la Pole, 3rd Duke of Suffolk|William de la Pole]], one of the surviving Yorkist claimants to the throne, was imprisoned at Windsor Castle during Henry's reign, before his execution in 1513.<ref>Rowse, p. 46.</ref>
From Albert's death until her own death in 1901, Windsor Castle was Victoria's principal home, and she seldom visited Buckingham Palace again. The prince's rooms were maintained exactly as they had been at the moment of his death, and although an air of melancholy was allowed to settle on the castle for the remainder of the 19th century, this did not prevent improvements and restoration from taking place. In 1866 [[Anthony Salvin]] created the Grand Staircase in the State Apartments ("[[#Layout-image|C]]"). This great stone staircase in the Gothic style rises to a double height hall lit by a [[vault (architecture)|vaulted]] lantern tower. The hall is decorated with arms and armour, including the suit of armour worn by King Henry VIII, made in 1540. The top of the stairs are flanked by life-size [[equestrian sculpture|equestrian statues]] mounted by knights in armour. This theme of decoration continues into the Queen's Guard Chamber and the Grand Vestibule. Salvin also added the château-style conical roof to the Curfew Tower ("[[#Layout-image|T]]") at this time.


===20th century===
=== 16th century ===
[[File:Windsor Castle Henry VIII Gateway.jpg|thumb|alt=A photograph of a stone gatehouse, with angular octagonal towers and windows picked out in white stone. The weather is good, with the sky behind the gatehouse a bright blue.|The [[Henry VIII of England|Henry&nbsp;VIII]] gateway in the Lower Ward]]
Following the accession of [[Edward VII of the United Kingdom|King Edward VII]] in 1901, the castle often remained empty for long periods, the new King preferring his other homes elsewhere. The King visited for [[Ascot Racecourse|Ascot]] week and [[Easter]]. One of the few alterations he made was to lay out the castle's [[golf course]].
[[Henry VIII of England|Henry&nbsp;VIII]] enjoyed Windsor Castle, as a young man "exercising himself daily in shooting, singing, dancing, wrestling, casting of the bar, playing at the recorders, flute, virginals, in setting of songs and making of ballads".<ref>Rowse, p. 47.</ref> The tradition of the Garter Feasts was maintained and became more extravagant; the size of the royal retinue visiting Windsor had to be restricted because of the growing numbers.<ref>Rowse, p. 48.</ref> During the [[Pilgrimage of Grace]], a huge uprising in the north of England against Henry's rule in 1536, the king used Windsor as a secure base in the south from which to manage his military response.<ref>Rowse, pp. 52–53.</ref> Throughout the Tudor period, Windsor was also used as a safe retreat in the event of plagues occurring in London.<ref>Rowse, p. 61.</ref>


Henry rebuilt the principal castle gateway in about 1510 and constructed a tennis court at the base of the motte in the Upper Ward.<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 46; Rowse, p. 47.</ref> He also built a long terrace, called the North Wharf, along the outside wall of the Upper Ward; constructed of wood, it was designed to provide a commanding view of the [[River Thames]] below.<ref name=BrindleKerrP46/> The design included an outside staircase into the king's apartments, which made the monarch's life more comfortable at the expense of considerably weakening the castle's defences.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 25.</ref> Early in his reign, Henry had given the eastern [[Lady Chapel]] to [[Thomas Wolsey|Cardinal Wolsey]] for Wolsey's future mausoleum.<ref>Rowse, p. 55.</ref> [[Benedetto Grazzini]] converted much of this into an Italian Renaissance design, before Wolsey's fall from power brought an end to the project, with contemporaries estimating that around £60,000 (£295&nbsp;million in 2008 terms) had been spent on the work.<ref>Rowse, p. 55; Hoak, p. 101.</ref> Henry continued the project, but it remained unfinished when he himself was buried in the chapel, in an elaborate funeral in 1547.<ref>Rowse, p. 56.</ref>
Edward VII's successor [[George V of the United Kingdom|George V]], who was King from 1910 until his death in 1936, also preferred his other country homes. However, his wife [[Mary of Teck|Queen Mary]] was a great connoisseur of the arts, and not only sought out and re-acquired long-dispersed items of furniture from the castle, but also acquired many new works of art to furnish the state rooms. She also rearranged the fashion in which the castle was used, abandoning the [[baroque]] idea of a large suite of state rooms reserved just for important guests on the principal floor. New, more comfortable bedrooms with modern bathrooms were installed on the upper floors, allowing the formerly reserved state rooms below to be used for entertaining and court functions. The state bedroom itself was retained, but more as a historical curiosity. It has not been used as a bedroom since 1909.


[[File:Windsor Castle Hollar View From River.jpg|thumb|350px|left|alt=A black and white sketch of a river scene. A river runs across the foreground of the picture, with a sail boat moving along it. In the middle ground, beyond the river, is a small town, and beyond that, on the top of a ridge, is a castle stretching across the back of the picture.|Windsor Castle in the 1670s from across the [[River Thames]], showing the North Terrace (left) built by [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth&nbsp;I]] in the 16th century and the steep, protective ground to the north of the castle]]
During the [[World War I|First World War]], when the members of the [[British Royal Family|Royal Family]] felt the need to change its dynastic name from the German "[[Saxe-Coburg and Gotha|House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha]]", they took their new name from the castle, becoming the "[[House of Windsor]]".
By contrast, the young [[Edward VI of England|Edward&nbsp;VI]] disliked Windsor Castle.<ref name=Williams1860P69>Williams (1860), p. 69.</ref> Edward's Protestant beliefs led him to simplify the Garter ceremonies, to discontinue the annual Feast of the Garter at Windsor and to remove any signs of Catholic practices with the Order.<ref>Rowse, p. 57.</ref> During the rebellions and political strife of 1549, Windsor was again used as a safe-haven for the king and the [[Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset|Duke of Somerset]].<ref>Rowse, pp. 57–60.</ref> Edward famously commented while staying at Windsor Castle during this period that "Methink I am in a prison, here are no galleries, nor no gardens to walk in".<ref name=Williams1860P69 /> Under both Edward and his sister, [[Mary I of England|Mary&nbsp;I]], some limited building work continued at the castle, in many cases using resources recovered from the English abbeys.<ref>Rowse, p. 60.</ref> Water was piped into the Upper Ward to create a fountain.<ref name=BrindleKerrP46/> Mary also expanded the buildings used by the Knights of Windsor in the Lower Ward, using stone from [[Reading Abbey]].<ref name=BrindleKerrP46/>


[[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth&nbsp;I]] spent much of her time at Windsor Castle and used it a safe haven in crises, "knowing it could stand a siege if need be".<ref>Williams (1971), p. 25.</ref> Ten new [[brass]] cannons were purchased for the castle's defence.<ref>Rowse, p. 67.</ref> It became one of her favourite locations and she spent more money on the property than on any of her other palaces.<ref name=RowseP64>Rowse, p. 64.</ref> She conducted some modest building works at Windsor, including a wide range of repairs to the existing structures.<ref>Brindle and Kerr, pp. 46–47.</ref> She converted the North Wharf into a permanent, huge stone terrace, complete with statues, carvings and an octagonal, outdoor banqueting house, raising the western end of the terrace to provide more privacy.<ref>Rowse, pp. 64, 66.</ref> The chapel was refitted with stalls, a gallery and a new ceiling.<ref name=BrindleKerrP47>Brindle and Kerr, p. 47.</ref> A bridge was built over the ditch to the south of the castle to enable easier access to the park.<ref name=RowseP64/> Elizabeth built a gallery range of buildings on the west end of the Upper Ward, alongside Henry VII's tower.<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 47; Rowse, pp. 64–65.</ref> Elizabeth increasingly used the castle for diplomatic engagements, but space continued to prove a challenge as the property was simply not as large as the more modern royal palaces.<ref>Rowse, p. 66.</ref> This flow of foreign visitors was captured for the queen's entertainment in [[William Shakespeare]]'s play, ''[[The Merry Wives of Windsor]]''.<ref name=RowseP69>Rowse, p. 69.</ref>{{refn|[[Falstaff]]'s role in [[The Merry Wives of Windsor]], for example, is believed to represent [[Frederick I, Duke of Württemberg|Frederick&nbsp;I]]; the duke became an unpopular figure of fun at [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth&nbsp;I]]'s court for his unwillingness, or inability, to pay his bills and his constant attempts to join the [[Order of the Garter]]. Various parts of the park surrounding Windsor are also represented in the play.<ref name=RowseP69/>|group="nb"}}
Queen Mary was a lover of all things miniature, and had created a large [[Queen Mary's Dolls' House|dolls' house]], based on a large aristocratic mansion—it was designed by the architect [[Edwin Lutyens|Lutyens]]. Its furniture and picture were created by the great craftsmen and designers of the 1930s. The dolls' house today is one of the castle's many tourist attractions.


=== 17th century ===
[[Image:G6&EGarter.PNG|thumb|300px|right|[[George VI of the United Kingdom|King George VI]] and [[Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon|Queen Elizabeth]] lead the processions of [[Order of the Garter|Knights of the Garter]] from the castle's Upper Ward to [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor|St George's Chapel]].]]
[[File:Windsor Castle Hollar Birds Eye view.jpg|thumb|350px|alt=A detailed engraving of a castle, seen from the air. The castle is divided in three pieces, with a domed mound in the middle, upon which is a keep. The castle and walls look stubby and short from this angle.|A [[bird's-eye view]] of Windsor Castle in 1658, by [[Wenceslas Hollar]], shown before [[Hugh May]]'s reconstruction of the Upper Ward]]
[[James VI and I|James&nbsp;I]] used Windsor Castle primarily as a base for hunting, one of his favourite pursuits, and for socialising with his friends.<ref>Rowse, p. 74; MacGregor, p. 86.</ref> Many of these occasions involved extensive [[Drinking#Alcoholic beverages|drinking]] sessions, including one with [[Christian&nbsp;IV of Denmark]] in 1606 that became infamous across Europe for the resulting drunken behaviour of the two kings.<ref name=RowseP74>Rowse, p. 74.</ref> The absence of space at Windsor continued to prove problematic, with James' English and Scottish retinues often quarrelling over rooms.<ref name=RowseP74/>


[[Charles I of England|Charles&nbsp;I]] was a connoisseur of art, and paid greater attention to the aesthetic aspects of Windsor Castle than his predecessors.<ref>Rowse, p. 76.</ref> Charles had the castle completely surveyed by a team including [[Inigo Jones]] in 1629, but little of the recommended work was carried out.<ref name=BrindleKerrP47/> Nonetheless, Charles employed [[Nicholas Stone]] to improve the chapel gallery in the [[Northern Mannerism|Mannerist]] style and to construct a gateway in the North Terrace.<ref name=BrindleKerrP47/> Christian van Vianen, a noted Dutch goldsmith, was employed to produce a [[baroque]] gold service for the St George's Chapel altar. In the final years of peace, Charles demolished the fountain in the Upper Ward, intending to replace it with a classical statue.<ref name=RowseP77>Rowse, p. 77.</ref>
[[George VI of the United Kingdom|George VI]] came to the throne in 1936 following the [[Edward VIII abdication crisis|abdication]] of his brother [[Edward VIII of the United Kingdom|Edward VIII]]; on [[11 December]] Edward had broadcast his abdication speech to the [[British Empire]] from the castle, but had preferred during his short reign to live at his home [[Fort Belvedere, Berkshire|Fort Belvedere]] in [[Windsor Great Park]]. George VI (and his wife [[Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon|Queen Elizabeth]]) preferred their original Windsor home, [[Royal Lodge]]. On the outbreak of [[World War II]] in 1939 the castle resumed its role as a royal fortress, and the King and Queen and their children [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Princess Elizabeth]] (the future Queen Elizabeth II) and [[Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon|Princess Margaret]] lived, for safety, in the castle. The King and Queen drove daily to London, returning to Windsor to sleep, although at the time this was a well-kept secret, as for propaganda and morale purposes it was reported that the king was still residing full-time at Buckingham Palace. Following the cessation of hostilities in 1945, the Royal Family left Windsor Castle and returned to Royal Lodge.


In 1642 the [[English Civil War]] broke out, dividing the country into the [[Cavalier|Royalist]] supporters of Charles, and the [[Roundheads|Parliamentarians]]. In the aftermath of the [[battle of Edgehill]] in October, Parliament became concerned that Charles might advance on London.<ref name=RowseP79>Rowse, p. 79.</ref> [[John Venn (regicide)|John Venn]] took control of Windsor Castle with twelve companies of foot soldiers to protect the route along the Thames river, becoming the governor of the castle for the duration of the war.<ref name=RowseP79/> The contents of St George's Chapel were both valuable and, to many Parliamentary forces, inappropriately [[high church]] in style.<ref name=RowseP79/> Looting began immediately: Edward IV's bejewelled coat of mail was stolen; the chapel's organs, windows and books destroyed; the Lady Chapel was emptied of valuables, including the component parts of Henry VIII's unfinished tomb.<ref>Rowse, pp. 56, 79; Hoak, p. 98.</ref> By the end of the war, some {{convert|3580|oz|kg}} of gold and silver [[Silver (household)|plate]] had been looted.<ref name=RowseP79/>
[[Image:windsorcastlevisitors.jpg|thumb|350px|During the latter half of the 20th century Windsor Castle became one of Britain's major tourist attractions.]]


[[Prince Rupert of the Rhine]], a prominent Royalist general, attempted to relieve Windsor Castle that November.<ref name=RowseP79/> Rupert's small force of cavalry was able to take the town of Windsor, but was unable to overcome the walls at Windsor Castle&nbsp;– in due course, Rupert was forced to retreat.<ref name=RowseP80>Rowse, p. 80.</ref> Over the winter of 1642–1643, Windsor Castle was converted into the headquarters for the [[Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex|Earl of Essex]], a senior Parliamentary general.<ref name=RowseP80/> The Horseshoe Cloister was taken over as a prison for captured Royalists, and the resident [[Canon (priest)|canons]] were expelled from the castle.<ref name=RowseP80/> The Lady Chapel was turned into a [[Magazine (artillery)|magazine]].<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 36.</ref> Looting by the underpaid garrison continued to be a problem; 500&nbsp;royal deer were killed across the Windsor Great Park during the winter, and fences were burned as firewood.<ref name="RowseP80"/>
In [[1952]], Queen Elizabeth II came to the throne and decided to make Windsor her principal weekend retreat. The private apartments ("[[#Layout-image|D]]") which had not been properly occupied since the era of Queen Mary were renovated and further modernised, and the Queen, [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh|Prince Philip]] and their (then) two children took up residence. This arrangement has continued to the present day.


In 1647 Charles, then a prisoner of Parliament, was brought to the castle for a period under arrest, before being moved to [[Hampton Court]].<ref name=RowseP80/> In 1648 there was a Royalist plan, never enacted, to seize Windsor Castle.<ref name=RowseP84>Rowse, p. 84.</ref> The Parliamentary [[Army Council (1647)|Army Council]] moved into Windsor in November and decided to try Charles for treason.<ref name=RowseP84/> Charles was held at Windsor again for the last three weeks of his reign; after his execution in January 1649, his body was taken back to Windsor that night through a snowstorm, to be interred without ceremony in the [[tomb|vault]] beneath [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle|St George's Chapel]].<ref>Rowse, p. 85.</ref>
On [[20 November]] [[1992]], a [[1992 Windsor Castle fire|fire]] which began in the Queen's private chapel (''between "C" and "D" on plan'') quickly spread. The fire raged for 15 hours until it had destroyed nine of the principal state rooms, and severely damaged over 100 more—in all the larger part of the upper ward. One-fifth of the floor space of the castle was damaged—an area of 9,000 [[Square metre|square metres]]. The restoration programme was not complete until [[1997]], 70% of it funded by the decision to open to the public for the first time the state rooms of Buckingham Palace. The total cost of repairing the damage was £37 million The restoration was undertaken at no additional cost to the British taxpayer. So successful was the restoration and faithfulness to the original plans and decorations that the distinction between old and new is hard to detect. Although some of the rooms that had been gutted by the fire were completely redesigned in a modern interpretation, the new design is very organic and of the Gothic style, called "Downesian Gothic" after the rooms’ architect Giles Downes, of Sidell Gibson Partnership. These rooms include the new Private Chapel, the new Lantern Lobby and the new ceiling of St George's Hall. The latter is made of green-oak, a technique used in mediæval times. However, what is less obvious to the eye is that the restoration work resulted in significant improvements, particularly to the arrangements of the public rooms and the service quarters.
{{wide image|Windsor Castle Hollar Panoramic view.jpg|1000px|alt=An engraving of a castle, with stone walls and square towers running along them. In the middle, a mound can be seen with a stone keep on it. A low, long wall runs outside the castle to the left and right, with a gateway close to the castle on each side.|Windsor Castle in 1658, as seen from the south-east, by [[Wenceslas Hollar]]; (l to r) the Lower Ward, the Middle Ward and Round Tower, the Upper Ward}}


[[Restoration (England)|The Restoration]] of the monarchy in 1660 saw the first period of significant change to Windsor Castle for many years. The civil war and the years of the [[Interregnum (England)|Interregnum]] had caused extensive damage to the royal palaces in England.<ref name=ThurleyP214>Thurley, p. 214.</ref> At the same time the shifting "functional requirements, patterns of movement, modes of transport, aesthetic taste and standards of comfort" among royal circles was changing the qualities being sought in a successful palace.<ref name=ThurleyP214/> Windsor was the only royal palace to be successfully fully modernised by Charles II in the Restoration years.<ref name=ThurleyP214/>
In latter years, the Queen has increasingly used the castle as a royal palace as well as her weekend home. It is as often used for state banquets and official entertaining as Buckingham Palace. When during the great fire in 1992 [[Prince Andrew, Duke of York|Prince Andrew]] was interviewed for television, he stated that Windsor Castle was the one place the royal family regarded as home.


During the Interregnum, however, squatters had occupied Windsor Castle. As a result, the "King's house was a wreck; the fanatic, the pilferer, and the squatter, having been at work&nbsp;... Paupers had squatted in many of the towers and cabinets".<ref>Dixon, p. 269.</ref> Shortly after returning to England, Charles appointed [[Prince Rupert of the Rhine|Prince Rupert]], one of his few surviving close relatives, to be the [[Constable of Windsor Castle]] in 1668.<ref>Spencer, p. 326.</ref> Rupert immediately began to reorder the castle's defences, repairing the Round Tower and reconstructing the [[real tennis]] court.<ref>Spencer, pp. 327–329.</ref> Charles attempted to restock Windsor Great Park with deer brought over from Germany, but the herds never recovered their pre-war size.<ref name=RowseP80/> Rupert created apartments for himself in the Round Tower, decorated with an "extraordinary" number of weapons and armour, with his inner chambers "hung with tapisserie, curious and effeminate pictures".<ref name="Spencer, p.331">Spencer, p. 331.</ref>
During the Queen's tenure of the Castle much has been done, not only to restore and maintain the fabric of the building, but also to transform it into a major British [[Tourism in England|tourist]] attraction.<ref name="bbcoil">{{cite news |title= 1994: Royal approval for oil drilling at Windsor |url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/december/6/newsid_2535000/2535461.stm|publisher=[[BBC]] |accessdate=2007-07-22 }}</ref> This has had to be achieved in co-ordination with the castle's role as a working royal palace. In 1994, [[oil]] was discovered on the grounds of the Castle, and the Queen granted permission to sink an exploratory well to test the reserves, which experts predicted could be worth more than $1 billion.<ref name="timeoil">{{cite news |title= Queen Elizabeth, Wildcatter |url= |publisher=''Time Magazine''|date=1994-12-19 |accessdate=2007-07-22 }}</ref> Any resulting profits would have been split between the oil company and the state.<ref name="timeoil"/>


[[File:Windsor Castle East View Pote.jpg|thumb|350px|alt=An engraving of a castle, with four square towers running along the face of it. Numerous windows can be seen in the castle walls and towers, and a long, flat terrace runs outside the castle.|The Upper Ward seen from the east, after [[Hugh May]]'s reconstruction work. May's new East Terrace is in the foreground.]]
[[Image:Windsor.jpg|thumb|125px|The Round Tower of Windsor Castle.]]
Charles was heavily influenced by [[Louis XIV Style]] and imitated French design at his [[King's House, Winchester|palace at Winchester]] and the [[Royal Hospital Chelsea|Royal Hospital]] at [[Chelsea, London|Chelsea]].<ref name=WatkinsP335>Watkin, p. 335.</ref> At Windsor, Charles created "the most extravagantly Baroque interiors ever executed in England".<ref name=WatkinsP335/> Much of the building work was paid for out of increased royal revenues from Ireland during the 1670s.<ref>Barnard, p. 257.</ref> French court etiquette at the time required a substantial number of [[Enfilade (architecture)|enfiladed]] rooms to satisfy court protocol; the demand for space forced architect [[Hugh May]] to expand out into the North Terrace, rebuilding and widening it in the process.<ref name=BrindleKerrP50>Brindle and Kerr, p. 50.</ref> This new building was called the Star Building, because Charles II placed a huge gilt Garter star on the side of it.<ref name=BrindleKerrP50/> May took down and rebuilt the walls of Edward III's hall and chapel, incorporating larger windows but retaining the height and dimensions of the medieval building.<ref name=BrindleKerrP50/> Although Windsor Castle was now big enough to hold the entire court, it was not built with chambers for the King's Council, as would be found in [[Whitehall]].<ref name=ThurleyP229>Thurley, p. 229.</ref> Instead Charles took advantage of the good road links emerging around Windsor to hold his council meetings at [[Hampton Court Palace|Hampton Court]] when he was staying at the castle.<ref name=ThurleyP229/> The result became an "exemplar" for royal buildings for the next twenty-five years.<ref>Newman, p. 81.</ref> The result of May's work showed a medievalist leaning; although sometimes criticised for its "dullness", May's reconstruction was both sympathetic to the existing castle and a deliberate attempt to create a slightly austere 17th-century version of a "neo-Norman" castle.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 128–129; Rowse, p. 95.</ref>
In a [[June]] [[1999]] story, the [[BBC]] reported that [[Charles, Prince of Wales|Prince Charles]] was considering moving the royal court to Windsor Castle instead of Buckingham Palace when he ascends the throne. The story speculated that the Prince may be attempting to gain more independence from the traditional court at Buckingham Palace. So far, the Palace has not commented on the story, but Prince Charles, along with the rest of the royal family, is said to be fond of Windsor Castle.


[[William III of England|William&nbsp;III]] commissioned [[Nicholas Hawksmoor]] and Sir [[Christopher Wren]] to conduct a large, final classical remodelling of the Upper Ward, but the king's early death caused the plan to be cancelled.<ref name=RobinsonMackworth-YoungP55P45>Robinson, p. 55; Mackworth-Young, p. 45.</ref> [[Anne, Queen of Great Britain|Queen Anne]] was fond of the castle, and attempted to address the lack of a formal garden by instructing [[Henry Wise (gardener)|Henry Wise]] to begin work on the Maestricht Garden beneath the North Terrace, which was never completed.<ref name=RobinsonMackworth-YoungP55P45/> Anne also created the racecourse at [[Ascot Racecourse|Ascot]] and began the tradition of the annual [[Royal Ascot|Royal Ascot procession]] from the castle.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 45.</ref>
===21st century===
[[Image:Windsor1.jpg|right|thumb|200px|The Round Tower of Windsor Castle behind part of its garden]]
On [[30 September]] [[2006]] it was reported that the Queen, as part of the [[equal opportunity|equal opportunities]] policy at Windsor, has allowed an office in the Castle to be used as a [[Salah|Muslim prayer]] room when required, as requested by an employee.<ref>{{Cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/berkshire/5395298.stm |title=Queen grants Muslim prayer room |publisher=BBC News Online |date=2006-09-30 }}</ref>


==Big Royal Dig==
=== 18th century ===
[[File:Paul Sandby 001.jpg|thumb|alt=A painting of a terrace at sunset. On the left, the outer facing of a castle; on the right, the ground drops away sharply showing only the distant landscape. A handful of figures in 18th century dress walk or mingle along the terrace.|The North Terrace at sunset, c. 1790, by [[Paul Sandby]]]]
Windsor Castle was one of three royal sites excavated over four days by the [[Time Team]] of [[archaeology|archaeologists]] led by Tony Robinson, on [[25 August|25]]–[[28 August]] [[2006]]. In the [[United Kingdom]], [[Channel 4]] devoted an evening program to each day's findings and also followed the dig live on [[More4]], together with a simulcast on the internet.
[[George I of Great Britain|George&nbsp;I]] took little interest in Windsor Castle, preferring his other palaces at [[St James's Palace|St James's]], [[Hampton Court Palace|Hampton Court]] and [[Kensington Palace|Kensington]].<ref name="Tite, p.110">Tite, p. 110.</ref> [[George II of Great Britain|George&nbsp;II]] rarely used Windsor either, preferring Hampton Court.<ref>Tite, p. 24; Robinson, p. 57.</ref> Many of the apartments in the Upper Ward were given out as "[[grace and favour]]" privileges for the use of prominent widows or other friends of the Crown.<ref name=RobinsonP57>Robinson, p. 57.</ref> The [[Prince William, Duke of Cumberland|Duke of Cumberland]] made the most use of the property in his role as the [[Ranger of Windsor Great Park]].<ref>Robinson, pp. 57–58.</ref> By the 1740s, Windsor Castle had become an early tourist attraction; wealthier visitors who could afford to pay the castle keeper could enter, see curiosities such as the castle's [[narwhal]] horn, and by the 1750s buy the first guidebooks to Windsor, produced by [[George Bickham the Younger|George Bickham]] in 1753 and Joseph Pote in 1755.<ref>Tite, p. 110; Robinson, p. 60; Bickham; Pote.</ref> {{refn|The Windsor narwhal horn had been kept since medieval times, when it was first believed to be a [[unicorn]]'s horn. It narrowly escaped being lost during the Interregnum after the Civil War.<ref>Rowse, p. 86.</ref>|group="nb"}} As the condition of the State Apartments continued to deteriorate, even the general public were able to regularly visit the property.<ref name="Robinson, p.59">Robinson, p. 59.</ref>


[[George III]] reversed this trend when he came to the throne in 1760.<ref name=RobinsonP57/> George disliked Hampton Court and was attracted by the park at Windsor Castle.<ref name=RobinsonP57/> George wanted to move into the Ranger's House by the castle, but his brother, [[Prince Henry, Duke of Cumberland and Strathearn|Henry]] was already living in it and refused to move out.<ref name=RobinsonP58>Robinson, p. 58.</ref> Instead, George had to move into the Upper Lodge, later called the Queen's Lodge, and started the long process of renovating the castle and the surrounding parks.<ref name=RobinsonP58/> Initially the atmosphere at the castle remained very informal, with local children playing games inside the Upper and Lower Wards, and the royal family frequently seen as they walked around the grounds.<ref name="Robinson, p.59"/> As time went by, however, access for visitors became more limited.<ref name="Tite, p.110"/>
Timed to help celebrate the 80th birthday of Queen Elizabeth II, along with many other events ongoing throughout 2006, this marked the 150th dig conducted by Time Team. For the first time, the Queen gave permission for trenches to be dug in [[Buckingham Palace Gardens|the Garden]] of Buckingham Palace, as well as in Windsor Castle and the [[Palace of Holyroodhouse]], Edinburgh. The Big Royal Dig is an example of the Queen opening up her homes for greater access to the public, as she did during her [[Golden Jubilee Weekend]] in 2002 and throughout 2006 for her birthday.


George's architectural taste shifted over the years.<ref>Robinson, p. 71.</ref> As a young man, he favoured Classical, in particular [[Palladian architecture|Palladian]] styles, but the king came to favour a more Gothic style, both as a consequence of the Palladian style becoming overused and poorly implemented, and because the Gothic form had come to be seen as a more honest, national style of English design in the light of the [[French Revolution]].<ref>Robinson, p. 72.</ref> Working with the architect [[James Wyatt]], George attempted to "transform the exterior of the buildings in the Upper Ward into a Gothic palace, while retaining the character of the Hugh May state rooms".<ref name=RobinsonP76>Robinson, p. 76.</ref> The outside of the building was restyled with Gothic features, including new battlements and turrets.<ref name=RobinsonP76/> Inside, conservation work was undertaken, and several new rooms constructed, including a new Gothic staircase to replace May's 17th-century version, complete with the Grand Vestibule ceiling above it.<ref>Robinson, pp. 74–75.</ref> New paintings were purchased for the castle, and collections from other royal palaces moved there by the king.<ref>Robinson, p. 81.</ref> The cost of the work came to over £150,000 (£100&nbsp;million in 2008 terms).<ref>Robinson, p. 75.</ref><ref name=MeasuringWorthAE/> The king undertook extensive work in the castle's Great Park as well, laying out the new Norfolk and Flemish farms, creating two dairies and restoring [[Virginia Water Lake]], and its [[grotto]] and [[folly|follies]].<ref>Robinson, pp. 60–62.</ref>
The archaeologists had an unprecedented opportunity to probe the geophysics and history of three royal residences over a four-day period, with teams working concurrently in the three locations.


At the end of this period Windsor Castle became a place of royal confinement. In 1788 the king first became ill during a dinner at Windsor Castle; diagnosed as suffering from madness, he was removed for a period to the [[Kew Palace#Augusta and George|White House]] at Kew, where he temporarily recovered.<ref>Clarke and Ridley, p. 46.</ref> After relapses in 1801 and 1804, his condition became enduring from 1810 onwards and he was confined in the State Apartments of Windsor Castle, with building work on the castle ceasing the following year.<ref>Clarke and Ridley, p. 48; Robinson, p. 71.</ref>
Windsor Castle was the scene of two remarkable finds:


=== 19th century ===
*In the Upper Ward, the foundations of the Round Table building erected in 1344 by [[Edward III of England|Edward III]] were discovered, and also, among other finds, a spectacular decorated mediaeval tile ''[[in situ]]''.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.channel4.com/history/microsites/B/big_royal_dig/windsor/finds/gallery_3_windsor_finds2.html |title=Upper Ward complete decorated medieval floor tile |work=Big Royal Dig - Time Team |publisher=Channel 4 }}</ref> In Edward's day the Round Table building, 200 feet (60 metres) in [[diameter]], was used for feasting, festivals, and theatrical re-enactments of the [[Knights of the Round Table]] of [[King Arthur|Arthurian]] legend.
[[File:WindsorLowerBaileyJosephNash1848 edited.jpg|thumb|alt=A painting showing a stone chapel on the left, with a timber built entrance, out of which are parading a number of white clad individuals. In the middle of the painting is a grassy area, across which are marching various red-uniformed soldiers. On the right hand side is a line of stone buildings, with a circular tower on a mound in the far distance.|The Lower Ward in 1840, by [[Joseph Nash]], showing the [[Military Knights of Windsor|Military Knights]] attending chapel on a Sunday morning]]
[[George IV]] came to the throne in 1820 intending to create a set of royal palaces that reflected his wealth and influence as the ruler of an increasingly powerful Britain.<ref name=RobinsonP85>Robinson, p.85.</ref> George's previous houses, [[Carlton House, London|Carlton House]] and the [[Brighton Pavilion]] were too small for grand court events, even after expensive extensions.<ref name=RobinsonP85/> George expanded the [[Royal Lodge]] in the castle park while he was Prince Regent, and then began a programme of work to modernise the castle itself once he became king.<ref name=RobinsonP85/>


George persuaded [[Parliament of the United Kingdom|Parliament]] to vote him [[Pound sterling|£]]300,000 for restoration (£245&nbsp;million in 2008 terms).<ref name="Nicolson, p.106"/><ref name=MeasuringWorthAE>Financial comparison based on average earnings; using the [http://www.measuringworth.com/index.php Measuring Worth] website. Retrieved 15 November 2010.</ref> Under the guidance of George's advisor, [[Charles Long, 1st Baron Farnborough|Charles Long]], the architect [[Jeffry Wyatville]] was selected, and work commenced in 1824.<ref>Robinson, p. 90.</ref><ref group="nb">Jeffry Wyatville was the nephew of [[James Wyatt]] who had worked for George III; he changed his name to distinguish himself from his other relatives working in architecture.</ref>
*In the Lower Ward, the [[great hall|Great Hall]] of [[Henry III of England|Henry III]]'s palace was located and one of its walls, still standing, was found. This has assisted archaeologists in assessing where Windsor's first palace actually stood.
Wyatville's own preference ran to Gothic architecture, but George, who had led the reintroduction of the French [[Rococo]] style to England at Carlton House, preferred a blend of periods and styles, and applied this taste to Windsor.<ref>Ireland, p. 92; Nicolson, p. 79, 172–173.</ref> The terraces were closed off to visitors for greater privacy and the exterior of the Upper Ward was completely remodelled into its current appearance.<ref>Robinson, p. 89.</ref> The Round Tower was raised in height to create a more dramatic appearance; many of the rooms in the State Apartments were rebuilt or remodelled; numerous new towers were created, much higher than the older versions.<ref>Robinson, pp. 91, 93.</ref> The south range of the ward was rebuilt to provide private accommodation for the king, away from the state rooms.<ref name=RobinsonP96>Robinson, p. 96.</ref> The statue of [[Charles II of England|Charles&nbsp;II]] was moved from the centre of the Upper Ward to the base of the motte.<ref name=RobinsonP96/> Sir [[Walter Scott]] captured contemporary views when he noted that the work showed "a great deal of taste and feeling for the Gothic architecture"; many modern commentators, including [[Charles III|Prince Charles]], have criticised Wyatville's work as representing an act of vandalism of May's earlier designs.<ref>Robinson, p. 92; Prince Charles, quoted Nicolson, p. 126.</ref> The work was unfinished at the time of George IV's death in 1830, but was broadly completed by Wyatville's death in 1840. The total expenditure on the castle had soared to the colossal sum of over one million pounds (£817&nbsp;million in 2008 terms) by the end of the project.<ref name="Nicolson, p.106"/><ref name=MeasuringWorthAE/>


[[File:Mary Steen Victoria Beatrice Windsor 1895.jpg|thumb|left|upright|alt=A black and white photograph of an elderly Victoria sat alongside a younger woman (Beatrice) reading a newspaper. The room is ornately decorated, with a number of photographs, paintings and a large chandelier hanging from the ceiling.|[[Queen Victoria]] and [[Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom|Princess Beatrice]] in the Queen's Sitting Room in 1895, photographed by [[Mary Steen]]]]
These finds have added to knowledge of the location, history, and uses of the Round Table and the Great Hall.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.channel4.com/history/microsites/B/big_royal_dig/windsor/windsor_latest.html |title=Latest from Windsor Castle |work=Big Royal Dig - Time Team |publisher=Channel 4 }}</ref>
[[Queen Victoria]] and [[Albert, Prince Consort|Prince Albert]] made Windsor Castle their principal royal residence, despite Victoria complaining early in her reign that the castle was "dull and tiresome" and "prison-like", and preferring [[Osborne House|Osborne]] and [[Balmoral Castle|Balmoral]] as holiday residences.<ref>Robinson, p. 117; Rowse, p. 207; Mackworth-Young, p. 75.</ref> The growth of the [[British Empire]] and Victoria's close dynastic ties to Europe made Windsor the hub for many diplomatic and state visits, assisted by the new railways and [[steamboat|steamships]] of the period.<ref>Robinson, pp. 117, 126.</ref> Indeed, it has been argued that Windsor reached its social peak during the Victorian era, seeing the introduction of invitations to numerous prominent figures to "dine and sleep" at the castle.<ref>Rowse, p. 207.</ref> Victoria took a close interest in the details of how Windsor Castle was run, including the minutiae of the social events.<ref>Rowse, p. 209.</ref> Few visitors found these occasions comfortable, both due to the design of the castle and the excessive royal formality.<ref name=RobinsonP126>Robinson, p. 126.</ref> Prince Albert died in the [[Blue Room (Windsor Castle)|Blue Room]] at Windsor Castle in 1861 and was buried in the Royal Mausoleum built at nearby [[Frogmore]], within the [[Home Park, Windsor|Home Park]].<ref>Rowse, p. 221.</ref> The prince's rooms were maintained exactly as they had been at the moment of his death and Victoria kept the castle in a state of mourning for many years, becoming known as the "[[The Widow at Windsor|Widow of Windsor]]", a phrase popularised in the famous poem by [[Rudyard Kipling]].<ref>Robinson, p. 129.</ref> The Queen shunned the use of [[Buckingham Palace]] after Albert's death and instead used Windsor Castle as her residence when conducting official business near London.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 75.</ref> Towards the end of her reign, plays, operas, and other entertainments slowly began to be held at the castle again, accommodating both the Queen's desire for entertainment and her reluctance to be seen in public.<ref>Rowse, p. 237; Mackworth-Young, p. 75.</ref>


Several minor alterations were made to the Upper Ward under Victoria. [[Anthony Salvin]] rebuilt Wyatville's grand staircase, with [[Edward Blore]] constructing a new private chapel within the State Apartments.<ref>Robinson, pp. 118–119.</ref> Salvin also rebuilt the State Dining Room following a serious fire in 1853.<ref name=BrindleKerrP56>Brindle and Kerr, p. 56.</ref> [[Ludwig Gruner]] assisted in the design of the Queen's Private Audience Chamber in the south range.<ref>Robinson, p. 124.</ref> Blore and Salvin also did extensive work in the Lower Ward, under the direction of Prince Albert, including the Hundred Steps leading down into Windsor town, rebuilding the Garter, Curfew and Salisbury towers, the houses of the Military Knights and creating a new Guardhouse.<ref>Robinson, pp. 119–121.</ref> [[George Gilbert Scott]] rebuilt the Horseshoe Cloister in the 1870s.<ref name="Robinson, p.121"/> The Norman Gatehouse was turned into a private dwelling for Sir [[Henry Ponsonby]].<ref name=RowseP234>Rowse, p. 234.</ref> Windsor Castle did not benefit from many of the minor improvements of the era, however, as Victoria disliked [[Gas lighting|gaslight]], preferring candles; electric lighting was only installed in limited parts of the castle at the end of her reign.<ref name=RobinsonP126/> Indeed, the castle was famously cold and draughty in Victoria's reign,<ref name=RowseP234/> but it was connected to a nearby reservoir, with water reliably piped into the interior for the first time.<ref name=TigheDavisP656>Tighe and Davis, p. 656.</ref>
==Security==
Although this has been less well publicised than Buckingham Palace, security at Windsor Castle has occasionally been breached, most recently when an intruder (the self-styled "comedy terrorist", [[Aaron Barschak]]) "gate-crashed" the birthday party for [[Prince William of Wales|Prince William]]. Police from the [[Thames Valley Police]] and from the [[Royalty and Diplomatic Protection Department]] of the London [[Metropolitan Police Service|Metropolitan Police]] provide the main element of physical security. The Windsor Castle Guard of the [[Foot Guards]] of the [[Household Division]], provided by a [[public duties]] [[battalion]] in London, or by the battalion at [[Victoria Barracks, Windsor Castle|Victoria Barracks]], [[Windsor, Berkshire|Windsor]], contributes to this.


Many of the changes under Victoria were to the surrounding parklands and buildings. The Royal Dairy at Frogmore was rebuilt in a [[Elizabethan architecture|mock Tudor]] style in 1853; George III's Dairy rebuilt in a [[Renaissance]] style in 1859; the Georgian Flemish Farm rebuilt, and the Norfolk Farm renovated.<ref>Robinson, pp. 122–123.</ref> The Long Walk was planted with fresh trees to replace the diseased stock.<ref name=RobinsonP122>Robinson, p. 122.</ref> The [[Windsor Castle Act 1848|Windsor Castle and Town Approaches Act]], passed by Parliament in 1848, permitted the closing and re-routing of the old roads which previously ran through the park from Windsor to [[Datchet]] and [[Old Windsor]].<ref>Tighe and Davis, p. 655.</ref> These changes allowed the royal family to undertake the enclosure of a large area of parkland to form the private "Home Park" with no public roads passing through it.<ref name=TigheDavisP656/> The Queen granted additional rights for public access to the remainder of the park as part of this arrangement.<ref name=TigheDavisP656/>
The Foot Guards battalion at Victoria Barracks, a quarter of a mile from the Castle, is supported by the [[Formation reconnaissance regiment|armoured reconnaissance]] [[squadron]] of the [[Household Cavalry]] based at [[Combermere Barracks]], Windsor, one mile from the Castle. In times of emergency at the castle, several thousand soldiers, as well as the [[FV107 Scimitar]] Light Tanks of the [[Household Cavalry]], would be able to respond quickly to protect the castle and its occupants.


=== 20th century ===
[[Image:Windsor Castle Upper Ward Quadrangle Corrected 2- Nov 2006.jpg|thumb|centre|800px|Windsor Castle's Upper Ward—The Quadrangle—not open to tourists]]
{{Multiple image
| direction = vertical
| align = right
| image1 = St George's Hall Windsor from W.H. Payne's Royal Residences (1819).jpg
| image2 = WindsorStGeorgesHallJosephNashPub1848 edited.jpg
| image3 = Windsor Castle - St George's Hall.jpg
| width = 280
| alt1 = Three pictures show a changing room over time; in the first painting the room is characterised by tall, curved windows and elaborate painted ceilings. In the second painting, the room has been almost doubled in length, with arches and a wooden beamed ceiling. In the third photograph, the ceiling is made of fresh oak and a large red carpet has been installed.
| header = Changing style of St George's Hall since the 1600s
| caption1 = [[Baroque architecture|Baroque]] style under [[Charles II of England|Charles&nbsp;II]]
| caption2 = Gothic alterations made by Sir [[Jeffry Wyatville]] for [[George IV]]
| caption3 = [[Giles Downes|Downesian Gothic]] reconstruction after the 1992 fire
}}


[[Edward&nbsp;VII]] came to the throne in 1901 and immediately set about modernising Windsor Castle with "enthusiasm and zest".<ref>Robinson, p. 135; Hibbert, p. 191.</ref> Many of the rooms in the Upper Ward were de-cluttered and redecorated for the first time in many years, with Edward "peering into cabinets; ransacking drawers; clearing rooms formerly used by the Prince Consort and not touched since his death; dispatching case-loads of relics and ornaments to a special room in the Round Tower&nbsp;... destroying statues and busts of [[John Brown (servant)|John Brown]]&nbsp;... throwing out hundreds of 'rubbishy old coloured photographs'&nbsp;... [and] rearranging pictures".<ref>Robinson, p. 135; Hibbert, pp. 191–192.</ref> Electric lighting was added to more rooms, along with [[central heating]]; telephone lines were installed, along with garages for the newly invented automobiles.<ref>Robinson, p. 135; Hibbert, p. 192.</ref> The [[marathon]] was run from Windsor Castle at the [[1908 Summer Olympics|1908 Olympics]],<ref group="nb">This resulted in a change to the official distance to the race; the previous length of a marathon had been around 24&nbsp;miles; since 1908, the distance has been set at 26&nbsp;miles and 385&nbsp;yards, the distance between Windsor Castle and the main stadium.</ref> and in 1911 the pioneering aviator [[Thomas Sopwith]] landed an aircraft at the castle for the first time.<ref>Senn, p. 24; Rowse, p. 247.</ref>
==Notes and references==
{{reflist}}


[[George V]] continued a process of more gradual modernisation, assisted by his wife, [[Mary of Teck]], who had a strong interest in furniture and decoration.<ref>Robinson, p. 136.</ref> Mary sought out and re-acquired items of furniture that had been lost or sold from the castle, including many dispersed by Edward VII, and also acquired many new works of art to furnish the state rooms.<ref>Robinson, pp. 136–137; Rowse, p. 247.</ref> Queen Mary was also a lover of all things miniature, and a famous [[Queen Mary's Dolls' House|dolls' house]] was created for her at Windsor Castle, designed by the architect [[Edwin Lutyens]] and furnished by leading craftsmen and designers of the 1930s.<ref name=RobinsonP138>Robinson, p. 138.</ref> George V was committed to maintaining a high standard of court life at Windsor Castle, adopting the motto that everything was to be "of the best".<ref>Robinson, p. 137.</ref> A large staff was still kept at the castle, with around 660&nbsp;servants working in the property during the period.<ref name=RobinsonP138/> Meanwhile, during the First World War, anti-German feeling led the members of the [[British royal family|royal family]] to change their dynastic name from the German [[House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha]]; George decided to take the new name from the castle, and the royal family became the [[House of Windsor]] in 1917.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP85>Mackworth-Young, p. 85.</ref>
==See also==
*[[Constables and Governors of Windsor Castle]]
*[[List of historical events at Windsor Castle]]
*[[The Society of the Friends of St George's and Descendants of the Knights of the Garter]]
*[[St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle]]
*[[Military Knights of Windsor]]


[[Edward&nbsp;VIII]] did not spend much of his reign at Windsor Castle.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP85/> He continued to spend most of his time at [[Fort Belvedere, Surrey|Fort Belvedere]] in the [[Windsor Great Park|Great Park]], where he had lived while Prince of Wales.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP85/> Edward created a small [[aerodrome]] at the castle on Smith's Lawn, now used as a golf-course.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP85/> Edward's reign was short-lived and he broadcast his abdication speech to the [[British Empire]] from the castle in December 1936, adopting the title of [[Duke of Windsor]].<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP85/> His successor, [[George&nbsp;VI]] also preferred his own original home, the [[Royal Lodge]] in the Great Park, but moved into Windsor Castle with his wife [[Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother|Elizabeth]].<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP85/> As king, George revived the annual [[Order of the Garter#Garter service at St George's Chapel|Garter Service]] at Windsor, drawing on the accounts of the 17th-century ceremonies recorded by [[Elias Ashmole]], but moving the event to [[Ascot Racecourse|Ascot Week]] in June.<ref>Robinson, pp. 139–140.</ref>
==External links==
{{commonscat|Windsor Castle}}
*[http://www.royal.gov.uk/output/Page557.asp Royal Residences: Windsor Castle]
*[http://www.windsor.gov.uk/attractions/castle.htm Official Windsor site]
*[http://www.englishmonarchs.co.uk/windsor_castle.html Windsor Castle at English Monarchs]
*[http://wikitravel.org/en/Windsor_and_Eton Windsor and Eton travel site]
*[http://www.channel4.com/bigroyaldig Channel4.com - Big Royal Dig]
*[http://www.britishtours.com/360/windsorcastle.html British Tours Ltd - Quicktime VR of Windsor Castle across the Thames]


On the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 the castle was readied for war-time conditions. Many of the staff from Buckingham Palace were moved to Windsor for safety, security was tightened and windows were blacked-out.<ref>Shawcross, p. 487.</ref> There was significant concern that the castle might be damaged or destroyed during the war; the more important art works were removed from the castle for safe-keeping, the valuable chandeliers were lowered to the floor in case of bomb damage, and a sequence of paintings by [[John Piper (artist)|John Piper]] were commissioned from 1942 to 1944 to record the castle's appearance.<ref>Robinson, pp. 138–139; Shawcross, p. 487.</ref> The king and queen and their children Princesses [[Elizabeth II|Elizabeth]] and [[Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon|Margaret]] lived for safety in the castle, with the roof above their rooms specially strengthened in case of attack.<ref name=ShawcrossP527>Shawcross, p. 527.</ref> The king and queen drove daily to London, returning to Windsor to sleep, although at the time this was a well-kept secret, as for propaganda and morale purposes it was reported that the king was still residing full-time at Buckingham Palace.<ref name=ShawcrossP527/> The castle was also used as a storage facility; for example, the only purified [[heavy water]] at the time was rescued from France in the face of the imminent [[Battle of France|French defeat]] in 1940, and most of it was sent to the castle to be stored in the basement alongside the [[Crown Jewels of the United Kingdom|Crown Jewels]].<ref>Freeman, p. 145.</ref> After the war the king revived the "dine and sleep" events at Windsor, following comments that the castle had become "almost like a vast, empty museum"; nonetheless, it took many years to restore Windsor Castle to its pre-war condition.<ref>Shawcross, pp. 604–605, 594.</ref>
{{Royal Palaces UK}}


In February 1952, Elizabeth II came to the throne and decided to make Windsor her principal weekend retreat.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP88>Mackworth-Young, p. 88.</ref> The private apartments which had not been properly occupied since the era of [[Mary of Teck|Queen Mary]] were renovated and further modernised, and the Queen, [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh|Prince Philip]] and their two children took up residence.<ref name=Mackworth-YoungP88/> By the early 1990s, however, there had been a marked deterioration in the quality of the Upper Ward, in particular the State Apartments.<ref>Robinson, p. 151.</ref> Generations of repairs and replacements had resulted in a "diminution of the richness with which they had first been decorated", a "gradual attrition of the original vibrancy of effect, as each change repeated a more faded version of the last".<ref>Nicolson, p. 183; Robinson, p. 151.</ref> A programme of repair work to replace the heating and the wiring of the Upper Ward began in 1988.<ref>Nicolson, p. 4.</ref> Work was also undertaken to underpin the motte of the Round Tower after fresh subsidence was detected in 1988, threatening the collapse of the tower.<ref>Emery, p. 193; Brindle and Kerr, p. 5.</ref>
{{coor title dms|51|29|02|N|0|36|16|W|type:landmark}}


==== 1992 fire ====
<!--If it's in this category, shouldn't the article mention why?-->
{{Main|1992 Windsor Castle fire}}
[[File:Carved unicorn212334.jpg|thumb|upright|alt=A photograph focusing on a large wooden sculpture of a unicorn, rearing on its hind legs. Behind it part of a wall and ceiling can be seen, the latter decorated with heraldic shields.|A [[unicorn]], one of four [[Queen's Beasts]] carved by [[Ben Harms]] and Ray Gonzalez to replace carvings destroyed in the [[1992 Windsor Castle fire|1992 fire]]]]
On 20 November 1992, a major fire occurred at Windsor Castle, lasting for 15 hours and causing widespread damage to the Upper Ward.<ref>Robinson, p. 143; Nicolson, p. 30.</ref> The Private Chapel in the north-east corner of the State Apartments was being renovated as part of a long term programme of work within the castle, and it is believed that one of the spotlights being used in the work set fire to a curtain by the altar during the morning.<ref name=RobinsonP114>Robinson, p. 144.</ref> The fire spread quickly and destroyed nine of the principal state rooms and severely damaged more than 100 others.<ref name=RobinsonP114/> Fire-fighters applied water to contain the blaze, while castle staff attempted to rescue the precious artworks from the castle.<ref>Nicolson, p. 11.</ref> Many of the rooms closest to the fire had been emptied as part of the renovation work, and this contributed to the successful evacuation of most of the collection.<ref name=RobinsonP114/>


The fire spread through the roof voids and efforts continued through the night to contain the blaze, at great risk to the 200 fire-fighters involved.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 23, 25.</ref> It was not until late afternoon that the blaze began to come under control, although the fire continued during the night before being officially declared extinguished the next morning.<ref>Nicolson, p. 30.</ref> Along with the fire and smoke damage, one of the unintended effects of the fire-fighting was the considerable water damage to the castle; more than 1.5&nbsp;million gallons of water were used to extinguish it, which in many ways caused more complex restoration problems than the fire.<ref>Nicolson, p. 110; ''[http://www.royalcollection.org.uk/sites/default/files/Windsor_Castle_Fact_Sheet.pdf Windsor Castle Fact Sheet]'', [[Royal Collection Trust]]. Retrieved 18 March 2015.</ref>
<!--Categories-->

[[Category:1070s architecture]]
Two major issues for Windsor Castle emerged following the fire. The first was a political debate in Britain as to who should pay for the repairs.<ref name=NicholsonP55>Nicolson, p. 55.</ref> Traditionally, as the property of [[the Crown]], Windsor Castle was maintained, and if necessary repaired, by the British government in exchange for the profits made by the [[Crown Estate]].<ref>Bogdanor, p. 190; ''[http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20130129110402/http:/www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/leg_sovereign_grant_faq.htm Sovereign Grant Act: Frequently Asked Questions Relating to the Act and on General Issues]'', HM Treasury. Retrieved 22 May 2016.</ref> Furthermore, like other occupied royal palaces, it was not [[Insurance|insured]] on grounds of economy.<ref>''[https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/written-answers/1992/dec/01/windsor-castle-1#S6CV0215P0_19921201_CWA_103 Windsor Castle]'', [[Hansard]]. Retrieved 22 May 2016.</ref> At the time of the fire, however, the British press strongly argued in favour of the Queen herself being required to pay for the repairs from her private income.<ref name=NicholsonP55/> A solution was found in which the restoration work would be paid for by opening [[Buckingham Palace]] to the public at selected times of the year, and by introducing new charges for public access to the parkland surrounding Windsor.<ref>Nicolson, p. 58.</ref> The second major issue concerned how to repair the castle. Some suggested that the damaged rooms should be restored to their original appearance, but others favoured repairing the castle so as to incorporate modern designs.<ref>Robinson, p. 145; Nicolson, p. 71.</ref> The decision was taken to largely follow the pre-fire architecture with some changes to reflect modern tastes and cost, but fresh questions emerged over whether the restoration should be undertaken to "authentic" or "equivalent" restoration standards.<ref name="NicholsonP78"/> Modern methods were used at Windsor to reproduce the equivalent pre-fire appearance, partially due to the cost.<ref>Nicolson, pp. 78–79.</ref> The restoration programme was completed in 1997 at a total cost of £37&nbsp;million (£67&nbsp;million in 2015 terms).<ref name=MeasuringWorthAE/><ref>Nicholson, p. 260.</ref>

=== 21st century ===
[[File:windsorcastlevisitors.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|right|alt=A photograph of a grey stone castle, stretching alongside the left of the picture. A road makes up the centre, along which a number of people walk.|Windsor Castle is one of [[Tourist attractions in the United Kingdom|Britain's major tourist attractions]].]]
Windsor Castle, part of the [[List of British royal residences#Crown-owned|Occupied Royal Palaces Estate]], is owned by [[Charles&nbsp;III]] in right of [[the Crown]],<ref>''[https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/written-answers/1995/jan/16/royal-property#column_301w Royal Property]''. [[Hansard]]. Retrieved 22 June 2016.</ref> and day-to-day management is by the [[Royal Households of the United Kingdom|Royal Household]].<ref name=HouseOfCommonsP3>House of Commons Public Accounts Committee, p. 3.</ref> In terms of population, Windsor Castle is the largest inhabited castle in the world and the longest-occupied palace in Europe, but it also remains a functioning royal home.<ref>Robinson, p. 7; Mackworth-Young, p. 88.</ref> As of 2006, around 500 people were living and working in the castle.<ref>Emery, p. 192.</ref> Elizabeth II had increasingly used the castle as a royal palace as well as her weekend home before her death.<ref>Robinson, p. 7.</ref> In recent years, Windsor Castle has hosted visits from [[Thabo Mbeki|President Mbeki]] of South Africa, [[Abdullah II of Jordan|King Abdullah&nbsp;II]] of Jordan and presidents [[Barack Obama|Obama]],<ref>[http://www.royal.gov.uk/TheRoyalResidences/WindsorCastle/WindsorCastle.aspx The Official Website of the British Monarchy]. Retrieved 28 November 2010; [https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-36113984/president-obama-touches-down-in-windsor President Obama touches down in Windsor], BBC News. Retrieved 2 June 2017.</ref> [[Donald Trump|Trump]], and [[Joe Biden|Biden]] of the United States.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Morton |first1=Becky |title=Queen meets Joe Biden at Windsor Castle |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-57461257 |access-date=13 June 2021 |work=BBC News |date=13 June 2021}}</ref> The castle remains an important ceremonial location. The [[Waterloo ceremony]] is carried out in the presence of the monarch each year, and the annual ceremony of the Order of the Garter takes place in [[St. George's Chapel, Windsor|St George's Chapel]].<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 92.</ref> When the Queen was in residence, the Guard Mounting ceremony occurred on a daily basis.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 90.</ref> The [[Royal Ascot|Royal Ascot procession]] leaves the castle each year during the annual meeting.<ref>Mackworth-Young, p. 95.</ref>

During Elizabeth II's reign much was done, not only to restore and maintain the fabric of the building, but also to transform it into a major British [[Tourism in England|tourist]] attraction, containing a significant portion of the [[Royal Collection]] of art. [[Archaeology of Windsor Castle|Archaeological work at the castle]] has continued, following on from limited investigations in the 1970s, the work on the Round Tower from 1988 to 1992 and the investigations following the 1992 fire.<ref>Brindle and Kerr, p. 4.</ref> During 2007, 993,000 tourists visited the castle.<ref>[http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/assets/hlst/documents/resources/ispal/B24.pdf ISPAL Information Hub Fact Sheet B24] p. 5, the Institute for Sport, Parks and Leisure. Retrieved 21 December 2010.</ref> This has had to be achieved in co-ordination with [[Security of Windsor Castle|security issues]] and the castle's role as a working royal palace.<ref name=HouseOfCommonsP3/> In late 2011 two large [[water turbine]]s were installed upstream of the castle on the River Thames to provide [[Hydropower|hydroelectric]] power to the castle and the surrounding estate.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-16276225 Windsor Castle water turbine installed on River Thames], BBC News. Retrieved 21 December 2011.</ref> In April 2016, the [[Royal Collection Trust]] announced a £27m project to reinstate the original entrance hall of the castle to visitors, as well as a new café in the 14th-century undercroft.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-35958283 Queen's official residences to undergo £37m tourism revamp], BBC News. Retrieved 6 April 2016.</ref> The new entrance was opened at the end of 2019.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-50067263 Windsor Castle's Inner Hall closed by Queen Victoria opens after revamp], BBC News, 16 October 2019. Retrieved 3 April 2020.</ref> From March 2020, the Queen and her husband, [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh]], shielded at Windsor during the [[COVID-19 pandemic]] with a small staff in what became known as 'HMS Bubble' – a jocular reference to the UK Government's rules on household support 'bubbles' during the pandemic.<ref>{{Cite news|date=2021-04-10|title=The Queen and Prince Philip: An enduring royal romance|work=BBC News|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-56252745|access-date=2021-04-14}}</ref> The pandemic also meant that they celebrated Christmas at Windsor Castle rather than [[Sandringham House]] for the first time since 1987.<ref>{{Cite news|date=2020-12-02|title=Queen and Prince Philip to skip Christmas in Sandringham for first time in 33 years|work=Sky News|url=https://news.sky.com/story/queen-and-duke-of-edinburgh-to-spend-christmas-at-windsor-12148166|access-date=2021-04-13}}</ref> Prince Philip died at Windsor Castle on 9 April 2021.<ref>{{Cite news|date=2021-04-09|title=Prince Philip has died aged 99, Buckingham Palace announces|work=BBC News|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-11437314|access-date=2021-04-13}}</ref>

On Christmas Day 2021, while Queen Elizabeth was staying at Windsor Castle, 19-year-old Jaswant Singh Chail broke into the gardens using a rope ladder and carrying a crossbow. Before he could enter any buildings Chail was arrested and later sectioned under the [[Mental Health Act 2007|Mental Health Act]]. He had posted a video on the internet threatening to assassinate the Queen.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/12/26/windsor-castle-armed-intruder-arrested-christmas-day-detained/ |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220110/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2021/12/26/windsor-castle-armed-intruder-arrested-christmas-day-detained/ |archive-date=10 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title=Windsor Castle: Video emerges of masked man threatening to 'assassinate the Queen'|author=Steve Bird|date=27 December 2021|work=The Telegraph}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Chail later admitted that his aim was to take revenge for the [[Amritsar massacre]] of 1919. He pleaded guilty to charges under section two of the [[Treason Act 1842]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://news.sky.com/story/man-admits-trying-to-harm-queen-after-being-caught-in-grounds-of-windsor-castle-with-a-crossbow-12802059|title=Man admits treason after breaking into grounds of Windsor Castle with crossbow 'to kill Queen'|work=Sky News|date=3 February 2023|accessdate=3 February 2023}}</ref>

On 7 May 2023, the lawn in the Home Park just beyond the East Terrace of the castle was the venue for the [[Coronation Concert]], in celebration of the [[coronation of Charles III and Camilla]]. It was the first open air concert to be staged at the castle and included performances by [[Lionel Richie]], [[Katy Perry]], [[Andrea Bocelli]], [[Sir Bryn Terfel]], [[Take That]] and [[Paloma Faith]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-65275880|title=Katy Perry and Lionel Richie to perform at Coronation concert|work=BBC News|first=Annabel|last=Rackham|date=14 April 2023|access-date=14 April 2023|archive-date=14 April 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230414212555/https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-65275880|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Performances-Segments">{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.com/mediacentre/bbcstudios/2023/bbc-announces-more-world-famous-names-for-coronation-concert-|title=BBC announces more world-famous names for Coronation Concert|work=BBC Media Centre|date=28 April 2023|accessdate=28 April 2023|archive-date=28 April 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230428232423/https://www.bbc.com/mediacentre/bbcstudios/2023/bbc-announces-more-world-famous-names-for-coronation-concert-|url-status=live}}</ref> The concert was attended by members of the royal family, alongside an audience of 20,000 members of the public.

[[File:WindsorCastlePano-Wyrdlight.jpg|thumb|center|700px|alt=A photograph of a white-grey stone castle, running left to right; trees are in the foreground, with a large white tower the most prominent part of the castle in the middle of the shot.|Windsor Castle, seen from the north; (l to r) Upper Ward, Middle Ward, Round Tower, St George's Chapel, Lower Ward and Curfew Tower]]

== See also ==
{{Portal|England}}
* [[Constables and Governors of Windsor Castle]]
* [[The Society of the Friends of St George's and Descendants of the Knights of the Garter]]
* [[Windsor Festival International String Competition]]
{{Clear}}

== Notes ==
{{reflist|group="nb"}}

== References ==
{{reflist|20em}}

== Bibliography ==
{{Refbegin}}

* {{Cite book |last=Barber |first=Richard |chapter=The Round Table Feast of 1344 |date=2007 |title=Edward III's Round Table at Windsor: The House of the Round Table and the Windsor Festival of 1344 |editor-last=Munby |editor-first=Julian |ol=25968301M |editor-last2=Barber |editor-first2=Richard |editor-last3=Brown |editor-first3=Richard}}
* Barnard, Toby. (2009) "The Viceregal Court in Later Seventeenth-Century Ireland", in Cruickshanks (ed) 2009.
* Bickham, George. (1753) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=4p4HAAAAQAAJ&q=bickham+windsor+castle Deliciæ Britannicæ; or, the Curiosities of Kensington, Hampton Court, and Windsor Castle, Delineated]''. London: Owen. {{OCLC|181805261}}.
* Bogdanor, Vernon. (1997) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=mN6SzMefot4C&pg=PA190 The Monarchy and the Constitution].'' Oxford: Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-19-829334-7}}.
* Bold, John and Chaney, Edwards. (eds) (1993) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=0UCQl0ocbZMC&q=English+Architecture,+Public+and+Private:+essays+for+Kerry+Downes English Architecture, Public and Private: essays for Kerry Downes]''. London: Hambledon Press. {{ISBN|978-1-85285-095-1}}.
* Brindle, Steven and Kerr, Brian. (1997) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=uIlJAAAACAAJ&q=Windsor+Revealed:+New+light+on+the+history+of+the+castle Windsor Revealed: New Light on the History of the Castle]''. London: English Heritage. {{ISBN|978-1-85074-688-1}}.
* Brown, Reginald Allen. (1984) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=jrJNAAAAYAAJ&q=%22The+Architecture+of+Castles:+A+Visual+Guide%22+allen The Architecture of Castles: A Visual Guide]''. London: Batsford. {{ISBN|978-0-7134-4089-8}}.
* Brown, Reginald Allen. (1989) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=uu08AAAAIAAJ&q=Brown,+Reginald+Allen.+(1989)+Castles+From+the+Ai Castles From the Air].'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-521-32932-3}}.
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* Clarke, John and Ridley, Jasper Godwin. (2000) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=_No3oxZfwy4C The Houses of Hanover and Saxe-Coburg-Gotha]''. Berkeley, US: University of California Press. {{ISBN|978-0-520-22801-6}}.
* Colvin, Howard Montagu. (ed) (1973) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=A9XVAAAAMAAJ&q=%22The+History+of+the+King's+Works%22 The History of the King's Works, Volume VI, 1782–1851]''. London: Her Majesty's Stationery Office. {{OCLC|77106638}}.
* Cruickshanks, Eveline. (ed) (2009) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=YH5nAAAAMAAJ&q=Cruickshanks+Stuart+Courts The Stuart Courts]''. Stroud, UK: The History Press. {{ISBN|978-0-7524-5206-7}}.
* [[William Hepworth Dixon|Dixon, William Hepworth]]. (1880) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=1PYGAAAAQAAJ&q=Royal+Windsor,+Volume+IV Royal Windsor, Volume IV]''. London: Hurst and Blackett. {{OCLC|455329771}}.
* Emery, Anthony. (2006) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=g7EXvaDEYioC Greater Medieval Houses of England and Wales, 1300–1500: Volume 3, Southern England]''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-521-58132-5}}.
* Freeman, Kerin. (2015) ''The Civilian Bomb Disposing Earl: Jack Howard and Bomb Disposal in WW2.'' Barnsley: Pen and Sword. {{ISBN|978-1473825604}}.
* Ireland, Ken. (2006) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=LhEWu_S21LYC&q=Cythera+Regained%3F:+the+Rococo+Revival+in+European+Literature+and+the+Arts,+1830-1910 Cythera Regained?: the Rococo Revival in European Literature and the Arts, 1830–1910]''. Cranbury, US: Fairleigh Dickinson Press. {{ISBN|978-0-8386-4078-4}}.
* Hibbert, Christopher. (2007) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=AB2Ub-5gvJ4C&q=Edward+VII:+The+Last+Victorian+King Edward VII: The Last Victorian King]''. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. {{ISBN|978-1-4039-8377-0}}.
* Hoak, Dale. (1995) "The Iconography of the Crown Imperial", in Hoak (ed) 1995 ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=fBirvV6yNIIC&q=Hoak,+Dale Tudor Political Culture].'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-521-52014-0}}.
* House of Commons Public Accounts Committee. (2009) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=d6TR-x_vlW0C&q=security+%22windsor+castle%22 Maintaining the Occupied Royal Palaces: Twenty-fourth Report of Session 2008–09, Report, Together with Formal Minutes, Oral and Written Evidence]''. London: The Stationery Office. {{ISBN|978-0-215-53049-3}}.
* Knox, Ronald and Leslie, Shane. (eds) (1923) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=cj08AAAAIAAJ&q=he+Miracles+of+King+Henry+VI. The Miracles of King Henry VI]''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
* MacGregor, Arthur. (2009) "The Household Out of Doors: the Stuart Court and the Animal Kingdom", in Cruickshanks (ed) 2009.
* Mackworth-Young, Robin. (1992) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=lnqgAAAAMAAJ&q=History+and+Treasures+of+Windsor+Castle The History and Treasures of Windsor Castle]''. Andover, UK: Pitkin. {{ISBN|978-0-85372-338-7}}.
* Munby, Julian; Barber, Richard and Brown, Richard. (eds) (2007) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=HFm2iudt_LYC&q=Edward+III%27s+Round+Table+at+Windsor+munby Edward III's Round Table at Windsor]''. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell. {{ISBN|978-1-84383-391-8}}.
* Newman, John. (1993) "Hugh May, Clarendon and Cornbury", in Bold and Chaney (eds) 1993.
* Nicolson, Adam. (1997) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=xeLVAAAAMAAJ&q=Restoration:+The+Rebuilding+of+Windsor+Castle. Restoration: The Rebuilding of Windsor Castle]''. London: Michael Joseph. {{ISBN|978-0-7181-4192-9}}.
* Pounds, Norman John Greville. (1990) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=d8babfRDfxwC The Medieval Castle in England and Wales: a social and political history]''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-521-45828-3}}.
* Pote, Joseph. (1755) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=lMwHAAAAQAAJ&q=%22joseph+pote%22 Les Delices de Windsore: or, a Description of Windsor Castle and the Country Adjacent]''. Eton: Joseph and Thomas Pote. {{OCLC|181833487}}.
* Ritchie, Leitch. (1840) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=IXsFAAAAQAAJ&q=%22Windsor+Castle,+and+Its+Environs%22 Windsor Castle, and Its Environs]''. London: Longman. {{OCLC|38518607}}.
* Robinson, John Martin. (2010) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=GaGGQgAACAAJ&q=Windsor+Castle:+the+Official+Illustrated+History Windsor Castle: the Official Illustrated History]''. London: Royal Collection Publications. {{ISBN|978-1-902163-21-5}}.
* [[Rowse, A. L.]] (1974) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=SBEhAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Windsor+Castle+in+the+History+of+the+Nation%22 Windsor Castle in the History of the Nation]''. London: Book Club Associates. {{ISBN|978-1-902163-21-5}}.
* Rubin, Miri. (2006) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=A3UIAQAAMAAJ&q=%22the+hollow+crown%22+rubin The Hollow Crown: a History of Britain in the Late Middle Ages]''. London: Penguin Books. {{ISBN|978-0-14-014825-1}}.
* Senn, Alfred Erich. (1999) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=k8geWJ_2wDQC&q=%22Power,+Politics,+and+the+Olympic+Games.%22 Power, Politics, and the Olympic Games]''. Champaign, US: Human Kinetics. {{ISBN|978-0-88011-958-0}}.
* Shawcross, William. (2009) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=ELC4SrbYidwC&q=Queen+elizabeth+queen+mother+shawcross Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother : the Official Biography]''. London: Macmillan. {{ISBN|978-1-4050-4859-0}}.
* South, Raymond. (1977) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=hPDoAAAAMAAJ&q=%22The+Book+of+Windsor%22 The Book of Windsor]''. Chesham, UK: Barracuda Books. {{ISBN|978-0-86023-038-0}}.
* Spencer, Charles. (2007) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=Gpj0HgAACAAJ&q=%22Prince+Rupert%22+spencer Prince Rupert: The Last Cavalier]''. London: Phoenix. {{ISBN|978-0-297-84610-9}}
* Steane, John. (1999) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=LoLlvnRPY_sC&q=%22The+Archaeology+of+the+Medieval+English+Monarchy%22 The Archaeology of the Medieval English Monarchy]''. London: Routledge. {{ISBN|978-0-415-19788-5}}.
* Tatton-Brown, Tim. (2007) "Windsor Castle Before 1344", in Munby, Barber and Brown (eds) 2007.
* Thurley, Simon. (2009) "A Country Seat Fit For a King: Charles II, Greenwich and Winchester", in Cruickshanks (ed) 2009.
* Tighe, Robert Richard and Davis, James Edward. (1858) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=ScRCAAAAYAAJ&q=%22annals+of+Windsor%22 Annals of Windsor, Being a History of the Castle and Town, with some Account of Eton and Places Adjacent, Volume II]''. London: Longman. {{OCLC|3813471}}.
* Tite, Catherine. (2010) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=X-UNZu2r6XcC&q=%22Portraiture,+Dynasty+and+Power:+Art+Patronage+in+Hanoverian+Britain%22 Portraiture, Dynasty and Power: Art Patronage in Hanoverian Britain, 1714–1759]''. Amherst, US: Cambria Press. {{ISBN|978-1-60497-678-6}}.
* Watkin, David. (2005) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=39T1zElEBrQC&q=%22'A+History+of+Western+Architecture%22+watkin A History of Western Architecture]''. London: Laurence King. {{ISBN|978-1-85669-459-9}}.
* Williams, Robert Folkestone. (1860) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=wrlCAAAAYAAJ&q=Domestic+memoirs+of+the+royal+family+and+of+the+court+of+England,+chiefly+at+Shene+and+Richmond Domestic Memoirs of the Royal Family and of the Court of England, Chiefly at Shene and Richmond, Volume 2]''. London: Hurst and Blackett. {{OCLC|8987461}}.
* Williams, Neville. (1971) ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=k5XpAAAAMAAJ&q=%22Royal+Homes%22+neville Royal Homes]''. Cambridge: Lutterworth Press. {{ISBN|978-0-7188-0803-7}}.
* Wolffe, Bertram. (2001) ''Henry VI''. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-300-08926-4}}.
{{refend}}

== External links ==
{{Commons category|Windsor Castle}}
* [https://www.royal.uk/royal-residences-windsor-castle Windsor Castle] at the Royal Family website
* [https://www.royalcollection.org.uk/visit/windsorcastle Windsor Castle] at the Royal Collection Trust
* [http://www.stgeorges-windsor.org/ College of St George], home to St George's Chapel
* {{National Heritage List for England |num=1117776|access-date=5 December 2016|ref=none}}

{{Royal palaces in the United Kingdom}}
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Latest revision as of 17:44, 3 September 2024

Windsor Castle
Windsor, Berkshire, in England
Round Tower and Upper Ward viewed from the Long Walk in Windsor Great Park
Windsor Castle is located in Berkshire
Windsor Castle
Windsor Castle
Location within Berkshire
Coordinates51°29′0″N 00°36′15″W / 51.48333°N 0.60417°W / 51.48333; -0.60417
TypeThree bailey wards with a round keep
Site information
OwnerKing Charles III in right of the Crown
OperatorRoyal Household
Open to
the public
Limited access
Site history
In useLate 11th century – present
MaterialsBagshot Heath stone
Events
Official nameWindsor Castle
Reference no.1006996
Listed Building – Grade I
Official nameWindsor Castle Including All The Buildings Within The Walls
Designated2 October 1975; 48 years ago (1975-10-02)
Reference no.1117776
Official nameThe Royal Estate, Windsor: Windsor Castle and Home Park
Designated31 August 1999; 25 years ago (1999-08-31)
Reference no.1001434

Windsor Castle is a royal residence at Windsor in the English county of Berkshire, about 25 miles (40 km) west of central London. It is strongly associated with the English and succeeding British royal family, and embodies almost a millennium of architectural history.

The original castle was built in the 11th century, after the Norman invasion of England by William the Conqueror. Since the time of Henry I (who reigned 1100–1135), it has been used by the reigning monarch and is the longest-occupied palace in Europe. The castle's lavish early 19th-century state apartments were described by the art historian Hugh Roberts as "a superb and unrivalled sequence of rooms widely regarded as the finest and most complete expression of later Georgian taste".[1] Inside the castle walls is the 15th-century St George's Chapel, considered by the historian John Martin Robinson to be "one of the supreme achievements of English Perpendicular Gothic" design.[2]

Originally designed to project Norman dominance around the outskirts of London and oversee a strategically important part of the River Thames, Windsor Castle was built as a motte-and-bailey, with three wards surrounding a central mound. Gradually replaced with stone fortifications, the castle withstood a prolonged siege during the First Barons' War at the start of the 13th century. Henry III built a luxurious royal palace within the castle during the middle of the century, and Edward III went further, rebuilding the palace to make an even grander set of buildings in what would become "the most expensive secular building project of the entire Middle Ages in England".[3] Edward's core design lasted through the Tudor period, during which Henry VIII and Elizabeth I made increasing use of the castle as a royal court and centre for diplomatic entertainment.

Windsor Castle survived the tumultuous period of the English Civil War, when it was used as a military headquarters by Parliamentary forces and a prison for Charles I. At the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II rebuilt much of Windsor Castle with the help of the architect Hugh May, creating a set of extravagant Baroque interiors. After a period of neglect during the 18th century, George III and George IV renovated and rebuilt Charles II's palace at colossal expense, producing the current design of the state apartments, full of Rococo, Gothic and Baroque furnishings. Queen Victoria made a few minor changes to the castle, which became the centre for royal entertainment for much of her reign. During the First World War, the historic estate inspired the naming of the royal House of Windsor. In the reign of George VI, it was used as a refuge by the royal family during the Luftwaffe bombing campaigns of the Second World War. An extensive restoration of several state rooms took place after the castle survived a fire in 1992. It is a popular tourist attraction, a venue for hosting state visits, and was the main residence of Elizabeth II from 2011 to 2022.[4]

Architecture

[edit]
A schematic map, with dark green parts of the castle on a light green background, individual locations marked out in red letters.
Plan of Windsor Castle:
  • A: The Round Tower
  • B: The Upper Ward, The Quadrangle
  • C: The State Apartments
  • D: Private Apartments*
  • E: South Wing
  • F: Lower Ward
  • G: St George's Chapel
  • H: Horseshoe Cloister
  • K: King Henry VIII Gate
  • L: The Long Walk
  • M: Norman Gate
  • N: North Terrace
  • O: Edward III Tower
  • T: The Curfew Tower
  • *to the right of "D" (not shown) is the East Terrace created in the 17th century

Windsor Castle grounds cover 13 acres (5.3 hectares)[5] and combines the features of a fortification, a palace, and a small town.[6] The present-day castle was created during a sequence of phased building projects, culminating in the reconstruction work after a fire in 1992.[7] It is in essence a Georgian and Victorian design based on a medieval structure, with Gothic features reinvented in a modern style. Since the 14th century, architecture at the castle has attempted to produce a contemporary reinterpretation of older fashions and traditions, repeatedly imitating outmoded or even antiquated styles.[8] As a result, architect Sir William Whitfield has pointed to Windsor Castle's architecture as having "a certain fictive quality", the Picturesque and Gothic design generating "a sense that a theatrical performance is being put on here", despite late 20th century efforts to expose more of the older structures to increase the sense of authenticity.[9] Although there has been some criticism, the castle's architecture and history lends it a "place amongst the greatest European palaces".[10]

Middle Ward

[edit]

At the heart of Windsor Castle is the Middle Ward, a bailey formed around the motte or artificial hill in the centre of the ward. The motte is 50 feet (15 m) high and is made from chalk originally excavated from the surrounding ditch. The keep, called the Round Tower, on the top of the motte is based on an original 12th-century building, extended upwards in the early 19th century under architect Jeffry Wyatville by 30 feet (9.1 m) to produce a more imposing height and silhouette.[11] The interior of the Round Tower was further redesigned in 1991–1993 to provide additional space for the Royal Archives, an additional room being built in the space left by Wyatville's originally hollow extension.[11] The Round Tower is in reality far from cylindrical, due to the shape and structure of the motte beneath it. The current height of the tower has been criticised as being disproportionate to its width; archaeologist Tim Tatton-Brown, for example, has described it as a mutilation of the earlier medieval structure.[12]

The western entrance to the Middle Ward is now open, and a gateway leads north from the ward onto the North Terrace.[13] The eastern exit from the ward is guarded by the Norman Gatehouse.[13] This gatehouse, which, despite its name, dates from the 14th century, is heavily vaulted and decorated with carvings, including surviving medieval lion masks, traditional symbols of majesty, to form an impressive entrance to the Upper Ward.[14] Wyatville redesigned the exterior of the gatehouse, and the interior was later heavily converted in the 19th century for residential use.[15]

Upper Ward

[edit]
A photograph of a grey Gothic quadrangle with a green grass square in the middle. On the left, a block of the building makes up the near ground. A gatehouse is in the middle of the right hand part of the quadrangle.
The South Wing of the Upper Ward; the Official Entrance to the State Apartments is on the left, the monarch's entrance to private apartments is left-centre in the corner, and the gateway near centre leads to the Long Walk in the Home Park. A statue of Charles II on horseback is at right.

The Upper Ward of Windsor Castle comprises a number of major buildings enclosed by the upper bailey wall, forming a central quadrangle. The State Apartments run along the north of the ward, with a range of buildings along the east wall, and the private royal apartments and the King George IV Gate to the south, with the Edward III Tower in the south-west corner. The motte and the Round Tower form the west edge of the ward. A bronze statue of Charles II on horseback sits beneath the Round Tower.[16] Inspired by Hubert Le Sueur's statue of Charles I in London, the statue was cast by Josias Ibach in 1679, with the marble plinth featuring carvings by Grinling Gibbons.[16] The Upper Ward adjoins the North Terrace, which overlooks the River Thames, and the East Terrace, which overlooks the Home Park; both of the current terraces were constructed by Hugh May in the 17th century.[17] The East Terrace has a private formal rose garden, first laid out by George IV in the 1820s. The present garden was updated by Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, after it was used for victory garden production during World War II, tended in part by Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret. In 2020 it was announced that for a limited time the garden would be open to the public for the first time in 40 years.[18]

Traditionally the Upper Ward was judged to be "to all intents and purposes a nineteenth century creation ... the image of what the early nineteenth-century thought a castle should be", as a result of the extensive redesign of the castle by Wyatville under George IV.[19] The walls of the Upper Ward are built of Bagshot Heath stone faced on the inside with regular bricks, the gothic details in yellow Bath stone.[20] The buildings in the Upper Ward are characterised by the use of small bits of flint in the mortar for galletting, originally started at the castle in the 17th century to give stonework from disparate periods a similar appearance. The skyline of the Upper Ward is designed to be dramatic when seen from a distance or silhouetted against the horizon, an image of tall towers and battlements influenced by the picturesque movement of the late 18th century.[20] Archaeological and restoration work following the 1992 fire has shown the extent to which the current structure represents a survival of elements from the original 12th-century stone walls onwards, presented within the context of Wyatville's final remodelling.[21]

State Apartments

[edit]
A photograph of a grey Gothic building stretching across the picture; the nearest parts have windows in a white stone, the furthest parts in a yellow stone. Three soldiers in grey uniforms and black hats are marching past the building.
The State Apartments in the Upper Ward – (l to r) King's Audience and Presence Chambers, the Official Entrance, St George's Hall, the Guest's Entrance[22]

The State Apartments form the major part of the Upper Ward and lie along the north side of the quadrangle. The modern building follows the medieval foundations laid down by Edward III, with the ground floor comprising service chambers and cellars, and the much grander first floor forming the main part of the palace. On the first floor, the layout of the western end of the State Apartments is primarily the work of architect Hugh May, whereas the structure on the eastern side represents Jeffry Wyatville's plans.[nb 1]

The interior of the State Apartments was mostly designed by Wyatville in the early 19th century. Wyatville intended each room to illustrate a particular architectural style and to display the matching furnishings and fine arts of the period.[23] With some alterations over the years, this concept continues to dominate the apartments. Different rooms follow the Classical, Gothic and Rococo styles, together with an element of Jacobethan in places.[24] Many of the rooms on the eastern end of the castle had to be restored following the 1992 fire, using "equivalent restoration" methods – the rooms were restored so as to appear similar to their original appearance, but using modern materials and concealing modern structural improvements.[25][nb 2] These rooms were also partially redesigned at the same time to more closely match modern tastes. Art historian Hugh Roberts has praised the State Apartments as "a superb and unrivalled sequence of rooms widely regarded as the finest and most complete expression of later Georgian taste."[1] Others, such as architect Robin Nicolson and critic Hugh Pearman, have described them as "bland" and "distinctly dull".[26]

A photograph of a large room with a long red carpet stretching through the middle of it and windows on the right hand side. Furniture fills both sides of the room. The ceiling contains ornate plasterwork and a chandelier hangs down from the middle of the picture.
The Crimson Drawing Room in 2007, following the 1992 fire and subsequent remodelling

Wyatville's most famous work are those rooms designed in a Rococo style. These rooms take the fluid, playful aspects of this mid-18th century artistic movement, including many original pieces of Louis XV style, but project them on a "vastly inflated" scale.[27] Investigations after the 1992 fire have shown though that many Rococo features of the modern castle, originally thought to have been 18th-century fittings transferred from Carlton House or France, are in fact 19th-century imitations in plasterwork and wood, designed to blend with original elements.[28] The Grand Reception Room is the most prominent of these Rococo designs, 100 feet (30 m) long and 40 feet (12 m) tall and occupying the site of Edward III's great hall.[29] This room, restored after the fire, includes a huge French Rococo ceiling, characterised by Ian Constantinides, the lead restorer, as possessing a "coarseness of form and crudeness of hand ... completely overshadowed by the sheer spectacular effect when you are at a distance".[30] The room is set off by a set of restored Gobelins French tapestries.[30] Although decorated with less gold leaf than in the 1820s, the result remains "one of the greatest set-pieces of Regency decoration".[31] The White, Green and Crimson Drawing Rooms include a total of 62 trophies: carved, gilded wooden panels illustrating weapons and the spoils of war, many with Masonic meanings.[32] Restored or replaced after the fire, these trophies are famous for their "vitality, precision and three-dimensional quality", and were originally brought from Carlton House in 1826, some being originally imported from France and others carved by Edward Wyatt.[32] The soft furnishings of these rooms, although luxurious, are more modest than the 1820s originals, both on the grounds of modern taste and cost.[33]

Wyatville's design retains three rooms originally built by May in the 17th century in partnership with the painter Antonio Verrio and carver Grinling Gibbons. The Queen's Presence Chamber, the Queen's Audience Chamber and the King's Dining Room are designed in a Baroque, Franco-Italian style, characterised by "gilded interiors enriched with florid murals", first introduced to England between 1648 and 1650 at Wilton House.[34] Verrio's paintings are "drenched in medievalist allusion" and classical images.[35] These rooms were intended to show an innovative English "baroque fusion" of the hitherto separate arts of architecture, painting and carving.[36]

Two designs for a ceiling, one showing a side view of structure and decoration; the bottom showing how it would appear from below. The ceiling is decorated with a network of gothic arches in gold on a blue background.
A presentation drawing for the new Private Chapel, showing a Gothic design by Giles Downes

A handful of rooms in the modern State Apartments reflect either 18th-century or Victorian Gothic design. The State Dining Room, for example, whose current design originates from the 1850s but which was badly damaged during the 1992 fire, is restored to its appearance in the 1920s, before the removal of some of the gilded features on the pilasters.[37] Anthony Salvin's Grand Staircase is also of mid-Victorian design in the Gothic style, rising to a double-height hall lit by an older 18th-century Gothic vaulted lantern tower called the Grand Vestibule, designed by James Wyatt and executed by Francis Bernasconi.[38] The staircase has been criticised by historian John Robinson as being a distinctly inferior design to the earlier staircases built on the same site by both Wyatt and May.[39]

Some parts of the State Apartments were completely destroyed in the 1992 fire and this area was rebuilt in a style called "Downesian Gothic", named after the architect, Giles Downes.[40][nb 3] The style comprises "the rather stripped, cool and systematic coherence of modernism sewn into a reinterpretation of the Gothic tradition".[41] Downes argues that the style avoids "florid decoration", emphasising an organic, flowing Gothic structure.[42] Three new rooms were built or remodelled by Downes at Windsor. Downes' new hammer-beam roof of St George's Hall is the largest green-oak structure built since the Middle Ages, and is decorated with brightly coloured shields celebrating the heraldic element of the Order of the Garter; the design attempts to create an illusion of additional height through the gothic woodwork along the ceiling.[43] The Lantern Lobby used to welcome guests features flowing oak columns forming a vaulted ceiling, imitating an arum lily, and is where the pre-fire chapel built for Queen Victoria was located.[44][45] The new Private Chapel is relatively intimate, only able to fit thirty worshippers, but combines architectural elements of the St George's Hall roof with the Lantern Lobby and the stepped arch structure of the Henry VIII chapel vaulting at Hampton Court.[46] The result is an "extraordinary, continuous and closely moulded net of tracery", complementing the new stained glass windows commemorating the fire, designed by Joseph Nuttgen,[47] based on an idea of Prince Philip's.[45] The Great Kitchen, with its newly exposed 14th-century roof lantern sitting alongside Wyatville's fireplaces, chimneys and Gothic tables, is also a product of the reconstruction after the fire.[48]

The ground floor of the State Apartments retains various famous medieval features. The 14th-century Great Undercroft still survives, some 193 feet (59 m) long by 31 feet (9.4 m) wide, divided into 13 bays.[49] At the time of the 1992 fire, the Undercroft had been divided into smaller rooms; the area is now opened up to form a single space in an effort to echo the undercrofts at Fountains and Rievaulx Abbeys, although the floor remains artificially raised for convenience of use.[50] The "beautifully vaulted" 14th-century Larderie passage runs alongside the Kitchen Courtyard and is decorated with carved royal roses, marking its construction by Edward III.[51][nb 4]

Lower Ward

[edit]
A photograph of a large Gothic chapel on the left, with tall thin windows. On the right is a line of stone buildings, pointing towards a circular tower in the middle of the picture. In the centre are two paths surrounded by grass, with a number of people walking around.
The Lower Ward, (l to r) St George's Chapel, the Lady Chapel, the Round Tower, the lodgings of the Military Knights, and the residence of the Governor of the Military Knights

The Lower Ward lies below and to the west of the Round Tower, reached through the Norman Gate. Originally largely of medieval design, most of the Lower Ward was renovated or reconstructed during the mid-Victorian period by Anthony Salvin and Edward Blore, to form a "consistently Gothic composition".[52] The Lower Ward holds St George's Chapel and most of the buildings associated with the Order of the Garter.

On the north side of the Lower Ward is St George's Chapel. This huge building is the spiritual home of the Order of the Knights of the Garter and dates from the late 15th and early 16th century, designed in the Perpendicular Gothic style.[53] The ornate wooden choir stalls are of 15th century design, having been restored and extended by Henry Emlyn at the end of the 18th century, and are decorated with a unique set of brass plates showing the arms of the Knights of the Garter over the last six centuries.[54] On the west side, the chapel has a grand Victorian door and staircase, used on ceremonial occasions.[55] The east stained glass window is Victorian, and the oriel window to the north side of it was built by Henry VIII for Catherine of Aragon.[56] The vault in front of the altar houses the remains of Henry VIII, Jane Seymour and Charles I, with Edward IV buried nearby.[57] The chapel is considered by historian John Robinson to be "one of the supreme achievements of English Perpendicular Gothic" design.[2]

A close-up photograph of a building made with black timbers and red brick. The building has four tall, brick chimneys. A relatively modern drainpipe comes down the middle of the building.
The Horseshoe Cloister, built in 1480 and reconstructed in the 19th century

At the east end of St George's Chapel is the Lady Chapel, originally built by Henry III in the 13th century and converted into the Albert Memorial Chapel between 1863 and 1873 by George Gilbert Scott.[55] Built to commemorate the life of Prince Albert, the ornate chapel features lavish decoration and works in marble, glass mosaic and bronze by Henri de Triqueti, Susan Durant, Alfred Gilbert and Antonio Salviati.[55] The east door of the chapel, covered in ornamental ironwork, is the original door from 1246.[58]

At the west end of the Lower Ward is the Horseshoe Cloister, originally built in 1480, near to the chapel to house its clergy. It houses the vicars-choral, or lay clerks of the chapel.[59] This curved brick and timber building is said to have been designed to resemble the shape of a fetlock, one of the badges used by Edward IV. George Gilbert Scott heavily restored the building in 1871 and little of the original structure remains.[59] Other ranges originally built by Edward III sit alongside the Horseshoe, featuring stone perpendicular tracery.[60] As of 2011, they are used as offices, a library and as the houses for the Dean and Canons.[60]

Behind the Horseshoe Cloister is the Curfew Tower, one of the oldest surviving parts of the Lower Ward and dating from the 13th century.[55] The interior of the tower contains a former dungeon, and the remnants of a sally port, a secret exit for the occupants in a time of siege.[61] The upper storey contains the castle bells placed there in 1478, and the castle clock of 1689. The French-style conical roof is a 19th-century attempt by Anthony Salvin to remodel the tower in the fashion of Eugène Viollet-le-Duc's recreation of Carcassonne.[62]

On the opposite side of the chapel is a range of buildings including the lodgings of the Military Knights, and the residence of the Governor of the Military Knights.[63] These buildings originate from the 16th century and are still used by the Knights, who represent the Order of the Garter each Sunday.[64] On the south side of the Ward is King Henry VIII's gateway, which bears the coat of arms of Catherine of Aragon and forms the secondary entrance to the castle.

Park and landscape

[edit]

Windsor Castle's position on top of steep ground has meant that the castle's gardens are limited in scale.[65] The castle gardens stretch east from the Upper Ward across a 19th-century terrace.[66] Windsor Castle is surrounded by extensive parkland. The immediate area stretching to the east of the castle is a 19th-century creation known as the Home Park.[67] The Home Park includes parkland and two working farms, along with many estate cottages mainly occupied by employees and the Frogmore estate. The Long Walk, a double lined avenue of trees, runs for 2.65 miles (4.26 km)[68] south of the castle, and is 240 ft (73 m) wide.[69] The original 17th century elms were replaced with alternating chestnut and plane trees. The impact of Dutch elm disease led to large-scale replanting after 1945.[70]

The Home Park adjoins the northern edge of the more extensive Windsor Great Park, occupying some 5,000 acres (2,020 ha)[71] and including some of the oldest broadleaved woodlands in Europe.[72] In the Home Park, to the north of the castle, stands a private school, St George's, which provides choristers to the chapel. Eton College is located about half a mile from the castle, across the River Thames, reflecting the fact that it was a royal foundation of Henry VI.

Aerial view of the castle from the south, from left to right: the Lower Ward and St George's Chapel, the Middle Ward and Round Tower, the Upper Ward and East Terrace garden, with the Long Walk, lower right. The River Thames can be seen in the upper left of the picture.

History

[edit]

11th and 12th centuries

[edit]
A photograph showing the left hand side of a circular stone tower made of grey stone and with small windows.
The Round Tower in the Middle Ward, built by Henry II and remodelled in the 19th century

Windsor Castle was originally built by William the Conqueror in the decade after the Norman conquest of 1066.[73] William established a defensive ring of motte and bailey castles around London; each was a day's march – about 20 miles (32 km) – from the City and from the next castle, allowing for easy reinforcements in a crisis.[73] Windsor Castle, one of this ring of fortifications, was strategically important because of its proximity to both the River Thames, a key medieval route into London, and Windsor Forest, a royal hunting preserve previously used by the Saxon kings.[74] The nearby settlement of Clivore, or Clewer, was an old Saxon residence. The initial wooden castle consisted of a keep on the top of a man-made motte, or mound, protected by a small bailey wall, occupying a chalk inlier, or bluff, rising 100 ft (30 m) above the river.[75] A second wooden bailey was constructed to the east of the keep, forming the later Upper Ward.[76] By the end of the century, another bailey had been constructed to the west, creating the basic shape of the modern castle.[76][nb 5] In design, Windsor most closely resembled Arundel Castle, another powerful early Norman fortification, but the double bailey design was also found at Rockingham and Alnwick Castle.[78]

Windsor was not initially used as a royal residence. The early Norman kings preferred to use the former palace of Edward the Confessor in the village of Old Windsor.[79] The first king to use Windsor Castle as a residence was Henry I, who celebrated Whitsuntide at the castle in 1110 during a period of heightened insecurity.[80] Henry's marriage to Adela, the daughter of Godfrey of Louvain, took place in the castle in 1121. During this period the keep suffered a substantial collapse – archaeological evidence shows that the southern side of the motte subsided by over 6 ft (2 m).[81] Timber piles were driven in to support the motte and the old wooden keep was replaced with a new stone shell keep, with a probable gateway to the north-east and a new stone well.[82] A chemise, or low protective wall, was subsequently added to the keep.[82]

Henry II came to the throne in 1154 and built extensively at Windsor between 1165 and 1179.[76] Henry replaced the wooden palisade surrounding the upper ward with a stone wall interspersed with square towers and built the first King's Gate.[76] The first stone keep was suffering from subsidence, and cracks were beginning to appear in the stonework of the south side.[82] Henry replaced the keep with another stone shell keep and chemise wall, but moved the walls in from the edge of the motte to relieve the pressure on the mound, and added massive foundations along the south side to provide additional support.[82] Inside the castle Henry remodelled the royal accommodation.[76] Bagshot Heath stone was used for most of the work, and stone from Bedfordshire for the internal buildings.[83]

13th century

[edit]
A photograph of a castle tower, the tower is pierced by small windows and has a coned, red-tiled roof, with a clock built into one side. The sky behind the wall is pale blue.
The Curfew Tower, part of the Lower Ward, built under Henry III and remodelled in the 19th century

King John undertook some building works at Windsor, but primarily to the accommodation rather than the defences.[84] The castle played a role during the revolt of the English barons: the castle was besieged in 1214, and John used the castle as his base during the negotiations before the signing of Magna Carta at nearby Runnymede in 1215.[84] In 1216 the castle was besieged again by baronial and French troops under the command of the Count of Nevers, but John's constable, Engelard de Cigogné, successfully defended it.[84]

The damage done to the castle during the second siege was immediately repaired in 1216 and 1221 by Cigogné on behalf of John's successor Henry III, who further strengthened the defences.[85] The walls of the Lower Ward were rebuilt in stone, complete with a gatehouse in the location of the future Henry VIII Gate, between 1224 and 1230.[76] Three new towers, the Curfew, Garter and the Salisbury towers, were constructed.[84] The Middle Ward was heavily reinforced with a southern stone wall, protected by the new Edward III and Henry III towers at each end.[76]

Windsor Castle was one of Henry III's three favourite residences and he invested heavily in the royal accommodation, spending more money at Windsor than in any other of his properties.[86][nb 6] Following his marriage to Eleanor of Provence, Henry built a luxurious palace in 1240–1263, based around a court along the north side of the Upper Ward.[87] This was intended primarily for the queen and Henry's children.[76] In the Lower Ward, the king ordered the construction of a range of buildings for his own use along the south wall, including a 70 ft (21 m) long chapel, later called the Lady Chapel.[88] This was the grandest of the numerous chapels built for his own use, and comparable to the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris in size and quality.[89] Henry repaired the Great Hall that lay along the north side of the Lower Ward, and enlarged it with a new kitchen and built a covered walkway between the Hall and the kitchen.[88] Henry's work was characterised by the religious overtones of the rich decorations, which formed "one of the high-water marks of English medieval art".[90] The conversion cost more than £10,000.[85] The result was to create a division in the castle between a more private Upper Ward and a Lower Ward devoted to the public face of the monarchy.[58] Little further building was carried out at the castle during the 13th century; the Great Hall in the Lower Ward was destroyed by fire in 1296, but it was not rebuilt.[91]

14th century

[edit]
A photograph of a stone gatehouse, with two large, circular towers on each side of the gateway dominating the picture. A stone wall stretches alongside the left hand side of the picture.
The Norman Gate in the Middle Ward, built by Edward III and remodelled in the 19th century

Edward III was born at Windsor Castle and used it extensively throughout his reign.[91] In 1344 the king announced the foundation of the new Order of the Round Table at the castle.[3] Edward began to construct a new building in the castle to host this order, but it was never finished.[3] Chroniclers described it as a round building, 200 ft (61 m) across, and it was probably in the centre of the Upper Ward.[92] Shortly afterwards, Edward abandoned the new order for reasons that remain unclear, and instead established the Order of the Garter, again with Windsor Castle as its headquarters, complete with the attendant Poor Knights of Windsor.[3] As part of this process Edward decided to rebuild Windsor Castle, in particular Henry III's palace, in an attempt to construct a castle that would be symbolic of royal power and chivalry.[93] Edward was influenced both by the military successes of his grandfather, Edward I, and by the decline of royal authority under his father, Edward II, and aimed to produce an innovative, "self-consciously aesthetic, muscled, martial architecture".[94]

Edward placed William of Wykeham in overall charge of the rebuilding and design of the new castle and while work was ongoing Edward stayed in temporary accommodation in the Round Tower.[91] Between 1350 and 1377 Edward spent £51,000 on renovating Windsor Castle; this was the largest amount spent by any English medieval monarch on a single building operation, and over one and a half times Edward's typical annual income of £30,000.[95] Some of the costs of the castle were paid from the results of ransoms following Edward's victories at the battles of Crécy, Calais and Poitiers.[91] Windsor Castle was already a substantial building before Edward began expanding it, making the investment all the more impressive, and much of the expenditure was lavished on rich furnishings.[96] The castle was "the most expensive secular building project of the entire Middle Ages in England".[3]

Edward's new palace consisted of three courts along the north side of the Upper Ward, called Little Cloister, King's Cloister and the Kitchen Court.[97] At the front of the palace lay the St George's Hall range, which combined a new hall and a new chapel. This range had two symmetrical gatehouses, the Spicerie Gatehouse and the Kitchen Gatehouse. The Spicerie Gatehouse was the main entrance into the palace, while the Kitchen Gatehouse simply led into the kitchen courtyard.[98] The great hall had numerous large windows looking out across the ward.[99] The range had an unusual, unified roof-line and, with a taller roof than the rest of the palace, would have been highly distinctive.[100] The Rose Tower, designed for the king's private use, set off the west corner of the range.[97] The result was a "great and apparently architecturally unified palace ... uniform in all sorts of ways, as to roof line, window heights, cornice line, floor and ceiling heights".[101] With the exception of the Hall, Chapel and the Great Chamber, the new interiors all shared a similar height and width.[102][nb 7] The defensive features, however, were primarily for show, possibly to provide a backdrop for jousting between the two-halves of the Order of the Garter.[94]

A drawing of the front of a castle hall, with two towers at either end and a row of high windows running along with the middle. The drawing is in shades of grey.
A reconstruction of the St George's Hall range built by Edward III: (l to r) the Spicerie Gatehouse, the chapel, the hall, and the Kitchen Gatehouse

Edward built further luxurious, self-contained lodgings for his court around the east and south edges of the Upper Ward, creating the modern shape of the quadrangle.[8] The Norman gate was built to secure the west entrance to the Ward.[91] In the Lower Ward, the chapel was enlarged and remodelled with grand buildings for the canons built alongside.[91] The earliest weight-driven mechanical clock in England was installed by Edward III in the Round Tower in 1354.[103] William of Wykeham went on to build New College, Oxford and Winchester College, where the influence of Windsor Castle can easily be seen.[91]

The new castle was used to hold French prisoners taken at the Battle of Poitiers in 1357, including King John II, who was held for a considerable ransom.[104] Later in the century, the castle also found favour with Richard II. Richard conducted restoration work on St George's Chapel, the work being carried out by Geoffrey Chaucer, who served as a diplomat and Clerk of The King's Works.

15th century

[edit]
A photograph of a huge stone chapel, with tall stained glass windows and stone detailing. A patch of green grass can be seen in the foreground with several people walking by the door of the chapel.
St George's Chapel, begun in 1475 by Edward IV

Windsor Castle continued to be favoured by monarchs in the 15th century, despite increasing political violence.[105] Henry IV seized the castle during his coup in 1399, although failing to catch Richard II, who had escaped to London.[105] Under Henry V, the castle hosted a visit from the Holy Roman Emperor in 1417, a massive diplomatic event that stretched the castle's accommodation to its limits.[106]

By the middle of the 15th century England was increasingly divided between the rival royal factions of the Lancastrians and the Yorkists. Castles such as Windsor did not play a decisive role during the resulting Wars of the Roses (1455–1485), which were fought primarily in the form of pitched battles between the rival factions.[107] Henry VI, born at Windsor Castle and known as Henry of Windsor, became king at the young age of nine months.[108] His long period of minority, coupled with the increasing tensions between Henry's Lancastrian supporters and the Yorkists, distracted attention from Windsor.[109] The Garter Feasts and other ceremonial activities at the castle became more infrequent and less well attended.[109]

Edward IV seized power in 1461. When Edward captured Henry's wife, Margaret of Anjou, she was brought back to be detained at the castle.[110] Edward began to revive the Order of the Garter, and held a particularly lavish feast in 1472.[111] Edward began the construction of the present St. George's Chapel in 1475, resulting in the dismantling of several of the older buildings in the Lower Ward.[112] By building the grand chapel Edward was seeking to show that his new dynasty were the permanent rulers of England, and may also have been attempting to deliberately rival the similar chapel that Henry VI had ordered to be constructed at nearby Eton College.[109] Richard III made only a brief use of Windsor Castle before his defeat at the Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, but had the body of Henry VI moved from Chertsey Abbey in Surrey to the castle to allow it to be visited by pilgrims more easily.[113]

Henry VII made more use of Windsor. In 1488, shortly after succeeding to the throne, he held a massive feast for the Order of the Garter at the castle.[114] He completed the roof of St George's Chapel, and set about converting the older eastern Lady Chapel into a proposed shrine to Henry VI, whose canonisation was then considered imminent.[114] In the event, Henry VI was not canonised and the project was abandoned, although the shrine continued to attract a flood of pilgrims.[115] Henry VII appears to have remodelled the King's Chamber in the palace, and had the roof of the Great Kitchen rebuilt in 1489.[116] He also built a three-storied tower on the west end of the palace, which he used for his personal apartments.[117] Windsor began to be used for international diplomatic events, including the grand visit of Philip I of Castile in 1506.[114] William de la Pole, one of the surviving Yorkist claimants to the throne, was imprisoned at Windsor Castle during Henry's reign, before his execution in 1513.[118]

16th century

[edit]
A photograph of a stone gatehouse, with angular octagonal towers and windows picked out in white stone. The weather is good, with the sky behind the gatehouse a bright blue.
The Henry VIII gateway in the Lower Ward

Henry VIII enjoyed Windsor Castle, as a young man "exercising himself daily in shooting, singing, dancing, wrestling, casting of the bar, playing at the recorders, flute, virginals, in setting of songs and making of ballads".[119] The tradition of the Garter Feasts was maintained and became more extravagant; the size of the royal retinue visiting Windsor had to be restricted because of the growing numbers.[120] During the Pilgrimage of Grace, a huge uprising in the north of England against Henry's rule in 1536, the king used Windsor as a secure base in the south from which to manage his military response.[121] Throughout the Tudor period, Windsor was also used as a safe retreat in the event of plagues occurring in London.[122]

Henry rebuilt the principal castle gateway in about 1510 and constructed a tennis court at the base of the motte in the Upper Ward.[123] He also built a long terrace, called the North Wharf, along the outside wall of the Upper Ward; constructed of wood, it was designed to provide a commanding view of the River Thames below.[116] The design included an outside staircase into the king's apartments, which made the monarch's life more comfortable at the expense of considerably weakening the castle's defences.[124] Early in his reign, Henry had given the eastern Lady Chapel to Cardinal Wolsey for Wolsey's future mausoleum.[125] Benedetto Grazzini converted much of this into an Italian Renaissance design, before Wolsey's fall from power brought an end to the project, with contemporaries estimating that around £60,000 (£295 million in 2008 terms) had been spent on the work.[126] Henry continued the project, but it remained unfinished when he himself was buried in the chapel, in an elaborate funeral in 1547.[127]

A black and white sketch of a river scene. A river runs across the foreground of the picture, with a sail boat moving along it. In the middle ground, beyond the river, is a small town, and beyond that, on the top of a ridge, is a castle stretching across the back of the picture.
Windsor Castle in the 1670s from across the River Thames, showing the North Terrace (left) built by Elizabeth I in the 16th century and the steep, protective ground to the north of the castle

By contrast, the young Edward VI disliked Windsor Castle.[128] Edward's Protestant beliefs led him to simplify the Garter ceremonies, to discontinue the annual Feast of the Garter at Windsor and to remove any signs of Catholic practices with the Order.[129] During the rebellions and political strife of 1549, Windsor was again used as a safe-haven for the king and the Duke of Somerset.[130] Edward famously commented while staying at Windsor Castle during this period that "Methink I am in a prison, here are no galleries, nor no gardens to walk in".[128] Under both Edward and his sister, Mary I, some limited building work continued at the castle, in many cases using resources recovered from the English abbeys.[131] Water was piped into the Upper Ward to create a fountain.[116] Mary also expanded the buildings used by the Knights of Windsor in the Lower Ward, using stone from Reading Abbey.[116]

Elizabeth I spent much of her time at Windsor Castle and used it a safe haven in crises, "knowing it could stand a siege if need be".[132] Ten new brass cannons were purchased for the castle's defence.[133] It became one of her favourite locations and she spent more money on the property than on any of her other palaces.[134] She conducted some modest building works at Windsor, including a wide range of repairs to the existing structures.[135] She converted the North Wharf into a permanent, huge stone terrace, complete with statues, carvings and an octagonal, outdoor banqueting house, raising the western end of the terrace to provide more privacy.[136] The chapel was refitted with stalls, a gallery and a new ceiling.[137] A bridge was built over the ditch to the south of the castle to enable easier access to the park.[134] Elizabeth built a gallery range of buildings on the west end of the Upper Ward, alongside Henry VII's tower.[138] Elizabeth increasingly used the castle for diplomatic engagements, but space continued to prove a challenge as the property was simply not as large as the more modern royal palaces.[139] This flow of foreign visitors was captured for the queen's entertainment in William Shakespeare's play, The Merry Wives of Windsor.[140][nb 8]

17th century

[edit]
A detailed engraving of a castle, seen from the air. The castle is divided in three pieces, with a domed mound in the middle, upon which is a keep. The castle and walls look stubby and short from this angle.
A bird's-eye view of Windsor Castle in 1658, by Wenceslas Hollar, shown before Hugh May's reconstruction of the Upper Ward

James I used Windsor Castle primarily as a base for hunting, one of his favourite pursuits, and for socialising with his friends.[141] Many of these occasions involved extensive drinking sessions, including one with Christian IV of Denmark in 1606 that became infamous across Europe for the resulting drunken behaviour of the two kings.[142] The absence of space at Windsor continued to prove problematic, with James' English and Scottish retinues often quarrelling over rooms.[142]

Charles I was a connoisseur of art, and paid greater attention to the aesthetic aspects of Windsor Castle than his predecessors.[143] Charles had the castle completely surveyed by a team including Inigo Jones in 1629, but little of the recommended work was carried out.[137] Nonetheless, Charles employed Nicholas Stone to improve the chapel gallery in the Mannerist style and to construct a gateway in the North Terrace.[137] Christian van Vianen, a noted Dutch goldsmith, was employed to produce a baroque gold service for the St George's Chapel altar. In the final years of peace, Charles demolished the fountain in the Upper Ward, intending to replace it with a classical statue.[144]

In 1642 the English Civil War broke out, dividing the country into the Royalist supporters of Charles, and the Parliamentarians. In the aftermath of the battle of Edgehill in October, Parliament became concerned that Charles might advance on London.[145] John Venn took control of Windsor Castle with twelve companies of foot soldiers to protect the route along the Thames river, becoming the governor of the castle for the duration of the war.[145] The contents of St George's Chapel were both valuable and, to many Parliamentary forces, inappropriately high church in style.[145] Looting began immediately: Edward IV's bejewelled coat of mail was stolen; the chapel's organs, windows and books destroyed; the Lady Chapel was emptied of valuables, including the component parts of Henry VIII's unfinished tomb.[146] By the end of the war, some 3,580 ounces (101 kg) of gold and silver plate had been looted.[145]

Prince Rupert of the Rhine, a prominent Royalist general, attempted to relieve Windsor Castle that November.[145] Rupert's small force of cavalry was able to take the town of Windsor, but was unable to overcome the walls at Windsor Castle – in due course, Rupert was forced to retreat.[147] Over the winter of 1642–1643, Windsor Castle was converted into the headquarters for the Earl of Essex, a senior Parliamentary general.[147] The Horseshoe Cloister was taken over as a prison for captured Royalists, and the resident canons were expelled from the castle.[147] The Lady Chapel was turned into a magazine.[148] Looting by the underpaid garrison continued to be a problem; 500 royal deer were killed across the Windsor Great Park during the winter, and fences were burned as firewood.[147]

In 1647 Charles, then a prisoner of Parliament, was brought to the castle for a period under arrest, before being moved to Hampton Court.[147] In 1648 there was a Royalist plan, never enacted, to seize Windsor Castle.[149] The Parliamentary Army Council moved into Windsor in November and decided to try Charles for treason.[149] Charles was held at Windsor again for the last three weeks of his reign; after his execution in January 1649, his body was taken back to Windsor that night through a snowstorm, to be interred without ceremony in the vault beneath St George's Chapel.[150]

An engraving of a castle, with stone walls and square towers running along them. In the middle, a mound can be seen with a stone keep on it. A low, long wall runs outside the castle to the left and right, with a gateway close to the castle on each side.
Windsor Castle in 1658, as seen from the south-east, by Wenceslas Hollar; (l to r) the Lower Ward, the Middle Ward and Round Tower, the Upper Ward

The Restoration of the monarchy in 1660 saw the first period of significant change to Windsor Castle for many years. The civil war and the years of the Interregnum had caused extensive damage to the royal palaces in England.[151] At the same time the shifting "functional requirements, patterns of movement, modes of transport, aesthetic taste and standards of comfort" among royal circles was changing the qualities being sought in a successful palace.[151] Windsor was the only royal palace to be successfully fully modernised by Charles II in the Restoration years.[151]

During the Interregnum, however, squatters had occupied Windsor Castle. As a result, the "King's house was a wreck; the fanatic, the pilferer, and the squatter, having been at work ... Paupers had squatted in many of the towers and cabinets".[152] Shortly after returning to England, Charles appointed Prince Rupert, one of his few surviving close relatives, to be the Constable of Windsor Castle in 1668.[153] Rupert immediately began to reorder the castle's defences, repairing the Round Tower and reconstructing the real tennis court.[154] Charles attempted to restock Windsor Great Park with deer brought over from Germany, but the herds never recovered their pre-war size.[147] Rupert created apartments for himself in the Round Tower, decorated with an "extraordinary" number of weapons and armour, with his inner chambers "hung with tapisserie, curious and effeminate pictures".[155]

An engraving of a castle, with four square towers running along the face of it. Numerous windows can be seen in the castle walls and towers, and a long, flat terrace runs outside the castle.
The Upper Ward seen from the east, after Hugh May's reconstruction work. May's new East Terrace is in the foreground.

Charles was heavily influenced by Louis XIV Style and imitated French design at his palace at Winchester and the Royal Hospital at Chelsea.[156] At Windsor, Charles created "the most extravagantly Baroque interiors ever executed in England".[156] Much of the building work was paid for out of increased royal revenues from Ireland during the 1670s.[157] French court etiquette at the time required a substantial number of enfiladed rooms to satisfy court protocol; the demand for space forced architect Hugh May to expand out into the North Terrace, rebuilding and widening it in the process.[158] This new building was called the Star Building, because Charles II placed a huge gilt Garter star on the side of it.[158] May took down and rebuilt the walls of Edward III's hall and chapel, incorporating larger windows but retaining the height and dimensions of the medieval building.[158] Although Windsor Castle was now big enough to hold the entire court, it was not built with chambers for the King's Council, as would be found in Whitehall.[159] Instead Charles took advantage of the good road links emerging around Windsor to hold his council meetings at Hampton Court when he was staying at the castle.[159] The result became an "exemplar" for royal buildings for the next twenty-five years.[160] The result of May's work showed a medievalist leaning; although sometimes criticised for its "dullness", May's reconstruction was both sympathetic to the existing castle and a deliberate attempt to create a slightly austere 17th-century version of a "neo-Norman" castle.[161]

William III commissioned Nicholas Hawksmoor and Sir Christopher Wren to conduct a large, final classical remodelling of the Upper Ward, but the king's early death caused the plan to be cancelled.[162] Queen Anne was fond of the castle, and attempted to address the lack of a formal garden by instructing Henry Wise to begin work on the Maestricht Garden beneath the North Terrace, which was never completed.[162] Anne also created the racecourse at Ascot and began the tradition of the annual Royal Ascot procession from the castle.[163]

18th century

[edit]
A painting of a terrace at sunset. On the left, the outer facing of a castle; on the right, the ground drops away sharply showing only the distant landscape. A handful of figures in 18th century dress walk or mingle along the terrace.
The North Terrace at sunset, c. 1790, by Paul Sandby

George I took little interest in Windsor Castle, preferring his other palaces at St James's, Hampton Court and Kensington.[164] George II rarely used Windsor either, preferring Hampton Court.[165] Many of the apartments in the Upper Ward were given out as "grace and favour" privileges for the use of prominent widows or other friends of the Crown.[166] The Duke of Cumberland made the most use of the property in his role as the Ranger of Windsor Great Park.[167] By the 1740s, Windsor Castle had become an early tourist attraction; wealthier visitors who could afford to pay the castle keeper could enter, see curiosities such as the castle's narwhal horn, and by the 1750s buy the first guidebooks to Windsor, produced by George Bickham in 1753 and Joseph Pote in 1755.[168] [nb 9] As the condition of the State Apartments continued to deteriorate, even the general public were able to regularly visit the property.[170]

George III reversed this trend when he came to the throne in 1760.[166] George disliked Hampton Court and was attracted by the park at Windsor Castle.[166] George wanted to move into the Ranger's House by the castle, but his brother, Henry was already living in it and refused to move out.[171] Instead, George had to move into the Upper Lodge, later called the Queen's Lodge, and started the long process of renovating the castle and the surrounding parks.[171] Initially the atmosphere at the castle remained very informal, with local children playing games inside the Upper and Lower Wards, and the royal family frequently seen as they walked around the grounds.[170] As time went by, however, access for visitors became more limited.[164]

George's architectural taste shifted over the years.[172] As a young man, he favoured Classical, in particular Palladian styles, but the king came to favour a more Gothic style, both as a consequence of the Palladian style becoming overused and poorly implemented, and because the Gothic form had come to be seen as a more honest, national style of English design in the light of the French Revolution.[173] Working with the architect James Wyatt, George attempted to "transform the exterior of the buildings in the Upper Ward into a Gothic palace, while retaining the character of the Hugh May state rooms".[174] The outside of the building was restyled with Gothic features, including new battlements and turrets.[174] Inside, conservation work was undertaken, and several new rooms constructed, including a new Gothic staircase to replace May's 17th-century version, complete with the Grand Vestibule ceiling above it.[175] New paintings were purchased for the castle, and collections from other royal palaces moved there by the king.[176] The cost of the work came to over £150,000 (£100 million in 2008 terms).[177][178] The king undertook extensive work in the castle's Great Park as well, laying out the new Norfolk and Flemish farms, creating two dairies and restoring Virginia Water Lake, and its grotto and follies.[179]

At the end of this period Windsor Castle became a place of royal confinement. In 1788 the king first became ill during a dinner at Windsor Castle; diagnosed as suffering from madness, he was removed for a period to the White House at Kew, where he temporarily recovered.[180] After relapses in 1801 and 1804, his condition became enduring from 1810 onwards and he was confined in the State Apartments of Windsor Castle, with building work on the castle ceasing the following year.[181]

19th century

[edit]
A painting showing a stone chapel on the left, with a timber built entrance, out of which are parading a number of white clad individuals. In the middle of the painting is a grassy area, across which are marching various red-uniformed soldiers. On the right hand side is a line of stone buildings, with a circular tower on a mound in the far distance.
The Lower Ward in 1840, by Joseph Nash, showing the Military Knights attending chapel on a Sunday morning

George IV came to the throne in 1820 intending to create a set of royal palaces that reflected his wealth and influence as the ruler of an increasingly powerful Britain.[182] George's previous houses, Carlton House and the Brighton Pavilion were too small for grand court events, even after expensive extensions.[182] George expanded the Royal Lodge in the castle park while he was Prince Regent, and then began a programme of work to modernise the castle itself once he became king.[182]

George persuaded Parliament to vote him £300,000 for restoration (£245 million in 2008 terms).[95][178] Under the guidance of George's advisor, Charles Long, the architect Jeffry Wyatville was selected, and work commenced in 1824.[183][nb 10] Wyatville's own preference ran to Gothic architecture, but George, who had led the reintroduction of the French Rococo style to England at Carlton House, preferred a blend of periods and styles, and applied this taste to Windsor.[184] The terraces were closed off to visitors for greater privacy and the exterior of the Upper Ward was completely remodelled into its current appearance.[185] The Round Tower was raised in height to create a more dramatic appearance; many of the rooms in the State Apartments were rebuilt or remodelled; numerous new towers were created, much higher than the older versions.[186] The south range of the ward was rebuilt to provide private accommodation for the king, away from the state rooms.[187] The statue of Charles II was moved from the centre of the Upper Ward to the base of the motte.[187] Sir Walter Scott captured contemporary views when he noted that the work showed "a great deal of taste and feeling for the Gothic architecture"; many modern commentators, including Prince Charles, have criticised Wyatville's work as representing an act of vandalism of May's earlier designs.[188] The work was unfinished at the time of George IV's death in 1830, but was broadly completed by Wyatville's death in 1840. The total expenditure on the castle had soared to the colossal sum of over one million pounds (£817 million in 2008 terms) by the end of the project.[95][178]

A black and white photograph of an elderly Victoria sat alongside a younger woman (Beatrice) reading a newspaper. The room is ornately decorated, with a number of photographs, paintings and a large chandelier hanging from the ceiling.
Queen Victoria and Princess Beatrice in the Queen's Sitting Room in 1895, photographed by Mary Steen

Queen Victoria and Prince Albert made Windsor Castle their principal royal residence, despite Victoria complaining early in her reign that the castle was "dull and tiresome" and "prison-like", and preferring Osborne and Balmoral as holiday residences.[189] The growth of the British Empire and Victoria's close dynastic ties to Europe made Windsor the hub for many diplomatic and state visits, assisted by the new railways and steamships of the period.[190] Indeed, it has been argued that Windsor reached its social peak during the Victorian era, seeing the introduction of invitations to numerous prominent figures to "dine and sleep" at the castle.[191] Victoria took a close interest in the details of how Windsor Castle was run, including the minutiae of the social events.[192] Few visitors found these occasions comfortable, both due to the design of the castle and the excessive royal formality.[193] Prince Albert died in the Blue Room at Windsor Castle in 1861 and was buried in the Royal Mausoleum built at nearby Frogmore, within the Home Park.[194] The prince's rooms were maintained exactly as they had been at the moment of his death and Victoria kept the castle in a state of mourning for many years, becoming known as the "Widow of Windsor", a phrase popularised in the famous poem by Rudyard Kipling.[195] The Queen shunned the use of Buckingham Palace after Albert's death and instead used Windsor Castle as her residence when conducting official business near London.[196] Towards the end of her reign, plays, operas, and other entertainments slowly began to be held at the castle again, accommodating both the Queen's desire for entertainment and her reluctance to be seen in public.[197]

Several minor alterations were made to the Upper Ward under Victoria. Anthony Salvin rebuilt Wyatville's grand staircase, with Edward Blore constructing a new private chapel within the State Apartments.[198] Salvin also rebuilt the State Dining Room following a serious fire in 1853.[199] Ludwig Gruner assisted in the design of the Queen's Private Audience Chamber in the south range.[200] Blore and Salvin also did extensive work in the Lower Ward, under the direction of Prince Albert, including the Hundred Steps leading down into Windsor town, rebuilding the Garter, Curfew and Salisbury towers, the houses of the Military Knights and creating a new Guardhouse.[201] George Gilbert Scott rebuilt the Horseshoe Cloister in the 1870s.[52] The Norman Gatehouse was turned into a private dwelling for Sir Henry Ponsonby.[202] Windsor Castle did not benefit from many of the minor improvements of the era, however, as Victoria disliked gaslight, preferring candles; electric lighting was only installed in limited parts of the castle at the end of her reign.[193] Indeed, the castle was famously cold and draughty in Victoria's reign,[202] but it was connected to a nearby reservoir, with water reliably piped into the interior for the first time.[203]

Many of the changes under Victoria were to the surrounding parklands and buildings. The Royal Dairy at Frogmore was rebuilt in a mock Tudor style in 1853; George III's Dairy rebuilt in a Renaissance style in 1859; the Georgian Flemish Farm rebuilt, and the Norfolk Farm renovated.[204] The Long Walk was planted with fresh trees to replace the diseased stock.[67] The Windsor Castle and Town Approaches Act, passed by Parliament in 1848, permitted the closing and re-routing of the old roads which previously ran through the park from Windsor to Datchet and Old Windsor.[205] These changes allowed the royal family to undertake the enclosure of a large area of parkland to form the private "Home Park" with no public roads passing through it.[203] The Queen granted additional rights for public access to the remainder of the park as part of this arrangement.[203]

20th century

[edit]
Changing style of St George's Hall since the 1600s
Three pictures show a changing room over time; in the first painting the room is characterised by tall, curved windows and elaborate painted ceilings. In the second painting, the room has been almost doubled in length, with arches and a wooden beamed ceiling. In the third photograph, the ceiling is made of fresh oak and a large red carpet has been installed.
Baroque style under Charles II
Gothic alterations made by Sir Jeffry Wyatville for George IV
Downesian Gothic reconstruction after the 1992 fire

Edward VII came to the throne in 1901 and immediately set about modernising Windsor Castle with "enthusiasm and zest".[206] Many of the rooms in the Upper Ward were de-cluttered and redecorated for the first time in many years, with Edward "peering into cabinets; ransacking drawers; clearing rooms formerly used by the Prince Consort and not touched since his death; dispatching case-loads of relics and ornaments to a special room in the Round Tower ... destroying statues and busts of John Brown ... throwing out hundreds of 'rubbishy old coloured photographs' ... [and] rearranging pictures".[207] Electric lighting was added to more rooms, along with central heating; telephone lines were installed, along with garages for the newly invented automobiles.[208] The marathon was run from Windsor Castle at the 1908 Olympics,[nb 11] and in 1911 the pioneering aviator Thomas Sopwith landed an aircraft at the castle for the first time.[209]

George V continued a process of more gradual modernisation, assisted by his wife, Mary of Teck, who had a strong interest in furniture and decoration.[210] Mary sought out and re-acquired items of furniture that had been lost or sold from the castle, including many dispersed by Edward VII, and also acquired many new works of art to furnish the state rooms.[211] Queen Mary was also a lover of all things miniature, and a famous dolls' house was created for her at Windsor Castle, designed by the architect Edwin Lutyens and furnished by leading craftsmen and designers of the 1930s.[212] George V was committed to maintaining a high standard of court life at Windsor Castle, adopting the motto that everything was to be "of the best".[213] A large staff was still kept at the castle, with around 660 servants working in the property during the period.[212] Meanwhile, during the First World War, anti-German feeling led the members of the royal family to change their dynastic name from the German House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha; George decided to take the new name from the castle, and the royal family became the House of Windsor in 1917.[214]

Edward VIII did not spend much of his reign at Windsor Castle.[214] He continued to spend most of his time at Fort Belvedere in the Great Park, where he had lived while Prince of Wales.[214] Edward created a small aerodrome at the castle on Smith's Lawn, now used as a golf-course.[214] Edward's reign was short-lived and he broadcast his abdication speech to the British Empire from the castle in December 1936, adopting the title of Duke of Windsor.[214] His successor, George VI also preferred his own original home, the Royal Lodge in the Great Park, but moved into Windsor Castle with his wife Elizabeth.[214] As king, George revived the annual Garter Service at Windsor, drawing on the accounts of the 17th-century ceremonies recorded by Elias Ashmole, but moving the event to Ascot Week in June.[215]

On the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 the castle was readied for war-time conditions. Many of the staff from Buckingham Palace were moved to Windsor for safety, security was tightened and windows were blacked-out.[216] There was significant concern that the castle might be damaged or destroyed during the war; the more important art works were removed from the castle for safe-keeping, the valuable chandeliers were lowered to the floor in case of bomb damage, and a sequence of paintings by John Piper were commissioned from 1942 to 1944 to record the castle's appearance.[217] The king and queen and their children Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret lived for safety in the castle, with the roof above their rooms specially strengthened in case of attack.[218] The king and queen drove daily to London, returning to Windsor to sleep, although at the time this was a well-kept secret, as for propaganda and morale purposes it was reported that the king was still residing full-time at Buckingham Palace.[218] The castle was also used as a storage facility; for example, the only purified heavy water at the time was rescued from France in the face of the imminent French defeat in 1940, and most of it was sent to the castle to be stored in the basement alongside the Crown Jewels.[219] After the war the king revived the "dine and sleep" events at Windsor, following comments that the castle had become "almost like a vast, empty museum"; nonetheless, it took many years to restore Windsor Castle to its pre-war condition.[220]

In February 1952, Elizabeth II came to the throne and decided to make Windsor her principal weekend retreat.[221] The private apartments which had not been properly occupied since the era of Queen Mary were renovated and further modernised, and the Queen, Prince Philip and their two children took up residence.[221] By the early 1990s, however, there had been a marked deterioration in the quality of the Upper Ward, in particular the State Apartments.[222] Generations of repairs and replacements had resulted in a "diminution of the richness with which they had first been decorated", a "gradual attrition of the original vibrancy of effect, as each change repeated a more faded version of the last".[223] A programme of repair work to replace the heating and the wiring of the Upper Ward began in 1988.[224] Work was also undertaken to underpin the motte of the Round Tower after fresh subsidence was detected in 1988, threatening the collapse of the tower.[225]

1992 fire

[edit]
A photograph focusing on a large wooden sculpture of a unicorn, rearing on its hind legs. Behind it part of a wall and ceiling can be seen, the latter decorated with heraldic shields.
A unicorn, one of four Queen's Beasts carved by Ben Harms and Ray Gonzalez to replace carvings destroyed in the 1992 fire

On 20 November 1992, a major fire occurred at Windsor Castle, lasting for 15 hours and causing widespread damage to the Upper Ward.[226] The Private Chapel in the north-east corner of the State Apartments was being renovated as part of a long term programme of work within the castle, and it is believed that one of the spotlights being used in the work set fire to a curtain by the altar during the morning.[227] The fire spread quickly and destroyed nine of the principal state rooms and severely damaged more than 100 others.[227] Fire-fighters applied water to contain the blaze, while castle staff attempted to rescue the precious artworks from the castle.[228] Many of the rooms closest to the fire had been emptied as part of the renovation work, and this contributed to the successful evacuation of most of the collection.[227]

The fire spread through the roof voids and efforts continued through the night to contain the blaze, at great risk to the 200 fire-fighters involved.[229] It was not until late afternoon that the blaze began to come under control, although the fire continued during the night before being officially declared extinguished the next morning.[230] Along with the fire and smoke damage, one of the unintended effects of the fire-fighting was the considerable water damage to the castle; more than 1.5 million gallons of water were used to extinguish it, which in many ways caused more complex restoration problems than the fire.[231]

Two major issues for Windsor Castle emerged following the fire. The first was a political debate in Britain as to who should pay for the repairs.[232] Traditionally, as the property of the Crown, Windsor Castle was maintained, and if necessary repaired, by the British government in exchange for the profits made by the Crown Estate.[233] Furthermore, like other occupied royal palaces, it was not insured on grounds of economy.[234] At the time of the fire, however, the British press strongly argued in favour of the Queen herself being required to pay for the repairs from her private income.[232] A solution was found in which the restoration work would be paid for by opening Buckingham Palace to the public at selected times of the year, and by introducing new charges for public access to the parkland surrounding Windsor.[235] The second major issue concerned how to repair the castle. Some suggested that the damaged rooms should be restored to their original appearance, but others favoured repairing the castle so as to incorporate modern designs.[236] The decision was taken to largely follow the pre-fire architecture with some changes to reflect modern tastes and cost, but fresh questions emerged over whether the restoration should be undertaken to "authentic" or "equivalent" restoration standards.[25] Modern methods were used at Windsor to reproduce the equivalent pre-fire appearance, partially due to the cost.[237] The restoration programme was completed in 1997 at a total cost of £37 million (£67 million in 2015 terms).[178][238]

21st century

[edit]
A photograph of a grey stone castle, stretching alongside the left of the picture. A road makes up the centre, along which a number of people walk.
Windsor Castle is one of Britain's major tourist attractions.

Windsor Castle, part of the Occupied Royal Palaces Estate, is owned by Charles III in right of the Crown,[239] and day-to-day management is by the Royal Household.[240] In terms of population, Windsor Castle is the largest inhabited castle in the world and the longest-occupied palace in Europe, but it also remains a functioning royal home.[241] As of 2006, around 500 people were living and working in the castle.[242] Elizabeth II had increasingly used the castle as a royal palace as well as her weekend home before her death.[243] In recent years, Windsor Castle has hosted visits from President Mbeki of South Africa, King Abdullah II of Jordan and presidents Obama,[244] Trump, and Biden of the United States.[245] The castle remains an important ceremonial location. The Waterloo ceremony is carried out in the presence of the monarch each year, and the annual ceremony of the Order of the Garter takes place in St George's Chapel.[246] When the Queen was in residence, the Guard Mounting ceremony occurred on a daily basis.[247] The Royal Ascot procession leaves the castle each year during the annual meeting.[248]

During Elizabeth II's reign much was done, not only to restore and maintain the fabric of the building, but also to transform it into a major British tourist attraction, containing a significant portion of the Royal Collection of art. Archaeological work at the castle has continued, following on from limited investigations in the 1970s, the work on the Round Tower from 1988 to 1992 and the investigations following the 1992 fire.[249] During 2007, 993,000 tourists visited the castle.[250] This has had to be achieved in co-ordination with security issues and the castle's role as a working royal palace.[240] In late 2011 two large water turbines were installed upstream of the castle on the River Thames to provide hydroelectric power to the castle and the surrounding estate.[251] In April 2016, the Royal Collection Trust announced a £27m project to reinstate the original entrance hall of the castle to visitors, as well as a new café in the 14th-century undercroft.[252] The new entrance was opened at the end of 2019.[253] From March 2020, the Queen and her husband, Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, shielded at Windsor during the COVID-19 pandemic with a small staff in what became known as 'HMS Bubble' – a jocular reference to the UK Government's rules on household support 'bubbles' during the pandemic.[254] The pandemic also meant that they celebrated Christmas at Windsor Castle rather than Sandringham House for the first time since 1987.[255] Prince Philip died at Windsor Castle on 9 April 2021.[256]

On Christmas Day 2021, while Queen Elizabeth was staying at Windsor Castle, 19-year-old Jaswant Singh Chail broke into the gardens using a rope ladder and carrying a crossbow. Before he could enter any buildings Chail was arrested and later sectioned under the Mental Health Act. He had posted a video on the internet threatening to assassinate the Queen.[257] Chail later admitted that his aim was to take revenge for the Amritsar massacre of 1919. He pleaded guilty to charges under section two of the Treason Act 1842.[258]

On 7 May 2023, the lawn in the Home Park just beyond the East Terrace of the castle was the venue for the Coronation Concert, in celebration of the coronation of Charles III and Camilla. It was the first open air concert to be staged at the castle and included performances by Lionel Richie, Katy Perry, Andrea Bocelli, Sir Bryn Terfel, Take That and Paloma Faith.[259][260] The concert was attended by members of the royal family, alongside an audience of 20,000 members of the public.

A photograph of a white-grey stone castle, running left to right; trees are in the foreground, with a large white tower the most prominent part of the castle in the middle of the shot.
Windsor Castle, seen from the north; (l to r) Upper Ward, Middle Ward, Round Tower, St George's Chapel, Lower Ward and Curfew Tower

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ The Queen's Drawing Room, Queen's Ballroom, Queen's Audience Chamber, Queen's Presence Chamber, Queen's Guard Chamber, King's Presence Chamber, King's Audience Room, King's Drawing Chamber and King's Dining Chamber residing in May's 17th-century structure; Wyatville transformed the layout of the eastern end of the State Apartments, forming the Grand Reception Room, White Drawing Room, Green Drawing Room, Crimson Drawing Room, the Waterloo Chamber, State Dining Room and Octagonal Dining Room.
  2. ^ "Authentic restoration" involves using original materials and methods; "equivalent restoration", as at Windsor, can integrate modern "fire compartmentation, service ducting, hygienic materials and strengthened floors", provided they cannot be seen.[25]
  3. ^ The rooms completely or largely destroyed in the fire were St George's Hall, the Lantern Lobby, the Octagonal Dining Room, the Private Chapel, and the Great Kitchen.
  4. ^ "Larderie" means "meat passage".
  5. ^ Tim Tatton-Brown argues that only the initial, middle bailey was built by William I, suggesting a later construction date for the two larger baileys.[77]
  6. ^ The other two residences favoured by Henry III were the Palace of Westminster and Clarendon Palace.[85]
  7. ^ The interiors were approximately 22 ft 11 in (7 m) in height, and 23 ft 7 in (7.2 m) wide.[102]
  8. ^ Falstaff's role in The Merry Wives of Windsor, for example, is believed to represent Frederick I; the duke became an unpopular figure of fun at Elizabeth I's court for his unwillingness, or inability, to pay his bills and his constant attempts to join the Order of the Garter. Various parts of the park surrounding Windsor are also represented in the play.[140]
  9. ^ The Windsor narwhal horn had been kept since medieval times, when it was first believed to be a unicorn's horn. It narrowly escaped being lost during the Interregnum after the Civil War.[169]
  10. ^ Jeffry Wyatville was the nephew of James Wyatt who had worked for George III; he changed his name to distinguish himself from his other relatives working in architecture.
  11. ^ This resulted in a change to the official distance to the race; the previous length of a marathon had been around 24 miles; since 1908, the distance has been set at 26 miles and 385 yards, the distance between Windsor Castle and the main stadium.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Hugh Roberts, Options Report for Windsor Castle, cited Nicolson, p. 79.
  2. ^ a b Robinson, p. 27.
  3. ^ a b c d e Brindle and Kerr, p. 39.
  4. ^ Gordon Rayner (26 December 2015). "Buckingham Palace could become Queen's 'third home' as she opts for more time at Windsor and Balmoral". The Telegraph. The Queen spent 10 more nights at Windsor Castle than Buckingham Palace in 2011, 35 in 2012, 59 in 2013, 52 in 2014, and 71 in 2015
  5. ^ "Royal Collection Trust – Windsor Castle Fact Sheet" (PDF). Royal Collection Trust. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  6. ^ Robinson, pp. 7, 156.
  7. ^ Nicolson, pp. 3–4.
  8. ^ a b Nicolson, p. 123.
  9. ^ Nicolson, p.78; Brindle and Kerr, p. 61.
  10. ^ Robinson, p. 156.
  11. ^ a b Robinson, p. 142.
  12. ^ Tatton-Brown, p. 14.
  13. ^ a b Mackworth-Young, p. 1.
  14. ^ Nicolson, p. 120.
  15. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 234.
  16. ^ a b Robinson, p. 55.
  17. ^ Brindle and Kerr, p. 31.
  18. ^ "Windsor Castle's East Terrace Garden opens to public". Evening Standard. 6 August 2020. Retrieved 6 August 2020.
  19. ^ Colvin, p. 392, cited Brown (1984), p. 230.
  20. ^ a b Robinson, p. 92.
  21. ^ Brindle and Kerr, p. 61.
  22. ^ Emery, p. 200.
  23. ^ Nicolson, p. 79.
  24. ^ Nicolson, pp. 79, 172–173.
  25. ^ a b c Nicolson, p. 78.
  26. ^ Nicolson, p. 70.
  27. ^ Ireland, p. 93; Nicolson, p. 191.
  28. ^ Nicolson, p. 176.
  29. ^ Nicolson, pp. 123, 174; Brindle and Kerr, p. 28.
  30. ^ a b Nicolson, p. 190.
  31. ^ Brindle and Kerr, p. 28; Nicolson, p. 184.
  32. ^ a b Nicolson, pp. 197–198.
  33. ^ Nicolson, pp. 206–207.
  34. ^ Watkin, p. 345.
  35. ^ Nicolson, p. 128.
  36. ^ Rowse, p. 95.
  37. ^ Nicolson, p. 191.; Brindle and Kerr, p. 56.
  38. ^ Robinson, p. 74.
  39. ^ Robinson, p. 118.
  40. ^ Nicolson, p. 212.
  41. ^ Nicolson, p. 233.
  42. ^ Nicolson, p. 234.
  43. ^ Nicolson, pp. 211, 214, 218.
  44. ^ Nicolson, p. 235.
  45. ^ a b "Private chapel for Archie's christening was rebuilt after Windsor Castle fire". ITV News. 6 July 2019. Retrieved 26 May 2020.
  46. ^ Nicolson, pp. 244–246.
  47. ^ Nicolson, pp. 246, 264.
  48. ^ Nicolson, p. 146; Brindle and Kerr, p. 26.
  49. ^ Emery, p. 197.
  50. ^ Nicolson, pp. 166–167.
  51. ^ Nicolson, pp. 125, 152.
  52. ^ a b Robinson, p. 121.
  53. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 20.
  54. ^ Robinson, pp. 18, 28.
  55. ^ a b c d Mackworth-Young, p. 80.
  56. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 22.
  57. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 22; Rowse, p. 37.
  58. ^ a b Tatton-Brown, p. 26.
  59. ^ a b Robinson, pp. 26, 121.
  60. ^ a b Robinson, p. 26.
  61. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 81.
  62. ^ Robinson, pp. 14, 121.
  63. ^ Robinson, p. 30.
  64. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 27.
  65. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 42.
  66. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 72.
  67. ^ a b Robinson, p. 122.
  68. ^ "The Long Walk". Windsor Berkshire UK. WordPress. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
  69. ^ Cantor, p. 105.
  70. ^ Robinson, pp. 55, 122.
  71. ^ "The Crown Estate – Windsor Great Park". The Crown Estate. 2015. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
  72. ^ Brown (1989), p. 230; Cantor, p. 105.
  73. ^ a b Mackworth-Young, p. 6.
  74. ^ Rowse, p. 12; Robinson, p. 13.
  75. ^ Emery, p. 193; Tatton-Brown, p. 18; Robinson, p. 11.
  76. ^ a b c d e f g h Emery, p. 193.
  77. ^ Tatton-Brown, p. 18.
  78. ^ Brown (1989), p. 227; Robinson, p. 11.
  79. ^ Brindle and Kerr, p. 32.
  80. ^ South, p. 35.
  81. ^ Brindle and Kerr, pp. 32–33.
  82. ^ a b c d Brindle and Kerr, p. 33.
  83. ^ Robinson, p. 14.
  84. ^ a b c d Tatton-Brown, p. 24.
  85. ^ a b c Brindle and Kerr, p. 34.
  86. ^ Brindle and Kerr, p. 34; Robinson, p. 15.
  87. ^ Nicolson, p. 123; Emery, p. 193.
  88. ^ a b Tatton-Brown, p. 25.
  89. ^ Robinson, p. 15.
  90. ^ Robinson, p. 17.
  91. ^ a b c d e f g Steane, p. 110.
  92. ^ Tatton-Brown, p. 23; Barber, p. 41.
  93. ^ Nicolson, pp. 118–119.
  94. ^ a b Nicolson, p. 121.
  95. ^ a b c Nicolson, p. 106.
  96. ^ Brown (1984), p. 91; Nicolson, p. 122.
  97. ^ a b Emery, p.196.
  98. ^ Nicolson, p. 121; Emery, p. 196.
  99. ^ Nicolson, p. 124.
  100. ^ Nicolson, p.120; Brindle and Ward, p. 40.
  101. ^ Steven Brindle, cited Nicolson, p. 125.
  102. ^ a b Brindle and Kerr, p. 44.
  103. ^ Brown (1989), p. 230.
  104. ^ Ritchie, p. 100.
  105. ^ a b Rowse, p. 28.
  106. ^ Rowse, p. 29.
  107. ^ Pounds, p. 249.
  108. ^ Wolffe, pp. 27–28
  109. ^ a b c Rowse, p. 30.
  110. ^ Rowse, p. 31.
  111. ^ Rowse, p. 39.
  112. ^ Rowse, p. 34.
  113. ^ Rowse, p. 41; Rubin, p. 284.
  114. ^ a b c Rowse, p. 43.
  115. ^ Rowse, p. 43; Knox and Leslie pp. 3–7, cited Hoak p. 72.
  116. ^ a b c d Brindle and Kerr, p. 46.
  117. ^ Brindle and Kerr, p. 46; Rowse, p. 43.
  118. ^ Rowse, p. 46.
  119. ^ Rowse, p. 47.
  120. ^ Rowse, p. 48.
  121. ^ Rowse, pp. 52–53.
  122. ^ Rowse, p. 61.
  123. ^ Brindle and Kerr, p. 46; Rowse, p. 47.
  124. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 25.
  125. ^ Rowse, p. 55.
  126. ^ Rowse, p. 55; Hoak, p. 101.
  127. ^ Rowse, p. 56.
  128. ^ a b Williams (1860), p. 69.
  129. ^ Rowse, p. 57.
  130. ^ Rowse, pp. 57–60.
  131. ^ Rowse, p. 60.
  132. ^ Williams (1971), p. 25.
  133. ^ Rowse, p. 67.
  134. ^ a b Rowse, p. 64.
  135. ^ Brindle and Kerr, pp. 46–47.
  136. ^ Rowse, pp. 64, 66.
  137. ^ a b c Brindle and Kerr, p. 47.
  138. ^ Brindle and Kerr, p. 47; Rowse, pp. 64–65.
  139. ^ Rowse, p. 66.
  140. ^ a b Rowse, p. 69.
  141. ^ Rowse, p. 74; MacGregor, p. 86.
  142. ^ a b Rowse, p. 74.
  143. ^ Rowse, p. 76.
  144. ^ Rowse, p. 77.
  145. ^ a b c d e Rowse, p. 79.
  146. ^ Rowse, pp. 56, 79; Hoak, p. 98.
  147. ^ a b c d e f Rowse, p. 80.
  148. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 36.
  149. ^ a b Rowse, p. 84.
  150. ^ Rowse, p. 85.
  151. ^ a b c Thurley, p. 214.
  152. ^ Dixon, p. 269.
  153. ^ Spencer, p. 326.
  154. ^ Spencer, pp. 327–329.
  155. ^ Spencer, p. 331.
  156. ^ a b Watkin, p. 335.
  157. ^ Barnard, p. 257.
  158. ^ a b c Brindle and Kerr, p. 50.
  159. ^ a b Thurley, p. 229.
  160. ^ Newman, p. 81.
  161. ^ Nicolson, pp. 128–129; Rowse, p. 95.
  162. ^ a b Robinson, p. 55; Mackworth-Young, p. 45.
  163. ^ Mackworth-Young, p. 45.
  164. ^ a b Tite, p. 110.
  165. ^ Tite, p. 24; Robinson, p. 57.
  166. ^ a b c Robinson, p. 57.
  167. ^ Robinson, pp. 57–58.
  168. ^ Tite, p. 110; Robinson, p. 60; Bickham; Pote.
  169. ^ Rowse, p. 86.
  170. ^ a b Robinson, p. 59.
  171. ^ a b Robinson, p. 58.
  172. ^ Robinson, p. 71.
  173. ^ Robinson, p. 72.
  174. ^ a b Robinson, p. 76.
  175. ^ Robinson, pp. 74–75.
  176. ^ Robinson, p. 81.
  177. ^ Robinson, p. 75.
  178. ^ a b c d Financial comparison based on average earnings; using the Measuring Worth website. Retrieved 15 November 2010.
  179. ^ Robinson, pp. 60–62.
  180. ^ Clarke and Ridley, p. 46.
  181. ^ Clarke and Ridley, p. 48; Robinson, p. 71.
  182. ^ a b c Robinson, p.85.
  183. ^ Robinson, p. 90.
  184. ^ Ireland, p. 92; Nicolson, p. 79, 172–173.
  185. ^ Robinson, p. 89.
  186. ^ Robinson, pp. 91, 93.
  187. ^ a b Robinson, p. 96.
  188. ^ Robinson, p. 92; Prince Charles, quoted Nicolson, p. 126.
  189. ^ Robinson, p. 117; Rowse, p. 207; Mackworth-Young, p. 75.
  190. ^ Robinson, pp. 117, 126.
  191. ^ Rowse, p. 207.
  192. ^ Rowse, p. 209.
  193. ^ a b Robinson, p. 126.
  194. ^ Rowse, p. 221.
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