Castle Studies Trust

Castle Studies Trust The Castle Studies Trust is a UK based charity with the aim of increasing knowledge of castles

The Castle Studies Trust is a UK based charity founded in July 2012 with the aim of increasing knowledge of castles in the UK and abroad. The Trust has the express aim of:

'The advancement of public education for public benefit by promoting the study of and research into the history and archaeology of castles and dissemination of all useful results of such research.'

Every year we award grants t

o fund or co-fund with other organisations and projects. We work closely with the leading experts in castle studies to make sure that grants are targeted so that the maximum returns are achieved. The Castle Studies Trust is entirely funded by the public so we rely on donations to make our grants possible. The CST is developing a programme of exclusive site visits for donors to the projects they have helped fund during the research process or soon after, with an opportunity to learn about the results before publication.

Castle Studies Trust Increases Maximum Grant Award to £15,000The Castle Studies Trust is delighted to announce that for ...
07/06/2026

Castle Studies Trust Increases Maximum Grant Award to £15,000

The Castle Studies Trust is delighted to announce that for our next round of grants, which will open in September, we will be increasing the maximum grant award to £15,000.

The Trust awards grants to advance our understanding of castles and the type of projects we fund are:
• Site-based survey work (e.g. geophysical, architectural, topographical, -LiDAR)
• Excavations
• Scientific tests on objects/materials from a castle site (e.g. radiocarbon dating)
• Review of historical sources (only as part of a Castle Studies Trust funded project)
• Pieces of work, such as reconstruction drawings, which would help the public understanding of a castle site.

Applications open on 1 September 2026 and close on 1 December 2026 and for more information, including an application form you can go here: https://castlestudiestrust.org/Grants.html

If you have any questions about possible applications please contact the chair of trustees Jeremy Cunnington on admin at castlesudiestrust dot org.

"So you would like to extend the amount of accommodation in the inner ward my Lord? May I suggest building over the exis...
17/05/2026

"So you would like to extend the amount of accommodation in the inner ward my Lord? May I suggest building over the existing moat?"

In his latest piece for our blog, project lead Tom Addyman explains what he and the team learnt from their second visit to survey the inner ward of Cockermouth Castle including the importance of archival research. The inner ward seems to have multiple phases dating to earlier than previously thought:
https://castlestudiestrust.org/blog/2026/05/17/cockermouth-castle-building-survey-diary-update-2/

From the late thirteenth century onwards, knights in royal service became increasingly wealthy enough to start building ...
10/05/2026

From the late thirteenth century onwards, knights in royal service became increasingly wealthy enough to start building their own castles.

In recent years, the Trust has funding building surveys of two of them of Picton ( https://castlestudiestrust.org/blog/2024/04/28/picton-castle-baronial-innovation-in-southwest-wales/ ) and Leybourne ( https://castlestudiestrust.org/blog/2025/07/06/leybourne-castle-kent-a-monument-to-female-patronage/)

Another such case is Edlingham in Northumberland, where the royal knight, William de Felton built a castle. The castle was excavated in the late in the late 70s and early 80s by a team led by Graham Fairclough. Rather than a traditional excavation write up a new book, Graham take looks a look at the castle through the context of the life of its builder. Here Graham explains what he discovered: https://castlestudiestrust.org/blog/2026/05/10/edlingham-the-13th-14th-century-northumbrian-house-of-a-well-travelled-knight-of-the-royal-household/

A week after the end of the community excavation at Knepp, the project leads shares what we've learned so far. There wil...
06/05/2026

A week after the end of the community excavation at Knepp, the project leads shares what we've learned so far. There will be more to come once specialists have examined the finds. https://castlestudiestrust.org/blog/2026/05/06/ten-days-digging-at-knepp-castle/

Ten days digging at Knepp Castle From 20 April to 29 April, a community excavation took place at Knepp Castle involving local history and archaeology groups. Richard Nevell looks back on the dig. I woke up early on Monday 20 April to travel to Knepp Castle, navigating my way before rush hour began.....

29/04/2026

That's the final day of the community dig at Knepp. There'll be some follow-up: recording the archaeology tomorrow and finds analysis later. So we have one last update from the field.

The last day of digging is underway at Knepp Castle
29/04/2026

The last day of digging is underway at Knepp Castle

26/04/2026

That's one full week at Knepp, and what a week it's been with bones, pottery, shells, and visitors.

25/04/2026

A short update from day 6 at Knepp Castle

24/04/2026

With the end of day 5, the dig at Knepp Castle has reached the halfway point

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