Dunster
Castle is a former motte and bailey castle, now a country house, in the
village of Dunster, Somerset, England. The castle lies on the top of a
steep hill called the Tor, and has been fortified since the late
Anglo-Saxon period.
After the Norman conquest of England in the 11th
century, William de Mohun constructed a timber castle on the site as
part of the pacification of Somerset.
The medieval castle walls were mostly destroyed following the siege of
Dunster Castle at the end of the English Civil War, when Parliament
ordered the defences to be slighted to prevent their further use. In the
1860s and 1870s, the architect Anthony Salvin was employed to remodel
the castle to fit Victorian tastes; this work extensively changed the
appearance of Dunster to make it appear more Gothic and Picturesque.
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