THEOSOPHY
WALES
Cardiff Castle
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Roman forts
There were three successive Roman forts on the site of Cardiff Castle,
most notably a late 3rd century structure, some walls of which can still be seen
today. One of the gates was reconstructed in Victorian times.
Medieval castle
Cardiff Castle was
built for Robert Fitzhamon in 1091, on the site of
and incorporating some walls of the previous Roman fort, although it was mostly
of timber in the usual motte and bailey style. His
son-in-law, Robert of Gloucester,
rebuilt in stone, including the twelve-sided keep which can still be seen
today. Robert, Duke of Normandy who was imprisoned there by
his younger brother, King Henry I from 1106 until 1134. In 1158 it was
the scene for a daring kidnapping carried out by one Ifor
Bach (Ivor the Little). In
the Welsh Revolt of 1183, the castle was attacked and much damaged, but an
expected siege nearly a hundred years later, during the reign of Llywelyn the Last, never emerged. Gilbert de Clare had
refortified many of the defences in readiness.
The Despenser family held the castle
throughout the 14th century. In 1317, Llywelyn Bren
was imprisoned there for revolting against the English and executed in a most
humiliating manner. Four years later, the castle was taken by a combined force
of marcher lords attempting to overthrow King Edward II. okDuring Owain Glynd?r's rebellion in the early 1400's his supporters took
the castle in 1404 and set the town alight (a Cardiff pub is named in memory of Glyndwr).
Later it came into the possession of the Beauchamp Earls of Warwick, who built the living quarters along
the western wall including the Octagon
Tower. King
Henry VII gave it to his uncle, Jasper Tudor in 1488. By 1550, the
castle was held by the Herberts who added further
embellishments. They held the castle for the King during the Civil War, but it
was eventually taken by Parliamentary forces. In 1776, it passed to the Earl of
Bute. The family
made various alterations, including landscaping by Capability Brown.
Victorian mansion
In the early 19th century the castle was enlarged and refashioned in an
early Gothic Revival style for John Crichton-Stuart, 2nd Marquess
of Bute by Henry
Holland. But its transformation began in 1868 when the 3rd Marquess
commissioned William Burges to undertake a massive rebuilding which turned the
castle into a 19th century fantasy of a medieval palace, with a series of rooms
that, perhaps, constitute the highest achievement of later Victorian Gothic
Revival design. The coming together of the Marquess,
enormously rich, early Catholic convert and steeped in a romantic vision of the
mediaeval world and Burges, pre-eminent art-architect, committed Goth and
hugely-talented designer forged one of the great patron/architect relationships
and led to a succession of dazzling architectural triumphs of which Cardiff
Castle is the greatest of all.
Rebuilding began with the Clock Tower, planned 1866-1868 and begun in
1869. The towers continue westward, the Tank Tower, the Guest Tower, the
Herbert Tower and the Beauchamp Tower, part Burges, part Holland, part 15th and
16th century, creating a skyline, best observed from Bute
Park, that echoes Burges' unbuilt design for the Law
Courts and presents a visually-stunning image of a mediaeval city.
Within the Castle, the succession of sumptuous apartments; the Winter and Summer Smoking Rooms, the Chaucer Room, the Arab
Room, Lord Bute's Bedroom, the Roof Garden,
repeatedly illustrates Burges' supreme skill as an art-architect. Taking
complete control of the designing, the building, the decoration and the
furnishing of the apartments, and using his favoured
team of Nicholls, Crace, Lonsdale, Burges created a
suite of rooms in a unique Gothic Revival style that is unrivalled.
Access and events
The castle was later sold to the city of Cardiff by the Bute family in 1947 for £1. It is now a
popular tourist attraction, and houses a regimental museum in addition to the
ruins of the old castle and the Victorian reconstruction. It sits in the
expansive grounds of Bute Park.
The castle has hosted a number of rock concerts and performances and has
the capacity to accommodate over 10,000 people. Notable concerts include the Stereophonics Live at Cardiff Castle
in June 1998 and Green Day in 2000. In 1948 a crowd of 16,000, a record for
British Baseball game, watched Wales
defeat England
in Cardiff Castle grounds. Cardiff Castle
plays host to Cardiff
University's Summer Ball
each year. It is also the site of Wales' largest Mardi Gras held every August.
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Tekels Park
Camberley, Surrey,
England GU15 - 2LF
Concerns about the
fate of the wildlife as
Tekels Park is to
be Sold to a Developer
Concerns are raised
about the fate of the wildlife as
The Spiritual
Retreat, Tekels Park in Camberley,
Surrey, England is
to be sold to a developer.
Tekels Park is a 50
acre woodland park, purchased
for the Adyar
Theosophical Society in England in 1929.
In addition to
concern about the park, many are
worried about the
future of the Tekels Park Deer
as they are not a
protected species.
Anyone planning a
“Spiritual” stay at the
Tekels Park Guest
House should be aware of the sale.
There is confusion as the Theoversity
moves out of
Tekels Park to Southampton,
Glastonbury &
Chorley in Lancashire while the
leadership claim
that the Theosophical
Society will carry on using
Tekels Park despite its sale to a
developer
Future of Tekels
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the sale of Tekels Park
in Camberley, Surrey
to a developer
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What the men in top
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Tekels Park
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