Thornbury Castle, Thornbury, South Gloucs, BS35 1HH
Tel: 01454 281182
History of Thornbury Castle
The earliest account of Thornbury and the manor exists in the time of King Athelstan (A.D. 925-940) who was grandson of King Alfred the Great. It was then owned by Aylward and in A.D. 1020 his grandson Brictric succeeded to it. Brictric was ambassador at the Court of Baldwin, Count of Flanders where he attracted the love of Baldwin’s daughter Matilda. However, Brictric felt no affection for the lady and hastily returned to England. Matilda later married William the Conqueror who seized the Manor, together with other properties owned by Brictric, and gave it to his Queen. Not satisfied with this, she then had Brictric imprisoned in Winchester where, two years later, he died. Matilda died in 1083 and the Manor reverted to the King. William Rufus ascended the throne in 1087 and granted Thornbury to Robert Fitzhamon as a reward for his support. It then passed through 28 generations to William Stafford Howard, Earl of Stafford, who sold it to his cousin Thomas Howard, 8th Duke of Norfolk, in 1727 and in whose family it remained until 1959.
The 1st Duke of Buckingham was Humphrey Stafford who succeeded to Thornbury in 1403 and who was created Duke of Buckingham in 1444 and was made a Knight of the Garter. He remained faithful to the Lancastrian cause and fell at the Battle of Northampton in 1460. Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, helped place Richard III on the throne and as a reward was made Constable of England. In 1483 he was requested by King Richard to pay him a visit but instead of accepting the invitation he started to collect troops in Wales with the intention of leading them across the Severn. The uprising was unsuccessful and the Duke had to seek refuge in the house of a retainer named Banister. A reward of £1,000 tempted Banister to betray him and the Duke was beheaded in Salisbury without trial. King Richard refused to pay the reward to Banister saying “if he could betray so good a master he would be false to all others”.
Henry Stafford was succeeded by his own son Edward Stafford as 3rd Duke of Buckingham. He was restored by Henry VII to all his father’s lands and titles and was made Constable of England and Knight of the Garter. Up to now Thornbury was just a Manor but the Duke obtained a licence to castellate it and in 1508 started to build the present castle.