This was a ruin when I was a child:
Castles and abbeys
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Lindisfarne wasn't a ruin when Lutyens converted it into a holiday home - I think it was still habitable, although essentially a fortress with accommodation. Bamburgh Castle near by was renovated & rebuilt in the 19th century. Most castles still used as homes have never been ruins, but have been continually developed & adapted. Abbeys & monasteries of course fell into disuse after the dissolution & were either sold off & converted into houses or fell into ruin (& often used as convenient sources of building material). Some, like Fountains at Studley Royal & Rievaulx at Duncombe Park, were incorporated into a classical 18th century landscape as romantic focal points.
Which is why people like to visit ruins - romantic associations. The associations might have more to do with Hollywood films than the reality of Medieval life, but since Vanbrugh tried to persuade the Duchess of Marlborough to preserve, or at least mark the site of, the ruins of Woodstock Palace ruins have been valued & visited both because of their pictorial qualities and their associations with people or events.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostLindisfarne wasn't a ruin when Lutyens converted it into a holiday home - I think it was still habitable, although essentially a fortress with accommodation. Bamburgh Castle near by was renovated & rebuilt in the 19th century. Most castles still used as homes have never been ruins, but have been continually developed & adapted. Abbeys & monasteries of course fell into disuse after the dissolution & were either sold off & converted into houses or fell into ruin (& often used as convenient sources of building material). Some, like Fountains at Studley Royal & Rievaulx at Duncombe Park, were incorporated into a classical 18th century landscape as romantic focal points.
Which is why people like to visit ruins - romantic associations. The associations might have more to do with Hollywood films than the reality of Medieval life, but since Vanbrugh tried to persuade the Duchess of Marlborough to preserve, or at least mark the site of, the ruins of Woodstock Palace ruins have been valued & visited both because of their pictorial qualities and their associations with people or events.
To me it almost seems as if it's grown out of the ground rather than been built.
Not my photos,I haven't any as good as these.
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Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostIt still is, but has now been completely ruined.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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