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Rothley, Northumberland

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Population
  
160 (2011 census)

Civil parish
  
Rothley

Country
  
England

Shire county
  
Northumberland

UK parliament constituency
  
Berwick-upon-Tweed

OS grid reference
  
NZ044880

Region
  
North East

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Post town
  
Morpeth

Rothley, Northumberland

Rothley is a civil parish and small settlement in Northumberland, England about 2 miles (3 km) north east of Cambo and about 6 miles (10 km) west of Morpeth.

Contents

Map of Rothley, UK

Governance

Rothley is a civil parish in its own right, within the unitary authority of Northumberland. Both parish and unitary authority have responsibility for different aspects of local government. It is in the parliamentary constituency of Berwick-upon-Tweed.

Landmarks

Rothley Castle (55.1929°N 1.9328°W / 55.1929; -1.9328 (Rothley Castle)) is an 18th-century gothic folly built to resemble a medieval castle, situated at Rothley. It was designed in 1755 by architect Daniel Garrett for Sir Walter Blackett, owner of Wallington Hall, from where it is visible on the hillside.

Rothley Crags (55.1926°N 1.9349°W / 55.1926; -1.9349 (Rothley Crags)), a wild tract of country which was once Sir William Blackett's deer-park. With the mania our ancestors had for ruins, and surely there were enough in Northumberland already without building them, Sir William had some most realistic castellated ruins built on the top of the crags!

Rothley Lake (55.2067°N 1.9356°W / 55.2067; -1.9356 (Rothley Lake)) breaks the bareness of the scenery, prettily bordered with trees and overlooked by a wall of rugged crags topped by Codger Fort. Rothley Lakes (divided by a road) were created for the Wallington estate by Capability Brown. Codger Fort (55.2053°N 1.9316°W / 55.2053; -1.9316 (Codger Fort)) was erected by Sir Walter Blackett after the Jacobite rising of 1745, probably to demonstrate his loyalty. The fort contained six cannon and hence would have proved a serious obstacle to any invading forces. The fort was designed by Thomas Wright of Durham, and has also been interpreted as a folly like Rothley Castle to the south. Huge beeches and pines line the ascending road from the lake.

References

Rothley, Northumberland Wikipedia