Pendennis Castle
Pendennis Castle crowns a headland a mile east of Falmouth. The name suggests a
Dark Age hillfort but any remains are buried beneath the later rampart. What now stands is an Elizabethan artillery
fortress surrounding one of Henry VIII's coastal forts. Erected in 1540-45, when the Reformation had made England a
target for invasion, the castle protected the entrance to Carrick Roades, the large inlet pf the sea which could
have offered a sheltered landing place to the fleet of the Catholic powers. St. Mawes Castle was placed on the
opposite shore and the guns of the two forts commanded the mile-long sheet of water between them.
Pendennis is unusual among the Henrician coastal forts in having such an elevated
position. On the rocks below is a semi-circular blockhouse which would have been of value in repelling ships
invisible from the castle. As originally conceived Pendennis was one of the smaller coastal forts, just a squat
round tower with gun ports at all three levels. The walls were thick enough to withstand the artillery of that time
and the merlons of the parapet are rounded off to deflect any well-sized cannon balls.
The porticullis remains in position and the slots for drawbridge chains can still
be seen. Over the entrance is a handsome panel bearing the royal arms. The low chemise wall with gun emplacements
surrounding the tower must also have been an afterthought, as it blocks the gun ports on the ground floor of the
tower. Henry's castles were purely defensive units, but the quality of masonry here is high and there was clearly a
lot of pride in the workmanship.
A Classical entrance commemorates the completion of the defenses in 1611. The
enlarged castle was garrisoned as part of the coastal defense system until the Second World War.
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