Slighting
Slighting is the deliberate partial demolition or disabling of a fortification, such as a castle, to render it militarily ineffective and prevent its occupation by adversaries.[1] This tactic typically involved undermining walls with mines, collapsing key structures, or filling defensive features like moats, thereby compromising the site's defensive, administrative, and symbolic value without necessitating total destruction.[1] Employed across medieval and early modern Europe, slighting served both practical military purposes—to deny enemies a base—and punitive ones, signaling dominance over defeated owners by reducing their high-status properties to ruin.[2] The practice gained particular prominence during the English Civil War (1642–1651), when Parliamentarian forces systematically slighted captured royalist castles to eliminate potential strongholds for rebellion.[3] Notable instances include Corfe Castle in Dorset, demolished in 1646 after a prolonged siege to thwart royalist resurgence, and Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire, partially razed in 1654 despite its prior surrender.[4] These actions transformed many once-imposing fortifications into the picturesque ruins visible today, contributing to the landscape of British heritage sites while underscoring the war's decisive shift toward centralized authority.[3] Earlier precedents, such as King John's 1216 slighting of Pevensey Castle amid baronial conflicts, illustrate the method's longevity as a tool of political control.[5]