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December 3 2008
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Beaumaris Castle
     Castle Street
Anglesey
LL58 8AP
Wales
Collection details
Architecture
Contact details
General information (Tel) : 01248 810361
Website : www.beaumaris.com
Open
1st April to 1st June:
09.30 - 17.00 daily

2nd June to 28th September:
09.30 - 18.00 daily

29th September to 26th October:
09.30 - 17.00 daily

27th October to 31st March:
09.30 - 16.00 Monday to Saturday
11.00 - 16.00 Sunday

Last admission half an hour before closing.
Closed
24th, 25th, 26th December, 1st January
Admission charges
Admission Charge:- Adults £3.00, Reduced rate £2.50.

Family Ticket:- £8.50 - admits 2 adults and up to 3 children under 16 years.

Description
Beaumaris Castle on the Island of Anglesey is the great unfinished masterpiece. It was built as one of the 'iron ring' of North Wales castles by the English monarch Edward I, to stamp his authority on the Welsh. But it was never finished money and supplies ran out before the fortifications reached their full height.

Beaumaris is nonetheless an awesome sight, regarded by many as the finest of all the great Edwardian castles in Wales. Begun in 1295, it was also the last. The king's military architect, the brilliant James of St George, brought all his experience and inspiration to bear when building this castle, the biggest and most ambitious venture he ever undertook.

In pure architectural terms Beaumaris, the most technically perfect castle in Britain, has few equals. Its ingenious and perfectly symmetrical concentric 'walls within walls' design, involving no less than four successive lines of fortifications, was state of the art for the late 13th century.

The stronghold stands at one end of Castle Street, inextricably linked with the history of the town. This was the 'beau marais' (fair marsh) that Edward chose for a castle and garrison town. From the outside, Beaumaris appears almost handsome. It does not rear up menacingly like other fortresses buts sits contentedly in a scenic setting overlooking mountains and the sea, partially surrounded by a water filled moat.

The gate next-the-sea entrance protected the tidal dock which allowed supply ships to sail right up to the castle. Beaumaris is endlessly fascinating. There is so much to see here, the 14 separate major obstacles that any attacker would have to overcome, the hundreds of cleverly sited arrow-slits, the deadly use of 'murder holes' to defend entrances.

This outstanding fortress is a World Heritage inscribed site.

Articles
New Animation Pays Homage to Anglesey's Rich Prehistoric Past

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