Dorset, England
Corfe Castle, Wareham
One of England's most recognisable ruins — a royal castle on a steep hill above the village that shares its name, deliberately blown apart by Parliamentarian forces in 1646 after a Civil War siege rather than left to decay naturally. The result is a shattered, dramatic skyline that National Trust keeps fully staffed and open.
The jagged, part-toppled walls and towers left leaning at odd angles — a rare case where the damage itself is the historical evidence of how the castle fell.
The climb up is steep and uneven underfoot, so proper shoes help; the village below is worth combining with the castle visit rather than rushing straight back to the car.
Royal castle slighted 1646
1000-piece jigsaw of Corfe Castle and the Swanage steam railway, UK-made. Castle-specific — Corfe only, not a generic pick.
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