Today most of our travels centered around the battle at Flodden Field, specifically those sites which were in play leading up to the battle.
To start off, we are staying on the Ford Castle estate where James 4 established the Scottish army headquarters, and where he had a dalliance with the housekeeper. He and his army had breached the walls at Ford, Etal and Norham prior to the battle.
This is Ford Castle today, hugely rebuild and castle-fied for lack of a better description. It is a private residence.
The castle chapel. Is the cemetery growing daffodils, or a garden growing graves?
Norham Castle was next. This is a HUGE site, and since we are now in England and not Scotland, the historic sites are free to be explored. A stronghold on the River Tweed, the original Castle was built to defend a Bishop's land holding along the wild, lawless, and porous Anglo-Scots border. Besieged nine times and captured four by the Scots, it was allowed to fall into disrepair by Queen Elizabeth 1.
Blue in the ground floor storage areas.
Next was Twizel Castle and bridge. The English army crossed this mideval bridge on the way to Flodden Field, plus they used a ford upstream as there were so many of them.
In betwixt all this late history we snuck in a visit to a water powered flour mill in Heatherslaw, and our only Neolithic site this trip: the much weathered Duddo Stones.