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Corfe Castle
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Corfe Castle Distance from Lyndhurst - 33 miles (53 kilometres) via the Sandbanks Ferry Set in the heart of the most glorious Dorset countryside and strategically positioned to command a gap in the Purbeck Hills, the principal north : south route, Corfe Castle and the attractive village huddled around its base surely present one of the most impressive of English landscapes. And the view always comes as a surprise, at least when travelling from Wareham, for the castle does not draw gradually closer, but instead suddenly appears as if by magic around a bend in the A351, a stunning relic, a massive chunk of history rearing up like an angry animal atop its roadside hillock. Now owned and managed by the National Trust, the castle was originally built for William the Conqueror for use as a Royal fortress. Construction commenced in the second half of the 11th century, although substantial changes and additions were subsequently made in the early 12th century by Henry 1st and again by later monarchs. The castle was eventually purchased in 1635 by Sir John Bankes whose widow, Lady Bankes, a staunch Royalist, successfully defended what by then was the family home against Parliamentarian troops during the English Civil War. Until 1646, that is, when the castle fell at the end of a long siege. The family was allowed to leave, but the fortress was in large part destroyed, leaving behind the evocative ruin we see today. Corfe Castle parish church Steam trains and a model village Corfe Castle - the museum As with visits to much of the Isle of Purbeck, there is a choice:
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