William the Conqueror built Lincoln Castle, in 1068, on a strategic
site that had once been used by the Romans. The castle unusually has two
mottes, one is topped by a 12th century shell keep called the Lucy
Tower, and the other is topped by a 19th century tower that was used as
an observatory. A full circuit of curtain walls remain, most of which
can be walked on.
The buildings that remain within the castle are from its later use
as a prison and court. The Victorian court is still used today, but the
prison is no longer in use and can be visited. The prison has the
world's only surviving 'Pentonville System' chapel, where prisoners were
kept apart in separate cells. Many of the prisoners who were executed
at the castle where buried at the base of the Tower mound or inside the
Lucy Tower. The castle also has one of the four remaining original copies of
the Magna Carta, which can be viewed in an exhibition area in the old
prison building.
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