Dover Castle, medieval fortified castle complex in Dover, Kent, England, looking over the English Channel at the crossing’s narrowest point from a height of 375 feet (114 m) above sea level. It has defended England since the beginning of the Common Era and is one of the largest castles in the country.
Though there is evidence that there were fortifications built at the site before the arrival of the Romans, the oldest survival is a lighthouse built by the Romans soon after their conquest of Britain in the first century CE. It is possibly Britain’s oldest building still standing. It was converted into a belfry about a thousand years after it was built.
The Saxons fortified the site with earthwork ramparts, ditches, and wooden palisades. They also used Roman bricks in about 1000 CE to build the church of St. Mary in Castro next to the Roman lighthouse. The church was expanded and repaired in the 14th century but fell into disrepair in the ensuing centuries before being heavily restored in the 1850s. William the Conqueror took over the keep about 1066 and improved the defenses, but the main stone fortifications and the present castle date from Henry II’s time, with most of the building taking place during the 1180s. In 1216 the castle was held for King John against the rebel barons and an army of French invaders.
Building continued under Henry III, and the castle withstood another seige in 1265. During the reign of Edward IV residential rooms were created within the main tower. Later modifications include some fortifications added by Henry VIII, including a 23-foot- (7-m-) long bronze cannon known as “Queen Elizabeth’s Pocket Pistol.” Some of the rooms in the great tower have inscriptions scratched on the walls by foreign prisoners of war held in the castle during the late 17th and early 18th centuries. The defenses were again massively improved during the Napoleonic Wars.
Concealed inside the white cliffs is an intriguing labyrinth of tunnels, first built during the Napoleonic Wars and intended for cannons to repel Napoleon’s threatened invasion. This never materialized, but the tunnels came into their own in World War II when they were extended and used as bombproof offices, a small hospital, and the headquarters of Operation Dynamo, the Dunkirk evacuation.