Berkeley Castle, in Gloucestershire, has been home to the Berkeley family for around 900 years, with the exception of a 50-year period when it fell into the hands of the Crown. Here you can watch or read about a brief history of the castle, including details relating to Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn’s week-long stay at Berkeley during the summer of 1535, before I share with you some of The Tudor Travel Guide’s top tips for visiting the castle.

If you’d love to go on your own mini-1535 progress, accompanied by me, The Tudor Travel Guide, then stay tuned and read to the end of this blog. Details will follow on where to find more information and how to download your booking form.

The Appearance and Brief History of Berkeley Castle

The castle sits perched on a plateau that overlooks fields stretching away below it. It is an impressive sight. The basic design is of the motte-and-bailey construction typical of the Norman period. This is not surprising as Berkeley Castle was originally built in the eleventh century. However, it underwent further development in the twelfth and fourteenth centuries.

In appearance, the castle is highly distinctive, constructed from local pink-grey and yellow Severn sandstone. Although it is impressive enough today, it was never built as a fortress, but rather as a comfortable family home for the Berkeley family.

Berkeley Castle Gatehouse (Image Courtesty of C.J Haldeman)

Rather disparagingly, John Leland, antiquary and chronicler of sixteenth-century England, referred to the castle in his itinerary as ‘no great thing’. But today Berkeley Castle is considered to be one of the supreme residential survivors of the fourteenth-century. Sadly, although virtually nothing remains of its early interiors, it does retain most of its original external features such as doors, arrow slits and windows even down to iron catches.

In the early medieval period, the castle is probably best known as being the place of imprisonment of King Edward II. Rumours abound even to this day that the King’s death at Berkeley in 1327, possibly at the hands of his captors who (if those rumours are true), murdered him in a rather unspeakable fashion! He was later buried at the nearby Abbey at Gloucester, where his tomb can still be seen to this day.

In 1492, Berkeley Castle came into the ownership of the Crown. This was as a result of a bargain struck between William, then Viscount Berkeley and Henry VII. Viscount Berkeley was to receive a marquessate and the title of Earl Marshal of England (one of the premier offices of the land) while, in return, King Henry VIII would inherit Berkeley Castle upon the Marquis’ death. This he did, and the castle would remain the property of the Crown throughout the remainder of Henry VII’s reign and that of his son, King Henry VIII.

Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn Visit Berkeley

From a Tudor lover’s perspective, the most interesting event that occurred at Berkeley was the visit of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn during the summer progress of 1535. The couple were over a month into their three-and-a-half-month progress when they arrived at Berkeley, staying there for the entire week.

At the time, the constable of the castle was Thomas Cromwell. We know that he was with the Royal party on account of letters written and dated from the castle during his stay. It is clear from those letters that Cromwell was continuing to oversee the visitations of the lesser monasteries, heralding the beginning of the end of the great monastic institutions in England.



Thomas Cromwell

Unfortunately, due to the loss of all the archival records relating to the period of ownership by the Crown, we have no further details of how Henry and Anne spent their time whilst at Berkeley Castle!

The Wow! Factor at Berkeley Castle

However, what undoubtedly makes visiting this property so worthwhile is the exceptional state of preservation of the rooms that would have been used by the Royal couple. These rooms allow the visitor to have a sense of the flow of chambers from the public to the private in a high-status house of the day.

Over the centuries, the less political Berkeley family had developed the castle from its original early motte-and-bailey design with its austere Norman keep, to create a more fashionable and comfortable suite of residential rooms, and accompanying service offices, all within the pre-existing buttressed curtilage.

Today, when you pass under the gatehouse of Berkeley Castle, you enter a single courtyard, with the early medieval keep on your left and the entire range of service and residential lodgings encircling the rest of the inner courtyard.

Typical of the period, when great halls were all the rage, the great hall at Berkeley is directly opposite the gatehouse entrance, entered by a porch. This porch leads into the screen’s passage at the lower end of the great hall. Such a passage separated the hall from the kitchen, buttery and pantry. Today, you still get a good sense of that arrangement.

The Minstrels’ Gallery in the Great Hall at Berkeley Castle (Image Courtesy of C.J. Haldeman)

The great hall itself is one of the finest in the country and impressive in scale. At the high-end, a step demarcates the raised dais, with a stairway leading up to the first floor and the principal, privy chambers.

At the head of the staircase, the old chapel (now a morning room) sits at an angle with the greater, or outer chamber. This is connected to an inner chamber; the range filling much of this south side of the courtyard. In these rooms, we can imagine the Royal couple dining, playing cards and listening to music as they wiled away the long summer evenings in the heart of the Gloucestershire countryside.

The staircase off the high end of the Great Hall

There are a couple of features to note. The first is the wooden gallery in the outer chamber. This once served as the privy gallery of the chapel. However, the gallery was moved from its original position by the 8th Earl of Berkeley, in the early twentieth century, when he undertook considerable renovations of the interiors of the castle. In its time, this kind of gallery would have been commonplace, allowing the highest status people in the house to hear Mass separately from the rest of the household. Therefore, it is not beyond the realms of possibility to think that this very same gallery was used by the king and queen in order to hear Mass while they were residing at Berkeley.

The second gem that you need to look out for if you are visiting, is the sumptuous wall decoration hanging in the lobby at the head of the stairs. I have heard two versions of a story about the origins of this wall covering. The first is that it was a wall hanging made for Anne and Henry’s bedroom, which somehow found its way to Berkeley. Did the Royal couple leave this here after their visit in 1535?

The other story is that it once adorned the royal apartments in Henry’s temporary Palace at the Field of Cloth of Gold. Unfortunately, nobody knows its real origins however, it is clear that the material is of exceptionally high status and fit for a king – and it has been dated to be around 500 years old.

The 500-year-old wall hanging at Berkeley. Just where did it come from?

For more details on this location, and around 70 more places visited by Anne Boleyn, pick up a copy of my book, In the Footsteps of Anne Boleyn, co-authored with Natalie Gruneninger from Amazon US and Amazon UK, as well as other online bookstores.

If you want more information on the 1535 Mini-Progress Tour, or you want to download a booking form, follow this link.

Tudor Rose rating:

Historical Significance – 4 /5

Wow factor – 4 /5

Authenticity – 3 /5

Accessibility – 4 /5

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