1066 Country

There is no doubt that 1066 was a turbulent year in British history. It all started in January when King Edward the Confessor died childless. King Harold was crowned shortly afterwards but his brother Tostig, Hardrada the Norwegian King and William, the Duke of Normandy, all claimed the throne instead.

Harold defeated Tostig and Hardrada at the Battle of Stamford Bridge in Yorkshire on 25th September which just left William contesting the crown. William landed with his army on the south coast of England on 28th September and Harold and his exhausted army marched south from Stamford Bridge to confront them.

William’s army crossing The Channel to invade Britain in September 1066 as depicted in the Bayeux Tapestry

The two armies met on 14th October 1066 in a field seven miles northwest of Hastings at the present-day town of Battle and the fighting lasted from 9am to dusk of that day.

This week Dave, the dog and I stayed at the very edge of this battlefield in an English Heritage cottage:

The cottage looks out over the field where around 14,000 soldiers fought nearly a thousand years ago and where the course of British history was radically altered:

Harold and his men were positioned at the top of the hill where Battle Abbey now stands, using their large shields to form an impenetrable wall. The Normans were at the bottom, in the foreground of this photo:

Now that it is November, the site is closed during the week so, rather wonderfully, we had the entire place to ourselves

This drawing from an information board is of the same view on 14th October 1066:

Harold’s men forming a solid shieldwall at the top off the hill

It is estimated that there were somewhere between 6,500 and 10,000 deaths on this field that day.

Towards the end of the afternoon, King Harold himself was killed:

The Bayeux tapestry shows him being shot through the eye by an arrow, although this version of events is disputed. France is loaning the Bayeux tapestry to the UK next year and it will be on display in the British Museum by the autumn

The battle was a decisive victory for William the Conqueror, who was crowned king soon afterwards, marking the end of Anglo Saxon rule in Britain. In 1070 William founded an Abbey at the top of the field where Harold fell as a memorial to the Battle of Hastings and as an atonement for all the men who were killed on 14th October 1066.

Much of the surrounding land was then preserved as the Abbey’s great park, resulting in it being grazed but unploughed for a very long time, probably since the medieval period. This has allowed yellow meadow ant colonies to flourish in some parts of the battlefield, within enormous anthills that have been there for hundreds of years:

In the nearby village of Crowhurst, the Crowhurst Yew is a living witness to those tumultuous times in 1066. This tree is thought to have been planted around 700AD and would have already been three hundred years old when William and his army passed by on their way to the Battle of Hastings a thousand years ago:

The Crowhurst Yew in Sussex is a female tree and some of her berries have been grown on and planted around the country

This ancient 1,300 year old yew is growing in the graveyard in St George’s Church in Crowhurst in Sussex. In a ridiculous and confusing coincidence, there is another ancient yew growing in another St George’s Church graveyard in a second village called Crowhurst, but this time in Surrey. Both trees are called ‘The Crowhurst Yew’ but the Surrey yew is much older at 4,000 years old:

We passed through Surrey this week and took a short diversion to see this second Crowhurst Yew and I have to say that it is a completely amazing tree. In 1820 the centre of the tree was hollowed out to create a room with a door in which the parish council met for a while. As they were hollowing it out, a canon ball was discovered embedded in the wood, presumably from the English Civil War, another turbulent time in British history
The Surrey Crowhurst Yew is a male tree and so won’t be producing any berries

Whilst we were staying in Battle, we decided to spend a day in Romney Marsh, seeing some of the distinctive churches there. The most iconic of them all is the tiny Church of St Thomas Becket which stands in solitary isolation out on the marsh:

St Thomas Becket, Fairfield

We had to collect the enormous key for the church from its closest house:

And walk to the church across wet, sheep-grazed fields:

Although the church itself dates back to the 12th century, the interior of the church was restored in the 18th century and was surprisingly fitted out with white box pews and a triple-decker pulpit:

All of the Romney Marsh churches we visited that day had box pews
There was a photo in the church of it surrounded by the flooded marsh in November 1960

The Church of St Augustine in Brookland was also very memorable with its detached wooden bell tower and its strange stable-door style entrance:

In the 12th century an open framework was built to take a large bell to warn against floods and invasion. This bell framework was exposed to the winds and the rains of the marsh for three hundred years before being enclosed

The amazing 12th century Norman lead font in the church is still in use today:

We visited four Romney Marsh churches in total:

The church of St Mary in the Marsh with the simple grave of E. Nesbit, author of The Railway Children, in the foreground
St Clement’s Church in Old Romney

Now that it’s November, most National Trust and English Heritage properties in the area are closed during the week. Bodiam Castle, however, was fully open and looking fabulous in the November sunshine:

In 1066 the land at Bodiam was given to Osbern Fitz Hugh by the new Norman overlord of the area but the castle wasn’t built there until 1365

In the centre of the photo below is the castle gatehouse, the top floor of which is an important maternity roost for Daubenton’s and Natterer’s bats.

Daubenton’s bats fish insects from the surface of water using their large feet or tail. The Natterer’s bat has broad wings which allow it to fly slowly and prey on a wide variety of insects including taking spiders from their webs

I was surprised to see that visitors are allowed to walk through the rooms in which the bats roost, including during the summer when the bats will be breeding:

Bat droppings on the top floor of the gatehouse:

We saw Egyptian geese on the battlements:

And a load of enormous carp in the moat. Presumably they are fed because they were very interested in any human peering in at them:

The weather forecast for our stay in 1066 Country had been pretty poor, but actually we were quite lucky with the early November weather. As we walked the dog in some of the many woods in the area, there were plenty of rich autumnal colours to admire:

The RSPB’s Fore Wood near Crowhurst
Park Wood near Appledore
Bedgebury Pinetum

It is always a bit nerve-wracking taking the dog with us on holiday because she is generally quite anxious of things. But we are conscious that she is getting older and find ourselves wanting to spend as much time with her as we can.

She had her twelfth birthday while we were away
A birthday treat of a tub of dog ice cream at the National Trust cafe at Bodiam Castle

I have mentioned quite a few churches already in this post but will finish with one more. St Mary’s in Battle has installed a river of poppies cascading from its bell tower for tomorrow’s Remembrance Sunday:

There are over 10,000 handmade poppies, including knitted, crocheted, and felt flowers, making up this community art installation to mark the 80th Anniversary of the end of the Second World War.

Community groups, schools, care homes, and residents worked together to produce this memorial and I think that they should all be really proud of what they have produced.

4 thoughts on “1066 Country

  1. Seems like you had a fine time. I’ve never been to site of the Battle of Hastings, but your photos make it look so ordinary I find it impossible to imagine the carnage that occurred there. You can’t help wondering what life would be like today if Harold had won!

    Your photo of Bodiam Castle brought back a memory. Nearly 60 years ago my class went on a school trip there, and one of my classmates fell headlong into the moat. I distinctly remember him snivelling and dripping miserably on the long coach ride back to London. Oh, happy days!

    And those yew trees are simply awesome!

    1. Yes, really difficult to place yourself on that field in the 11th century. English Heritage do their utmost to help, though, with a lot of information boards and chainsaw sculptures, and there would have been an audio tour available had the site been open. I believe there are also re-enactments from time to time as well which would definitely help.

      There was a school trip visiting Bodiam Castle while we were there this week actually and the teachers did not seem to have them completely under control. There was a lot of shouting going on and children wildly breaking away from the main group and having to be pursued and returned by an adult. A long drop down into the moat, though. I’m pleased your classmate was alright all those years ago!

  2. An excellent tour, thank you. If a castle and a moat is what you like, it is hard to beat Bodiam. I always enjoyed a visit.

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