of Bramber Castle, now overgrown and much reduced in height Surveys indicate the
Normans were the first to build a fortification in the area, around 1070. It served as the administrative hub of the newly created
Rape of Bramber, and controlled the River Adur estuary. The castle was held by
William de Braose, 1st Lord of Bramber, whose family originated from
Falaise. During the
First Barons' War,
King John (r. 1199–1216) gave instructions to demolished
Knepp Castle in the same county and to use its resources to reinforce Bramber Castle. Except for a short period when it was confiscated by King John, the castle remained in the
de Braose family, until the male line died out in 1326, and it passed to the
Mowbrays. Bramber was one of the poorest parts of Sussex, and while it remained a centre of administration, the Mowbrays did not live there; by the 1550s, it was recorded as 'the late castle', used for grazing. During the
First English Civil War, Bramber was held by a
Parliamentary garrison, under
James Temple and Simon Lentner. In December 1643,
a skirmish took place nearby, when a
Royalist force unsuccessfully tried to secure the bridge over the River Adur. However, it is unclear whether the castle itself was occupied, while there is no evidence to support a local myth that its associated
church was used as a gun position. The castle ruins and its 12 acres of land were acquired by the
National Trust in 1945. ==Description==