In 1802 Samuel Prout was persuaded by the antiquary John Britton to move from Plymouth to London and work as a draughtsman on the serial publication The Beauties of England and Wales (1801–15). Prout began exhibiting watercolours in the capital, and produced several topographical publications devoted to rustic English subjects, although he began to specialise in foreign scenery following his first trip abroad in 1819. This large watercolour is from the early years of his career; in its depiction of a ruined castle, replete with weeds and crumbling masonry, it caters to an audience tutored in the principles of the picturesque aesthetic.