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Castle

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edinburgh Castle (Scotland) is one of a small number of castles which are still in use today.

Castles are medieval buildings which were defensive homes for powerful people. They could be made from wood, stone, or brick, and some were used for hundreds of years. Thousands of castles were built across Europe, the Middle East, and Japan with different designs. Today, most castles are ruins and many are popular tourist attractions.

In England and Wales castles were first used by the invading Normans led by Duke William in 1066. They provided a base for lord of the castle to control the surrounding area and govern their land. Castles were designed to be imposing: their massive defenses deterred attackers and showed the owner's strength.

A few troops in a castle could defend themselves against a much larger army. The most common method for taking a castle would be to besiege or storm it. Each had problems. Storming a castle would kill many of the attackers, but a siege would take a long time. Both methods sometimes failed.

Time of building

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Castles were first built in the 9th century and the practice continued up to the 16th century. A castle was both a home for someone important like a king or noble, and a fort. Castles were designed to keep people out and show how powerful the people inside were. They were sometimes used in war, with many famous sieges like the siege of Kenilworth in 1266 which lasted for six months, or Stirling Castle which was besieged eight times.

Castles could look very strong, but sometimes the defences were mostly for show. The moat around Bodiam Castle is not very deep and could be drained by an attacking army, so was not very practical as a defence. But it made the castle look very impressive, and look bigger than it really is. If the owner of a castle rebelled against their ruler they might be punished by having their castle demolished, known as slighting.

Where to find them

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Castles were built in Europe and the Middle East, with similar buildings developing separately in Japan in the 15th century. Castles were usually built from either wood or stone, and sometimes brick. Some castles started off as wooden and were then rebuilt in stone, which was more expensive and a stronger so that the castles could be bigger. They could be built on hills or low areas like the edge of towns or at river crossings. There is the widely held idea that castles were always built on high hills; while there are some castles which make dramatic use of the landscape and are highly visible, there were a lot of factors in choosing where to build castles and only a minority were on hills.[1] For example, many castles were built along the Rhine River so they could stop people using the river without permission.

Depending on the exact definition, the number of castles varies and more castles are still being discovered. The numbers below are rough, and it is difficult to find estimates for some countries like Italy and Spain though they have many castles. Imitation castles have been built in the 19th, 20th, and 21st century, like Neuschwanstein or some places in the United States but these are not considered genuine castles as they were not meant to be defensive.

  • Austria: 160[2]
  • Czech Republic: 60[2]
  • Denmark: More than 1,000[3]
  • England: about 2,700[4]
  • Finland: 6[2]
  • Germany: 8,100[2]
  • Hungary: 80[2]
  • Japan: 5,000[5]
  • Latvia: 30[2]
  • Netherlands: 140[2]
  • Scotland: 3,000[6]
  • Slovakia: 50[2]
  • Switzerland: 4,000[7]
  • Wales: 700[4]

Life in a castle

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The powerful people who built castles also lived in them with their families. They would have servants and a group of people to make sure the castle worked: people fetching water, cooking, clearing the stables, looking after animals, cooking, lighting fires, and checking who was coming into the castle. In peacetime, most castles only had a few soldiers who would guard the place.

Today, most castles have bare stone walls inside but in the Middle Ages they looked very different. Important rooms had colourful tapestries hanging on the walls, and paintings on the ceiling. Other rooms like kitchens or cupboards had plain white walls. Fireplaces kept rooms warm, and candles were used for light at night or in dark rooms. Glass was used later in the Middle Ages, but windows had shutters to keep out the cold and the weather. Religion was an important of the Middle Ages, and castles usually had chapels so that the people who lived there could pray.

Rooms and features in a castle

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Medieval castles had many different features and spaces

  • Great hall - The main living room and dining room in a castle, where people ate, worked, were entertained, and in smaller castles in early medieval times, slept and prayed.
  • Solar - a smaller living room or parlour, usually on an upper floor within a tower.
  • Keep (also called a great tower or donjon) - the main tower or living quarters in a castle.
  • Chapel - in bigger castles, a small church or large prayer room.
  • Moat - a wide, usually water filled ditch for keeping siege engines away from the castle.
  • Crenellations or battlements - the tooth shaped vertical protrusions atop castle walls.
  • Curtain wall - the outer defensive wall.

The end of castles

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Later in the Middle Ages, important people wanted more privacy and larger homes. It was easier to build new homes instead of trying to make the castles bigger, so some people moved out of castles into new homes. The use of gunpowder weapons also changed warfare and made castles less effective. Guns were introduced in the 14th century, and by the 15th and 16th centuries they were powerful enough to break castle walls. New types of fortification were invested, with shorter thicker walls, and using earth to absorb hits from cannonballs.

Though cannons were powerful, castles were still used in war. In the 17th century, lots of castles were used in the English Civil War, though many of them had not been lived in for decades and needed repairs.

Castles today

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As castles were built hundreds of years ago, most of them are ruins. Some are still lived in by wealthy families, or are still used by governments or armies. Because of this they might have changed and look different to old castles which were abandoned. Many castles have been turned into museums so the public can visit and learn about the past. Some castles are owned by the state, and others are owned by private people. Castles are expensive to run, so many are falling down. Every so often lightning strikes, flooding, or earthquakes damage castles.

People have been interested in castle for centuries. Historians and archaeologists have searched old documents and dug into castles to find out more about them. Because of this, for some castles we know who owned them, when they were used, when bits were built, what people ate, and what kind of things happened at castles. But there are lots of places where we know very little, not even when they were built. This is because a lot of medieval documents do not survive.

Some castle ruins have been rebuilt to look like they did originally. Also, many "mock" castles have been built, mostly in Europe and North America during the 19th and 20th centuries. These castles have no serious defensive function and the architectural elements are mainly for show.

Other famous castles include Warwick Castle, Bran Castle, Neuschwanstein Castle, and

Boldt Castle.

Glossary

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Some terms you might find people using when they talk about castles:

  • bailey – an area of a castle surrounded by a wall or bank to keep people out
  • keep – a large tower
  • motte – a mound of earth which had a tower on top
  • motte and bailey – a castle with a mound of earth with an enclosed area next to it
  • rampart – a bank of earth, usually next to a ditch
  • ringwork – a circular castle with a bank and ditch
  • slighting – deliberately damaging a castle
  • turret – a small tower

Notes and references

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  1. Creighton 2002, p. 64
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 "EBIDAT - Burgendatenbank des Europaischen Burgeninstitutes" (in German). Retrieved 11 May 2024.
  3. Olsen 2014, p. 12
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Statistical information". Gatehouse Gazetteer. 25 March 2015. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  5. Inoue 1959
  6. "Castles of thousands". 14 December 2017. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  7. King 1988, pp. 24–25
  8. The image is from the Luttrell Psalter which was made in the 14th century.

Books used

  • Creighton, Oliver (2002), Castles and Landscapes, London: Continuum, ISBN 0-8264-5896-3
  • Inoue, Munekazu (1959), Castles of Japan, Tokyo: Association of Japanese Castle
  • King, David James Cathcart (1988), The Castle in England and Wales: an Interpretative History, London: Croom Helm, ISBN 0-918400-08-2
  • Olsen, Rikke Agnete (2014), Danish Medieval Castles, Aarhus University Press

More resources

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  • Creighton, Oliver; Higham, Robert (2003), Medieval Castles, Shire Archaeology, ISBN 0-7478-0546-6
  • Friar, Stephen (2003), The Sutton Companion to Castles, Stroud: Sutton Publishing, ISBN 978-0-7509-3994-2
  • Hislop, Malcolm (2013), How to Read Castles, Bloomsbury, ISBN 978-1-4725-2161-3
  • Hull, Lise (2011), Castles of Britain and Ireland, New Holland Publishers, ISBN 978-1847739209
  • Liddiard, Robert (2005), Castles in Context: Power, Symbolism and Landscape, 1066 to 1500, Macclesfield: Windgather Press Ltd, ISBN 0-9545575-2-2
  • McNeill, Tom (1992), English Heritage Book of Castles, London: English Heritage and B. T. Batsford, ISBN 0-7134-7025-9
  • Turnbull, Stephen (2003), Japanese castles 1540–1640, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 978-1841764290

Other websites

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