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      Introduction to castles…………………………………………..3


      Castles of England……………………………………………....5


32 Dover……………………………………………………...5


33 Warwick…………………………………………………..6


34 Leeds……………………………………………………...8


      Medieval siege…………………………………………………10


      Castles with ghosts………………………………………….....12



                           INTRODUCTION TO CASTLES


       Britain is strewn with ruins of castles, rubble  from  the  centuries
of her existence. Castles are  tangible  relics  of  a  remarkable  past,  a
lengthy heritage etched in stone, as well as with the  blood  and  sweat  of
those who built, labored, fought, and died in their shadow.  Ruins  stir  up
in us a profound awareness of those past lives. Castles have a  timelessness
that is awe-inspiring. That they have endured centuries of warfare  and  the
effects of weather is a testimony to  the  creativity  and  power  of  their
medieval owners. How many of us will have such long-lasting success?


       As with gardens castles have  had  innumerable  books  written  about
them quoting design, styles, ages and so on. I think that one or  two  notes
are  helpful  in  distinguishing  the  various   types   and   the   logical
development.

The castles that we use as our standard are those  built  between  the  11th
and 16th centuries in Great Britain and Northern Europe. The English  castle
whose design was imported from Normandy following  the  Norman  invasion  of
1066 was essentially defensive. The Normans had to hold down  a  belligerent
conquered people and their way was to build a network  of  castles.  William
the Conqueror has a ring established  around  London,  including  Rochester,
Windsor and Berkampstead. These in conjunction with the Tower  of  London  -
the White Tower then - acted as a screen around the capital.


        As it was said these castles were  essentially  defensive,  designed
to protect the Norman families who were granted the land  by  William.  They
originally consisted of a mound of earth thrown up with a  tower  or  'keep'
on top, possibly surrounded by a palisade around  the  bottom  and  in  turn
frequently surrounded by a moat. The  palisade  contained  the  bailey.  The
keep was not living quarters normally but a last line of defense in case  of
attack and the main living  area  was  the  bailey  where  the  Lord  had  a
comfortable hall and where there were houses for his soldiers and  retainers
and their  families,  stables  for  the  animals  as  well  as  the  various
necessary service buildings, blacksmith,  farrier,  armourer,  etc.  In  the
case of sustained attack the whole countryside include villagers  and  their
beasts could be taken into the bailey for protection and in  dire  necessity
the whole would be withdrawn into the keep.

        Originally because of the urgency needed to get them  erected  these
structures were of wood but, as they were vulnerable  to  fire,  quite  soon
the King insisted that they be built of stone. One of  the  first  of  these
was the White Tower in the  center  of  the  Tower  of  London.  These  more
substantial buildings soon became home to the Lord and his retainers. It  is
an axiom of military design that each improvement in design creates its  own
destruction as the attacker soon learns to overcome the  latest  technology.
Thus castle building became a never ending program  of  updating  to  create
defensive protection. The keep had its own curtain  wall  with  watchtowers.
These were originally built square but it was soon found that  it  was  easy
for an  attacker  to  use  the  square  shape  to  protect  himself  against
defenders and also undermine the corners of the tower.  A  corner  would  be
undermined and the whole area filled with wooden props to support  it.  Then
pigskins filled with oil and fat would be placed in the cavity and  ignited.
As the flames destroyed the props so the tower crumbled. An example of  this
can be seen at Rochester where the undermining of one  square  corner  tower
is quite clear before it was rebuilt as round tower.
       Castle building grew apace and it became  necessary  to  protect  the
original curtain wall with its own wall  culminating  in  castles  like  the
Tower of London where there are several  concentric  rings.  England  became
more settled and by the middle of the  fifteenth  century  in  Southern  and
Middle  England  except  for  the  King  and  powerful  barons  the  smaller
landowner  had  found  that  a  more  peaceful  country  made   the   castle
unnecessary. He had had found the castle drafty, cold and uncomfortable  and
created 'fortified manor house'. This still had  strong  walls  for  defense
but also had larger windows and more doors while the interior was  of  wood,
rather than stone, to make the  whole  warmer  and  a  less  confrontational
design. From then on we get  the  development  of  the  'stately  home'  and
palace without any defensive capabilities and from these  in  turn  produced
the great Tudor mansions of which Hatfield House  and  Penshurst  Place  are
typical and in which defense has no part. Peace  was  now  assumed  and  the
history of English castle building reached its end.

        In the north of England it was not so easy and until  the  reign  of
Henry VIII there were still border attacks. The castles remained strong  and
well defended until well into the sixteenth century. Thus  for  hundreds  of
years the Duke of Northumberland remained influential  as  much  because  of
the soldiers he could muster as his personality.



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|CASTLES OF ENGLAND                                                   |
|Dover                                                                |
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|[pic]                                                                |
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|Location: Kent                                                       |
|When William the Conqueror defeated Harold II at Hastings he headed  |
|towards Dover where the Angle-Saxons had already raised a burh.      |
|William improved this fortification by erecting a motte-and-bailey.  |
|Dover Castle has the most massive tower in Britain, an almost        |
|100-foot cube with walls from seventeen to twenty-one feet thick. In |
|1216 the castle was besieged by Louis, son of the French king but    |
|saved when Louis returned to France.                                 |
|Overlooking Dover Harbour, the shortest sea-route to the Continent it|
|barred the way of anybody trying to invade England. Early in the 19th|
|century Napoleon stood opposite on the cliffs of Calais and through  |
|his telescope surveyed Dover. With the British navy controlling the  |
|seas and the steep cliffs beneath the castle he decided against an   |
|invasion of England, immediately turned round and invaded Russia     |
|instead. Hitler followed the same pattern and again after            |
|contemplating the problem decided to invade Russia instead. Beneath  |
|the castle are the secret wartime passages where the evacuation of   |
|Dunkirk and the Channel sea battle was controlled.                   |
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|Warwick Castle                                                       |
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|[pic]                                                                |
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|Location: Warwick Country                                            |
|Warwick Castle was founded in 1068 and was rebuilt and updated a     |
|number of times. Today it combines castle ruins, largely of the      |
|fourteenth century with one of the finest great houses in England.   |
|Two small projecting towers, which date to the late fifteenth century|
|are said to have built as artillery platforms. Warwick Castle rises  |
|like a precipice above the River Avon. On this natural cliff William |
|I founded a motte castle in 1068, on lands seized from a nearby Saxon|
|convent. A wooden tower built on the motte was evidently still there |
|in the reign of Henry II, by which time a polygonal shell enclosure  |
|had been raised round the motte top. Only fragments of the shell     |
|enclosure now remain, incorporated in the rebuilt shell, which is of |
|much later date.                                                     |
|Late in the fourteenth century, by which time some additional        |
|buildings such as the great hall and residential blocks had been put |
|up in the bailey, the castle passed to Earl Beauchamp who initiated a|
|fresh programme of works. These were substantially what can be seen  |
|today. They included restructuring the great hall and a range of     |
|other buildings on the south-east, a water-gate, and on the west     |
|front a high and stout defensive curtain leading from a gatehouse to |
|a very tall polygonal tower, known as Guy's Tower, which is 39.4     |
|metres tall. The gatehouse is a remarkable building: a pair of towers|
|above the doorway passage, which had portcullises and murder-holes.  |
|Projecting from the east side of the gatehouse is a tall rectangular |
|building leading to another tower.                                   |
|This latter tower is 45.2 meters tall and capped by a two-fold system|
|of battlements with machicolation all round below the battlements. It|
|is called Caesar's Tower. The three main storeys in the tower are    |
|each vaulted, and have stone fireplaces.                             |
|The castle is completed by curtain walling and further, much smaller,|
|flanking towers. The wall at the west leads up the motte to the      |
|restored shell enclosure and down again southwards to the south      |
|range. The whole is thus a powerfully defended enclosure             |
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