Warwick Castle, medieval castle in Warwick, Warwickshire, England, U.K., around which the town of Warwick developed. Five important families in succession in English history—the Beaumonts, Beauchamps, Nevilles, Dudleys, and Grevilles—have owned the castle as earls of Warwick, and it was they who made it one of the country’s most impressive baronial strongholds and later inserted a civilized stately home into it. The flawless gardens were designed by master landscape gardener Capability Brown.
As far back as 914, Alfred the Great’s daughter Aethelflaed built a fortress to command the River Avon, and the oldest survival on the site now is the mound from William the Conqueror’s time. However, today’s castle dates back to Henry de Beaumont, first earl of Warwick, in the 1100s, though most renovations and expansions were undertaken with the Beauchamp ownership, including Thomas Beauchamp, 11th earl of Warwick. One of the first members of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, he campaigned for Edward III in France and lavished the ransoms he extracted from captured French noblemen on his stronghold. His grandson Richard, the 13th earl, was another insatiable paladin who fought for Henry V, was said to have carried the baby Henry VI in his arms to his coronation, and watched the trial and execution of Joan of Arc.
In the mid-15th century the castle passed to a more formidable figure still, Richard Neville, 16th earl of Warwick, known as “the Kingmaker.” He played a key role in the Wars of the Roses, switching sides as his interests dictated. It then passed to Edward Plantagenet, 17th earl of Warwick, before falling under the control of the king of England. The title of earl of Warwick was re-created in 1547 for John Dudley, but when Dudley’s grandson died in 1590, the castle reverted to crown ownership.
Eventually, in 1604, James I gave the castle to Sir Fulke Greville, poet and courtier. After spending a fortune to restore what was by then a derelict castle, Greville was murdered by a servant, and his ghost allegedly haunts the fortress still. In 1759 the title of earl of Warwick was again re-created and bestowed on Francis Greville. He and his descendants created the splendid staterooms as they are now.
During the 20th century the succeeding earls increased tourism at the castle, and in 1998 it was sold to the Tussauds Group, which installed a collection of torture instruments, waxworks, and tableaux. Since 2007 the castle has been managed by Merlin Entertainments.