Hedingham Castle may occupy the site of an earlier castle believed to have been built in the late 11th or early 12th century by
Aubrey de Vere I, a Norman baron. Hedingham was one of the largest manors among those acquired by Aubrey I. The
Domesday Book records that he held the manor of Hedingham by 1086, and he ordered that
vineyards be planted. It became the seat of the
Vere barony.
Aubrey II and
Aubrey III are candidates for initiating the construction of a major stone tower at Hedingham, possibly to reflect the enhanced status of the family. In 1133 Aubrey II, son and heir of the first Aubrey, was created
master chamberlain of England by
Henry I. In 1141, his son and heir Aubrey was granted an earldom (
Earl of Oxford) by
Empress Matilda. By that time he had been
Count of Guînes in what is in present-day northern France for several years by right of his wife's inheritance.
Matilda, wife of
King Stephen, died at Castle Hedingham on 3 May 1152. The castle was besieged twice, in 1216 and 1217, during the dispute between
King John, rebel barons, and the French prince (in both cases the sieges were short and successful for those besieging the castle). The castle was long held by the de Vere family except for a hiatus during the
Wars of the Roses. The castle was taken from the de Veres upon the execution of
John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford, for treason against
Edward IV in 1462. Edward then awarded Hedingham to his brother,
Richard, Duke of Gloucester (later Richard III), who bestowed it on Henry Barley,
Sheriff of Essex and
Hertfordshire. Upon Barley's death in 1475, it passed to
Sir John Howard, a
Yorkist partisan later to become 1st
Duke of Norfolk, who was, in fact, the cousin of de Vere's wife, Elizabeth Howard. After the death of Richard III at the
Battle of Bosworth Field in 1485, the new king,
Henry VII, returned Hedingham to the de Veres in the person of
Lancastrian supporter
John de Vere, 13th Earl of Oxford. In 1713, the castle was purchased by
William Ashhurst; after his death in 1720, the estate passed to his great-great-granddaughter, Margaret Elizabeth Lindsay, the wife of
Lewis Majendie. The Majendie family owned Hedingham Castle for 250 years until
Musette Majendie left it to her cousin, The Honourable Thomas Lindsay, descended from the de Veres through both maternal and paternal lines. His son Jason Lindsay and wife Demetra now live at Hedingham Castle with their children. ==Present day use==