I am fortunate enough that my financial budget allows for us to have a family membership with English Heritage. Whilst visiting Market Bosworth over the summer of 2021, my husband and I decided to pound said membership and visit Ashby de la Zouch castle.
It is a ruins, and some parts of it due to Covid restrictions were inaccessible, but it is set in the most beautiful grounds and we enjoyed walking around and taking on board the nine hundred year old history of the site – in a prior life it had been a manor as many were and had been converted into a castle in the mid 1400’s by William Hastings, aka Lord Hastings who had fought alongside King Edward IV at the Battle of Towton and held some very important roles in the royal household.
Those of you with knowledge of the Wars of the Roses may recognise that name, he was the same Lord Hastings who Richard III had executed for treason in the June of 1483, many say it is because he was scared of Hastings and thought he would stop his "seizing" of the throne.
Anyway, even though it was a charge of high treason, there was no Bill of Attainder against Hastings estate (unusual for such a crime), and the castle and his lands carried on passing through the Hastings line. The next big hurdle was the Civil War in 1642, the Hastings subsequently surrendering the castle in February 1646, although in November of 1648 orders were given to slight it due to the suspicion that maybe they were not as subservient to the parliamentary cause as they were giving the illusion of.
This brought down a huge part of both the Great Tower and the Kitchen tower, but it stayed with the Hastings name until 1789 when it passed to Francis Rowden, the Earl of Moira.
Time waits for no man…and a castle costs a lot of money to upkeep, especially one that had dynamite charges set underneath it with the plan to stop it being habitable, and in 1932, the Rowden family gave it into the guardianship of the Ministry of Works.
There is quite a bit more to the history over those eight hundred years as I am sure you can imagine, but it is nigh on impossible to cover it in a blog.
Anyhoo….back to my husband and I! so, we are walking about, spotting some of the amazing stone work dotted around, reading the guidebook and chatting and we decide to go into the tunnel. I have to admit, I get dizzy on steep stairs, am slightly claustrophobic and there were lots of signs around saying that there was to be no mixing in the area due to the pandemic.
Anxiety building.
So, intrepid husband goes down first (I can hold onto him, he’s a roofer, pretty sure footed, I have been known to call him a mountain goat!) and we are shouting out “coming down” and all that jazz in case someone else is walking through the one person width passageway. As I took a photo, we both saw a shadow disappear around the corner, a full adult human height outline, neither of us were moving so it was not from the camera flash and anyway, it was in motion. Fully expecting to find another person in the area at the end of the passageway we were both shocked to find it empty.
I did what any good investigator would do, checked the doorway out – locked tight – and then made our way back. When we were about to leave I asked the duty manager where the tunnel came out, apparently it was for the servants to get to and from the kitchens with food etc quickly and not have to traipse it through the castle. The exit I found was permanently shut and only she had a key, and as she was the only member of staff there, she had not been in the tunnel that morning.
Had we seen someone rushing to get food to the Hastings before it got cold? Or was it one of the Royalist supporters using the shortcut to beat the parliamentarians? Who knows.