Topics > Northumberland > Civil Parishes in Northumberland > Featherstone Civil Parish > Bellister Castle > Bellister Castle - uninhabited parts
Bellister Castle - uninhabited parts
Scheduled Monument areas - based on Historic England data (Open Government Licence).
Scheduled Monument (#1002910): Bellister Castle (uninhabited parts)
Click the headings below to expand (selected extracts from the Historic England scheduling)
The motte and moat of Bellister Castle are well-preserved and the remains of the hall house are partly preserved as upstanding masonry with surviving medieval architectural features. The presence of the 13th century hall house on an earlier motte indicates that there will be archaeological deposits relating to an earlier structure. The monument is a good example of its type and is representative of the need for fortified residences in the Borders throughout the medieval period. It will contain archaeological deposits relating to its construction, use that will chart the development of the monument over time.
The monument includes the remains of a hall house, motte and moat of medieval date, situated on level ground adjacent to the South Tyne. The earliest remains on the site are an artificial mound or motte surrounded by a moat, which is partially silted up. On top of the motte are the remains of a rectangular hall house, aligned north east-south west, with the north and west walls standing to two and three storeys in height and the south and east walls preserved in a tumbled state. The north west corner has alternating quoins and there is the fragmentary remains of a spiral stair in the south west corner. On the north side is the remains of a window in a surround with double-roll moulding and part of a garderobe survives on the south wall. On the west side of the north end of the hall house is the fragmentary remains of a solar tower measuring approximately 8m by 7m, which is a later addition.
The form of the motte indicates that it was built in the late 11th-12th century, whilst the hall house is understood to be of late 13th century date with the addition of the solar tower occurring in the 14th century. By the 16th century Bellister Castle had passed into the hands of the Blenkinsop family and a survey of 1561 lists it as a bastle house. The house was occupied until the 18th century.
The remains of the hall house abut a post-medieval house bearing a datestone of 1669 but built in the 19th century. Both the hall house and post-medieval house together are a listed building Grade I.
