Background Until the late eleventh century, this part of southwestern Wales was part of the Welsh state of
Deheubarth. The exact administrative structure of Dehubarth is unclear, but it may have been something of an amalgamation of sub-kingdoms, there being a
Lord of Dyfed (named Cadifor) in this period, from the earlier line of rulers of
Dyfed. Under
King William I,
Rhys ap Tewdwr, the ruling king of Deheubarth, accepted William's suzerainty, and enjoyed support as a loyal
vassal. In 1088, however, when William died, Rhys, believing his vassalage to be for William's life only, attacked
Worcester (
in alliance with other powerful rebel vassals); in theory, treason made his lands forfeit. In 1092, Deheubarth was internally destabilised when Cadifor died, and his sons refused to accept the authority of Rhys ap Tewdwr, instead calling for a rival to assume the throne. Though Rhys managed to suppress the rebellion, he was killed in the following year, in the
Battle of Brecon, while attacking
Bernard de Neufmarche (the husband of Nest, granddaughter of the previous - and only - Welsh
King of Wales). Following Rhys' death, the king's agents immediately seized much of Deheubarth; the west of Dyfed was seized by
Arnulf de Montgomery, while the north and eastern parts were seized by Normans sailing from
Devon -
Martin de Turribus At the same time Normans also took much of the rest of South Wales (although according to an old Welsh legend, reported by the Tudor antiquarian
John Leland, this conquest east of Deheubarth was at the request of Cadifor's surviving brother/son,
Einion). South western Dyfed, including the land in which Wiston was later sited, became a
Marcher Lordship under Arnulf's rule; Arnulf built a castle at
Pembroke from which to rule the land (the Lordship becoming
of Pembroke as a result). In 1102, following the death of King William's successor
William Rufus, the Kingship passed to his brother,
Henry I, but again many powerful vassals - including Arnulf de Montgomery - rebelled in favour of Henry's elder brother (
Robert Curthose). Henry declared Arnulf's lands forfeit, and kept Arnulf's former Marcher Lordship for himself. Six years later, in 1108,
Flanders, the lands of Henry's mother, suffered catastrophic flooding, and many refugees sought help from Henry. Henry settled them in his newly acquired lordship, particularly
Roose (aka
Haverford) and
Dungleddy. The Flemings maintained their culture and were an identifiable group for at least a century;
Existence The Flemish leader in
Dungleddy, a man named Wizo, built a castle to control his lands; it was effective in controlling Dungleddy. Around the castle a settlement arose, named after Wizo - Wiston (Old Flemish/Saxon for ''Wizo's enclosure/town
) - hence the castle came to be called Wiston Castle''. Wizo parcelled out some of his lands to
lesser Flemings, one of whom, in 1130, was Wizo's son, Walter fitz-Wizo. Wizo was later to carry out a similar colonisation in
Lanarkshire in Scotland. In 1147, the Welsh led by
Hywel ab Owain captured Wiston, now under control of Walter, but the Flemings soon got it back. Towards the end of the century, Dungleddy (and the Lordship of Pembroke in general) came under pressure from the sons of
Lord Rhys, who were trying to aid their father to re-establish Deheubarth. In 1193,
Hywel the Saxon (son of Lord Rhys) attacked the Flemings, captured Wiston Castle, and took Wizo's other son, Philip, captive (along with Philip's wife and sons). Philip had only just recently donated lands in Dungelly to the
Knights Hospitaller. It took two years before the Flemings were able to recover Wiston Castle (and hence governance of Dungelly). The castle was sacked by
Llywelyn Fawr, in 1220, but a restoration was ordered by
William Marshall the younger, the Marcher Earl of Pembroke (the Marcher Lordship of Pembroke had been transferred from the crown to
William's great-grandfather, by
King Stephen, in need of allies during
The Anarchy following Henry I's death). Although exactly what happened after 1220 is unclear, the castle was abandoned while in an intermediary building stage; the original towers had been built of wood and the new, unfinished structures were built of stone, and show the original features without embellishments. The shell keep on the summit of the Motte is typical of the
Norman stonework of the time.
Abandonment The castle then came into the possession of
Sir John Wogan (a man whose ancestry is now totally unknown), by completely unclear means. The castle was abandoned after Sir John moved to the nearby
Picton Castle at the end of the 13th century. During the
English Civil War some four centuries later in 1643, the
Royalists established a small outpost at Wiston, perhaps in the abandoned motte. Even this was then abandoned, without an engagement taking place, when (during the following year) parliamentary troops advanced into the area, led by Major-General Rowland Laugharne. However, soon afterwards there was a pitched battle and the Royalists were defeated at the
Battle of Colby Moor, just south of Wiston. ==The site==