Below is a brief summary of the Historical Background
of Bamburgh
In the prehistoric period Northumbria looked very
different from the county we know today. The sea level was lower and
areas which are now on the coast were actually inland. At the end of
the ice age the people who inhabited the region were hunter-gatherers who
lived nomadic lives travelling around in small groups and evidence of the
tools they used has been found in Bamburgh. By the Neolithic period
people started to farm the area and stone tools have been found at Bamburgh
& Glorurum. During the Bronze age the landscape had become more
settled with increased deforestation and the creation of field systems.
By around 550 AD the Anglo Saxons from the continent
expanded northwards and control passed to the Anglican King, Ida. The
British territorial name of Bryneich (Bernicia), was retained by Ida, as was
the British name of the stronghold at Bamburgh, Din Guaroy, from where Ida
and his successors ruled. Later it became Bebbanburg after the Saxon Queen Bebba and finally Bamburgh.
Aidan came to Bamburgh from the monastery of Iona in 635,
at the request of King Oswald who sent for a monk to preach the Christian
faith in Northumbria. Aidan immediately built a wooden church,
somewhere in the vicinity of St Aidans Church. He died in 651, resting
against an outer buttress of the church (this timber buttress survived two
subsequent fires, and tradition says that it is now incorporated in the roof
above the font). From this place, Christianity spread throughout
Northern England.
A medieval village developed around the foot of the
Castle, and a Dominican Friary (dating from 12565) was built in what is now
the western part of the village. Among the friars charitable
activities was a lepers hospital, but this closed in the 14th century and
its site remains uncertain. The Friary acquired extensive lands, which
flourished until the dissolution of the monasteries in 1545 when all their
property was seized by Henry VIII and sold to Sir John Forster for the
princely sum of £664.
Under the ownership of the Forster family (who lived in
Bamburgh Hall) the castle gradually fell into disrepair and became little
more than a ruin, but in the 18th century it came under the ownership of
Lord Nathaniel Crewe, Bishop of Durham. He began the long process of
restoration, but soon died and work was continued by the charitable trust
that bears his name. The Lord Crewe Trust rebuilt much of the village
and created a 'welfare state' for the inhabitants which provided a school, a
dispensary, a hospital, a coastguard service, a lifeboat and a welfare
centre for the shipwrecked mariners. By the 1880's the trust was in
difficulties and in 1894 sold the Castle, village and estate lands to Lord
Armstrong of Cragside, who devoted much of his later life to the restoration
of the castle. When he died in 1900 the work continued in the hands of
his heir - Lord Armstrong of Bamburgh. The magnificent restoration of
the castle has made it a major tourist attraction and it has become a
desirable venue for weddings.
Archaeologists have been
investigating the castle since the late 1950's and the
Bamburgh Research Project
continues to try and decipher 5000 years of occupation of the castle
rock.
"When the Bamburgh
Research project started their investigation at the Castle ten years ago.
Little did we know that one of the most remarkable archaeological sites in
the world was about to be discovered" Francis Watson Armstrong of
Bamburgh Castle.
A recent publication has put together
their findings to date together with information from other leading
archaeologists and specialists in the Geology and natural environment of
Bamburgh. This book is available from local shops and businesses in
Bamburgh.