The famous tunnel known as Mortimer’s Hole is carved
into the sandstone outcrop on which the Castle stands. The passage way
is eerie enough but is made all the more so by the reputed presence of
the ghost of Sir Roger Mortimer himself.
Mortimer, the Earl of March and lover of Queen Isabella, was her
accomplice in the murder of Edward II. On the night of 19 October 1330
the Queen and her lover Mortimer were staying at Nottingham Castle.
Seeking to bring his father’s killer to justice and expose his feckless
mother, the young King Edward III entered a network of secret tunnels
that led ultimately into the Castle itself.
With a band of loyal supporters the King burst into his mother’s
bedroom and surprised the lovers. Edward himself is said to have seized
Mortimer. The now doomed monarch killer was led away, so legend has it,
to Isabella’s mournful cries of “Fair son, have pity on the gentle
Mortimer.”
Sir Roger was imprisoned in the Castle, taken to London and executed
as a traitor. He was hung, drawn and quartered on the 29 November 1330
and his wretched remains skewered on spikes and left to rot on traitors
gate at ‘Tyburn’.
The tunnel that led to Sir Roger’s downfall then became known as ‘Mortimer’s Hole’ and is so to this day.
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