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162:(1477–1521), born in Brecon Castle, was executed for treason in 1521 and posthumously attainted in 1523, when all the family's estates escheated to the crown. Although some estates were later recovered by his descendants, Brecon Castle began the process of dilapidation. The castle was last besieged by
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made of stone was constructed in the late 12th century (the keep was initially made of wood). In 1233, a bailey wall, also made of stone, was constructed. Two towers, one round and the other semi-octagonal, were built in the 13th century and early 14th century, respectively. A hall block was added
166:, a military commander for the Parliament, in 1645. The Welsh also attacked the castle numerous times, in 1215, 1231, 1233, 1264, 1265, 1273, and 1403. It was first captured by the Welsh in 1215, and it was captured again in 1264 and 1265. The attacks of 1273 and 1403 resulted in serious damage.
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in 1093, and was frequently assaulted by the Welsh in 13th and 15th centuries. The castle's ownership changed numerous times. It began falling into ruin when
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executed the last dukes of
Buckingham, who at the time controlled the castle. It was renovated and made into a hotel in the early 19th century.
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at Brecon in 1093, thereby creating the first stone castle in Wales. The stones were taken from the Roman town of
91:, defeating the local rulers. Bernard received the title of Lord of Brecon. He commenced the construction of the
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at the battle of Brecon, which occurred around Easter 1093. The
Normans subsequently invaded all of
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The castle later passed to the de Braose family. When the de
Braoses rebelled against
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died without male issue. It eventually passed to the
Stafford family, of whom
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Numerous renovations were carried out through the castle's history. A
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received the castle in 1241 and held it until 1373 when
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293:. Amberley Publishing Limited. p. 52.
258:. Amberley Publishing Limited. p. 28.
148:Thomas of Woodstock, 1st Duke of Gloucester
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160:Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham
132:Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford
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146:(1383-1438), daughter and heiress of
136:Edmund Stafford, 5th Earl of Stafford
16:Ruined castle in Brecon, Powys, Wales
457:11th-century establishments in Wales
353:. Boydell & Brewer. p. 8.
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379:, new edition, vol.XII no.1, p.390
350:Welsh Castles: A Guide by Counties
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432:Grade I listed buildings in Powys
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252:Alan Philips (4 November 2014).
427:Grade I listed castles in Wales
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214:"History of the Brecon Castle"
99:. The castle was built at the
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447:1093 establishments in Europe
290:Wales: A Historical Companion
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437:Scheduled monuments in Powys
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75:, sometimes claimed to be
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347:Adrian Pettifer (2000).
221:breconcastlehotel.co.uk
93:motte-and-bailey castle
150:(youngest son of King
79:'s brother, conquered
52:. It was built by the
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77:William the Conqueror
73:Bernard de Neufmarché
58:Bernard de Neufmarché
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376:The Complete Peerage
120:King John of England
399: /
287:(30 October 2012).
403:51.9491°N 3.3938°W
324:britainexpress.com
144:Anne of Gloucester
38:Castell Aberhonddu
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360:978-0-85115-778-8
300:978-1-4456-0990-4
265:978-1-4456-4406-6
164:Rowland Laugharne
124:First Barons' War
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30:Brecon Castle
25:Brecon Castle
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327:. Retrieved
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224:. Retrieved
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179:Georgian era
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128:Bohun family
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115:for mills.
97:Caer Badden
89:South Wales
81:Brycheiniog
421:Categories
391:51°56′57″N
329:24 October
226:24 October
189:References
171:shell keep
152:Edward III
113:hydropower
62:Henry VIII
394:3°23′38″W
373:Cokayne,
174:in 1300.
68:History
40:) is a
442:Brecon
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126:. The
109:Honddu
54:Norman
46:Brecon
42:castle
217:(PDF)
56:Lord
50:Wales
34:Welsh
355:ISBN
331:2015
295:ISBN
260:ISBN
228:2015
107:and
105:Usk
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32:(
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.