Gytha, mother of the defeated King Harold,…
1069 CE
Gytha, mother of the defeated King Harold, had been living in Exeter after the Norman conquest of 1066, and this may have caused the city to become a center of resistance to William the Conqueror.
Another reason for discontent may have been William's insistence that the city's traditional annual tribute of eighteen pounds must be increased.
After Exeter's citizens rejected William's demand that they should swear an oath of fealty to him, he had marched to the city in 1068 and laid siege to it for eighteen days before it capitulated.
The citizens of Exeter had been able to withstand William's siege thanks to the city wall, which had been first built by the Romans and extensively repaired in around 928 by King Athelstan.
Although the siege had ended with the surrender of the city, William had ordered a castle to be built within the wall to safeguard his position.
The place selected is at the highest point, inside the northern angle of the wall, on a volcanic outcrop.
The building of the castle had been left to Baldwin FitzGilbert who was appointed castellan, among other honors.
A deep ditch and internal rampart have been constructed between the northwestern and northeastern city walls, forming a roughly square enclosure with sides of about 600 ft.
The Domesday Book of 1086 reports that 48 houses had been destroyed in Exeter since the King came to England—this has been interpreted by historians to mean that this many houses were on the site cleared for the castle.
A large stone gatehouse, which still survives, is built into the bank at the south side of the enclosure.
It has clear elements of Anglo-Saxon architecture, such as long-and-short quoins and double triangular-headed windows, suggesting that it was built very early by Anglo-Saxon masons on the Normans' orders.
At this early stage, the rampart is probably surmounted by a stockade, though two corner turrets are soon built where the bank meets the city walls, the western one of which (mistakenly known as "Athelstan's Tower") is still present.
The stockade is soon replaced by a masonry curtain wall.
The remains of this wall shows that it was bonded into the repaired city walls, but not the gatehouse, indicating that it was built from the former towards the latter Another early enhancement is the construction of a protective barbican over the city side of the drawbridge.
There is evidence that the castle was attacked before it was completed.
This evidence is both physical, in the form of repairs to Athelstan's Tower; and documentary, in a report made by Orderic Vitalis of an attack made on Exeter in 1069.