Queenborough
Queenborough was a minor settlement dominated by a once-important castle, situated at the western tip of the Isle of Sheppey, a region ‘more celebrated for the fertility of the soil than the salubrity of air, which is gross and thick, causing aguish infirmities’. T. Philipott, Villare Cantianum (1659), 379. The site of a Saxon fort, Queenborough was effectively founded by Edward III, who named it in honour of his consort, Philippa of Hainault. Edward’s castle, built by William of Wyckham, was finished in 1367.
