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Chillingham Castle Ghost Hunt with Karl Beattie and Stuart Torevell


Date - 2nd July 2021
Times - 9pm til 2am
Price - £89pp

Cat - Cat B size
£30pp deposit option available with balance due 4 weeks before the event date..


Dare you enter this historic and very haunted location ?

Lets spend our time in this eerie castle in the dead of the night with Tvs Most Haunted..

Chillingham Castle Alnwick 2nd July 2021

£0.00Price
  • The 12th century stronghold became the fully fortified Chillingham Castle in 1344 and the family bloodline has remained ever since. We have the document giving the Royal permissions to add battlements. The castle was much besieged and battled, and the family all went off to those early wars in France.

    They captured a Norman castle in 1409 and were made Earls of Tankerville, and were even made Dukes in their early warrior days.  There are many mentions in Shakespeare and in Royal archives.  The many commanding generals of the castle include a record eighteen Knights of the Garter.

    Royal appointments were balanced out by no less than eight Executions for high treason! Family members chose different sides to support, and so Chillingham Estates survived and the loser always had ‘a friend at court’.

    Chillingham occupied a strategic position during Northumberland’s bloody border feuds. Chillingham Castle was often under attack and often basked in the patronage of Royal visitors, a tradition that remains to this day.  Sir Henry Wakefield was Treasurer of England to King Edward IV and, in the last century, Sir Humphry’s father, Sir Edward Wakefield, was both Treasurer and Comptroller of the Queen’s Household.  In 1245, King Henry III came to Chillingham as did the Kings Edward I and James I. Charles I stayed here for three frantic nights shortly before he was imprisoned. Edward VIII came to hunt here, and members of today’s Royal family continue the tradition with private visits to the castle this century.

    The mediaeval castle remains as it was, just with galleries that you see today added in Tudor days, for the visit of King James VI of Scotland. The King was en route to his English coronation as James I of England.  The castle commander of that day was Queen Elizabeth’s godchild. He was the ‘go-between’ for the English/Scottish courts during those difficult times of the royal succession and kept fascinating diaries of those days.

    In the 18th century, Capability Brown’s ideas re-landscaped the grounds, and Robert Adam’s pupil, Paterson, worked on the East wing.  In 1832, King Louis Philippe of France came to stay and gave us fine urns from his Versailles Palace. Extravagant gardens and avenues were laid out for the royal visit by Sir Jeffry Wyatville, fresh from his triumphs at Windsor Castle.

    Throughout the centuries the castle’s architectural detail and massive walls have remained unchanged. The medieval strength and character remains.

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