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From the vast fortifications of Greek and Roman times, and the Iron Age hill forts of Northern Europe, there evolved a form of military and residential place known as the castle. When the Norman, William the Conqueror, in 1066, conquered what was to become England, his forces quickly built as many wooden palisades as they could to establish their presence in the former Saxon kingdoms. Many of those fortresses were constructed on sites that had previously been fortified in pre-Roman times, then by the Romans when they tried holding the British Isles, and then by the Saxons who established the first kingdoms there.

As they settled in, the Normans began replacing the wooden palisades with stone. The overall plan of the fortresses was working just fine, so new places were built using the same plan but constructed almost entirely of stone.

In Northern Europe, this overall plan generally manifested as a single main tower with other buildings associated with it. In the mountainous areas there was no shortage of rocky hilltops on which to put fortifications. In the lowlands, however, islands and peninsulas were coveted for their ease of defense.

On the British Isles the Normans dug lots of ditches and created "motte and bailey" fortifications, some on top of old Iron Age hillfort places. A "motte" was the conical hill of dirt that was built as the main defense for the "keep", which was the residence and refuge for the fellow responsible for holding the surrounding territory. The keep was basically a tower with one room per floor and usually 3 or 4 floors.

The "bailey" was the walled area around the keep with another at the base of the motte to protect the keep's support functions: grain storage, workshops for wood and metal, troop housing, a well, sometimes a garden, a chapel, a hall for getting together (the "great hall").

These parts of a castle would appear in various forms throughout the castle building era.

Eventually, the motte itself began to be covered in stone, then new places were built without the motte altogether. The tower keep, however, remained. The ditch that had separated the motte from the bailey became a moat, either dry and stone-lined, or with a handy river or lake to fill it with water.

Moats, "water defenses", became a significant part of castle design for a lot of the period.

In the 1100's, Crusaders began their travels to the Middle East where they experienced some different concepts in fortifications. One of the most popular ideas was curtain walls with mural towers: the old palisade idea but with towers along its length from which to fire on attackers. Along with that developed the idea of concentric walls, giving attackers multiple obstacles to overcome just to get into the castle. The tower keep sometimes became part of the wall in this type of structure.

The most vulnerable spot in a curtain wall is its gate. Therefore, castle builders created formidable gate towers and developed interesting defenses specifically for the gate area. Some gate towers included residences because they were so well fortified.

Another version was to make the keep and the inner bailey into one piece, sort of, with the use of the curtain wall idea. The resulting structure was called a shell keep.

As population increased, then decreased due to plagues, and wealth grew, and titles and prestige developed, the people who built castles became more concerned with comfort and aesthetics. The design of castles began to be left to professional designers who were charged with maintenance of the military might of the castle, but also with the comfort of its residents.

Designers began to create castles that were symetrical or responded to specific other design criteria.

Sometimes the changing fortunes of land owners led them to upgrade their manors into fortifications.

Later developments in weaponry, i.e. muskets and cannon, caused other changes in castle design, and, eventually, made castles obsolete.

We plan for our castle to reflect the era preceeding cannons, with emphasis on comfort and community. The strength of our walls and towers will be aimed more at longevity than defense against archers, trebuchets, or muskets!

Our general plan shape will be that of a shell keep with a not-so-major residential gatehouse, a large tower keep for the main residence, a great hall and major kitchen for large group entertaining and feasting, other apartment residences and a chapel along the walls, workshops on the ground floor and along the south wall, and, possibly, stables, too.





Portcullis

Click over thumbnail to enlarge

Click over thumbnail to enlarge

A portcullis was a heavy grilled door that dropped vertically down through slots or guides, and most often protected the main entrance of the castle. It could be made of many different materials, but almost all were made of oak, then plated with iron. On the bottom were spikes. The raising of the heavy portcullis was sometimes assisted with counter weights, pulleys, and rope.

Often times a quick release device was used to quickly lower the portcullis. When the castle came under attack, a guard could take a sledge hammer and hit the release latch. The portcullis would quickly drop closed.

The portcullis went through development stages. It was invented by the Romans in 208 B.C. and began showing up in castle construction in the 12th Century. One of the last stages saw it incorporated into the drawbridge. When raised, the drawbridge lowered. When lowered, the drawbridge went up. Some castles had more than one portcullis.




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