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The Heritage at the Heart of the University City of Oxford is Oxford Castle. Its history spans ten centuries, beginning even before the Norman Baron Robert D’Oiley built St George’s Tower and the Mound in 1071.
The Castle has served time as a Royal Castle, from which the City and upper
reaches of the Thames Valley were administered, as a centre of justice, and
for several hundred years – a Gaol – hidden from the public view behind impenetrable
5 metre high stone walls. This remarkable place has now become Oxford’s Oldest
New Quarter. The historic buildings have been restored and appropriate architectural
additions have been made. A truly urban environment has emerged, with new and
easy public access on all sides to reveal a host of exciting surprises.
Apart
from the abiding Heritage of the place, it offers many other facilities. Accommodation
is provided in 40 unique apartments and, for the shorter term guests, the trendsetting
Malmaison Hotel is crafted within the prison walls – a charismatic place to
stay with the famed Malmaison-style interpreted in unique buildings.
Beside the restaurant and bars in the hotel, other new places to wine and dine
have been opened – each with seating both inside and in the open air, pedestrian
spaces outside – with a total capacity to seat 2,000 people.
The O3 Gallery features
and celebrates award-winning Oxfordshire artists with a fresh exhibition every
month and the performing arts are in evidence with outdoor opera, jazz, theatre
(including Shakespeare) and film evenings.
For those who practice the art of
shopping, a different experience awaits – specially designed Up-Market Trading
Stalls will be offering a different range of products on each day of the week
ranging from Speciality Foods to Oxfordshire Crafts and others beside.
"Oxford Castle Unlocked“ brings the site’s history to life, opening a whole
new perspective on Oxford. Visitors can climb the Norman Castle Mound and enjoy
panoramic views from the top of St. George’s Tower, while centuries of prison
life are revealed within the 18th century buildings, taking the story across
1000 years, right up to living memory.
The very heart of the City offers the best
in hotel hospitality, unique shopping, great restaurants and bars, visitor interpretation,
visual and performing arts and 1000 years of Heritage.
A visit to Oxford Castle
is not to be missed or ever forgotten!
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Oxford
Castle Unlocked
Castle
and Prison Tours
Open
everyday from 10.00am
(last tour 4.20pm)
For the first
time in 1000
years, the secrets
of Oxford Castle
have been Unlocked
revealing episodes
of violence,
executions, great
escapes, betrayal
and even romance. Walk
through these
ancient buildings
and experience
the stories that
connect the real
people to these
extraordinary
events.
01865
260 666
www.oxfordcastleunlocked.co.uk |
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Trevor Osborne
joined forces with the County Council and the
Oxford Preservation Trust to add a new layer
to the site’s 1000 years of history. By acquiring
a 200 year lease from the County Council and
gaining planning permission to develop the Oxford
Castle Heritage Project, Trevor Osborne secured
a sustainable future for these important buildings
and monuments.
May 2006 - Oxford Castle is officially opened by
the Her Majesty the Queen.
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The site was
then acquired by the County Council and gained
popularity with film makers. Inspector Morse,
Bad Girls and The Bill have all been filmed there
and it reached the big screen when featured in
102 Dalmations, The Spy Game and Lucky Break.
Spy Game:
2001,Starring Robert Redford and
Brad Pitt. Plot Set in 1991, the film
depicts the U.S. and Chinese Governments
on the verge of a major trade agreement
with the American President due to
pay a visit to China to seal the deal.
When the Central Intelligence Agency gets
word that operative Tom Bishop has
been captured trying to free an Englishwoman,
Elizabeth Hadley, from a Chinese prison
near Su Chou, and is being questioned
under torture and will be executed
within twenty-four hours unless he
is claimed by the U.S.
Oxford Prison was used as the Chinese prison set
in Su Chou. Shots of the ambulance approaching
the prison were also filmed in Queen's Lane in
Oxford.
Lucky Break:
2001, Starring James Nesbitt and
Timothy Spall. Synopsis: Feel good prison-escape
movie that sees a group of prison inmates,
put on a theatrical show of Nelson: The
Musical to cover their daring break-out
attempt.
102
Dalmations: 2000,
Starring Glenn Close,
Gérard Depardieu
and Ioan Gruffudd.
Synopsis: After a
spot of therapy Cruella
De Vil is released
from prison a changed
woman. Devoted to
dogs and good causes,
she is delighted
that Chloe, her parole
officer, has a dalmatian
family and connections
with a dog charity.
But the sound of
Big Ben can reverse
the treatment so
it is only a matter
of time before Ms
De Vil is back to
her incredibly ghastly
ways, using her new-found
connections with
Chloe and friends.
Bad
Girls: 1999. TV
Series shot on location
at Oxford Prison. A thoroughly
thought-provoking drama
series based on the events
in a womens prison. Bad
Girls captures the highs
and lows in the prison,
and questions which side
of the bar really is
the most intense- its
a world where the 'screws'
versus the 'cons,' a
world where anything
and everything can happen,
a world where the women
really are vulnerable
at the hands of the screws.
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The Prison Closes. |
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In 1878 the
Prison Commissioners took over the site and Her
Majesty’s Prison Oxford was established. The
prison, sometimes housing three men to a cell. |
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The site then
became home to a new County Hall and remodelled
County Gaol and Court. Within the walls, designed
to keep prisoners in and the public out, were
the Debtors’ Tower, the Governor’s House and
Office, A, B, C and D Wings, Punishment Cells
and an Exercise Yard. |
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In the 1770’s
a Prison report by John Howard condemned the
buildings, stating that years of neglect had
made them unfit for human habitation. The site
was reacquired by the Government and a major
redevelopment programme ensued. The new and austere
buildings, some of which were designed by Prison
architect William Blackburn, formed the basis
of the Gaol’s lugubrious appearance today. |
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The Castle was
refortified and garrisoned during the English
Civil
War but was eventually destroyed by Parliamentary
troops, keen to remove symbols of Royalist loyalties.
It remained the site of the Gaol however and the
prison buildings were repaired and extended. |
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During the reign
of King James, the Castle was purchased by Christ
Church College. |
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The Castle is
officially recorded as being a prison, although,
it is believed that it was used in part as a
prison long before then. |
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Legend has it
that in 1142 Princess Matilda, Henry I’s only
legitimate child and known as the Empress Maud,
escaped from Oxford Castle by fleeing across
the frozen Thames, camouflaged against the snow
and ice by her white nightdress. She was running
from her cousin Stephen who had seized the throne
on Henry’s death in 1135 and had now besieged
the Castle. |
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The development
of Oxford Castle began in 1071 when, having fought
alongside him during the Norman Conquest of 1066,
Robert d’Oilly built Oxford Castle for William
the Conqueror. The Castle was strategically positioned
near to the river, on the western edge of the
existing Saxon town defences. The Motte, or Mound,
with a well chamber, stands over 20 metres high
and is now a Scheduled Ancient Monument. |
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