In the 13th century a stone manor house was founded on the site.[10] Antiquarian William Burton noted in the early 17th century that Groby Castle "was utterly ruinated and gone and only the mounts, rampires and trenches were to be seen".[11]
A fragment of one wall remains, together with earthworks consisting of a large mound of earth at the rear of the present manor house known as Groby Old Hall. Part of the site is occupied by the church of St Philip and St James.[10] In 1962 and 1963 excavations were carried out at Groby Castle in preparation for the construction of the A50 road nearby.[12] The road, which runs past the north-east of the motte, destroyed some of the castle's outworks.[3] In April 2010, archaeological television programme Time Team undertook excavations at the castle.[13] Groby Castle is a Scheduled Monument,[3] which means it is a "nationally important" historic building and archaeological site which has been given protection against unauthorised change.[14]
Time Team excavating in Groby in 2010
Fictional Groby
The ancestral seat associated with the protagonist Christopher Tietjens in Ford Madox Ford's novel Parade's End (published in 1925, and dramatized for television in 2012) is named Groby Hall. The stately home, with an ancient tree growing in the grounds half the height of an even deeper well, is supposedly located in the North Riding of Yorkshire.[15]
"Tietjens was never going to live at Groby. No more feudal atmosphere!"
excerpted from Part VI of the third novel "A Man Could Stand Up"[16]
Brown, Reginald Allen (April 1959), "A List of Castles, 1154–1216", The English Historical Review, 74 (291), Oxford University Press: 249–280, doi:10.1093/ehr/lxxiv.291.249, JSTOR558442
King, David James Cathcart (1983), Catellarium Anglicanum: An Index and Bibliography of the Castles in England, Wales and the Islands. Volume I: Anglesey–Montgomery, Kraus International Publications
McWhirr, A. D.; Winter, M. J. (1978–1979), "Medieval Castles Additional Information"(PDF), Transactions of the Leicestershire Archaeological and Historical Society, 54: 74–75
Painter, Sidney (1935), "English Castles in the Early Middle Ages: Their Number, Location, and Legal Position", Speculum, 10 (3): 321–332, doi:10.2307/2848384, ISSN0038-7134