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Ypres Tower Site

  • Ypres Tower Site

    Ypres Tower Site


    The Ypres Tower Museum

    The Ypres Tower on a summers day

    The Ypres Tower on a summers day

    The Ypres Tower is thought to have been built  in 1249 as part of the town’s defences and is the oldest building open to the public in Rye. The Tower has had a chequered history (seeHistory of Ypres Tower) and as you look round the inside you can see some of  those changes in the blocked windows and doorways.

     
    From the balcony you can look over what was once one of the largest and most important harbours in the country. In the C16th it was England’s seventh busiest port; now there is farmland where once there was sea.   There are good views from the balcony in all directions, and guides to tell you what you are seeing. 
     

     In the Tower are various exhibits.  One of the newest is the Ypres Tower Embroidery,  created by a team of stitchers over a period of several years and depicting the Tower’s roles through nine centuries of history — as defence, private home, prison, mortuary, museum . . . .   One cell is now a Still Room showing the uses made of  herbs and other plants now being grown  in the Tower’s Medieval Garden.   In another cell there is medieval pottery made in Rye, which was very fine in comparison with pottery of a similar date made elsewhere. This probably reflects the prosperity of the town and also the skills brought from France, when the town was part of the lands belonging to the Abbey of Fecamp in Normandy.        

    Smugglers Lantern

    Smugglers Lantern

     
    One object is  a very rare smuggler’s spout lantern, which allowed smugglers to signal to ships, without being seen by the Excisemen ashore.  For younger visitors there are feely socks – what is inside?, and various other games and puzzles to try–especially the popular Captain Pugwash Treasure Hunt (there is another of these at the East Street site) .
       
    Up the winding and deliberateloy uneven stairs to the first floor you will find the Millienium Embroidery depicting many aspects of Rye life and history,  and a map showing the southeast shoreline dense with shipwrecks. 
     
     There is also a relief map which shows the development of the coastline over the last thousand years and how the Romans were able to sail over the area now known as the Romney Marsh at high tide and how, by Elizabethan times, the navigable area was far smaller and limited to Rye.   Compare what you have learned from the map with the views from the balcony today. 
     
    It takes three to pull a Longbow!

    It takes three to pull a Longbow!

     
      
    The  exhbitions in the basement  appeal to children of all ages:  There are  replicas of  medieval weapons which you can hold and thereby feel their weight. There are examples of swords, armour and chainmail to view and also helmets you can wear and then be photographed, if you have a camera with you.  . 
     
     
    You can test how strong you are and see if you could have been a medieval longbowman, by pulling a cord attached to a weight that is the equivalent of drawing a longbow. This is not for the faint hearted, and do be careful if you have any back problems, and generally take it gently!    
    Val Gill in Medieval Costume in the Garden

    Val Gill in Medieval Costume in the Garden

    There is also a re-creation of a medieval herb garden in what was the exercise yard.  On some days there is a gardener in medieval costume to show you around.

    The garden can also be viewed from the balcony.  The plants there are ones medieval ladies would have grown and then taken to the Still Room where they would be dried and prepared for  for  medicinal, culinary and laundry  purposes

      The ground floor of the Tower has now been made accessible to those with a physical disability, but unfortunately the ancient nature of the building means that the basement and first floor are not accessible to those who find stairs difficult.

    For six views from different sides of  the Tower balcony keep scrolling down. 

    view-church

    view-to-kent

    view-to-kent-2

    view-towards-harbour

      view-harbour
    view-harbour2

    Source : http://www.ryemuseum.co.uk/index.php/museum-site/ypres-tower-site/