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Castles in Great Britain

Auteur Frank Scholten

Laatst gewijzigd 01 juli 2016

Licentie CC Naamsvermelding 3.0 Nederland licentie

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Inhoudsopgave

Introduction
In class
Castle building through the ages

Homework
Over dit lesmateriaal

Pagina 1 Castles in Great Britain


Introduction

In this lesson I present some of my findings from my research about castles in Great Britain
and their changing role.
The lesson will take 30 minutes.

At the end of this lesson, students:

are familiar with the definition of “castle”


know what a surviving castle is according to my research
Are familiar with the present day functions of castles in Great Britain
know what to look for when trying to determine whether a castle is a medieval surviving
castle

Drawing based on St Michael's Mount (in Cornwall)

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In class

I class we will discuss the definition of the word "castle," the definition of a surviving castle and
the characteristics of different time periods with regard to castles.
Here you can find the presentation used in class:
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1BEf1_-
SaZQk7d0cpL1Z4Rugkwq9jTDRXFBZQgyYhzH8/edit?usp=sharing

Exercise: Caernarfon Castle


We are going to watch a short video about Caernarfon Castle.
Please listen closely and answer the following questions:

1) When was the castle built?


2) Why were the curtain walls unique at the time they were built?
3) Which purposes of the castle were mentioned in the video?
4) What is the difference between how people viewed the castle in the Middle Ages and how
people view it today?
5) Would you consider this castle a surviving medieval castle or not? Why?

kn.nu/ww.bf4aa37 (youtu.be)

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Castle building through the ages

This text is taken from my research "Castles in Great Britain."


You can read it as a reference while doing the homework assignment or to deepen your
understanding of the subject.
-----
An English castle around 1150 would most probably be enclosed, have few towers, a keep, a
gatehouse and no arrow slits. The enclosure would be irregular or curvilinear. A castle built in
or after 1200 would have arrow slits. In fact, all levels of the castle could be used for archery
whether it would concern habitable floors or rooms or not. Another thing that castles from
1200 onwards did have and earlier castles didn’t is the portcullis or strong iron gate. This type
of castle would have been designed into a polygon or a square and its keep would have been
polygonal or cylindrical (not square). In some cases the castle would not have a keep, for the
costs of the new type of defence would be too high. (King, 1988)
The thirteenth century, especially the period of the great building campaigns of Edward I, is
regarded as the most successful period of English castle-building. It is the time of a growing
desire for symmetrical castles. They could still have a motte with a tower in this era, with the
tower functioning as its keep, according to King (1988). Although not provable, according to
Thompson (1987) it is reasonable to assume the building of mottes was discontinued around
1200 unless they were fortified with stone and had become useless by the end of the
fourteenth century. (Thompson, 1987)
At the end of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth more complex towers
were on the rise. Round towers on top of a square, rectangular or polygonal base stem from
this period. Most towers would be large enough to provide comfortable chambers which could
be equipped with a fireplace and a kind of toilet (latrine). Towers were essential to the
defence of the castle. (King, 1988) People began adapting castles for the use of gunpowder
and a sort of gun from about 1370.
Thirteenth-century castles look like they were primarily built as defences with houses as some
sort of afterthought, according to King (1988). Fourteenth-century castles with their defences
and internal buildings, on the other hand, seem to be a planned whole. They were usually
built on low and level ground. In the south of England castles were typically built by the head
of an emerging family and in the north castles were usually built by established nobles. Moats
became an important part of castle's defences in this century and continued to be used in the
fifteenth century.
In the fifteenth century castles in England were on the decline. The scale at which new castles
were built was much smaller and their quality was less. Fifteenth-century castles looked a lot
like castles from the previous century; architects didn't experiment as much and the castle did
not really evolve, except for the greater use of machicolations. (King, 1988) According to the
page on castle architecture in the online version of the Encyclopaedia Britannica (Britannica,
Castle Architecture, n.d.) machicolations were openings in roofs of passages, walls or gates
through which missiles could be dropped, thrown or shot.

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Homework

To do
- Find a medieval castle in England, Wales or Scotland that should be classifiable as a
surviving castle.
- Give 2 or more arguments why you classify this as a surviving castle.
- Describe the history and current use of the castle you chose.
- Use at least two different sources and mention them.

Form
You can choose how to present your homework assignment. You can hand this in, in one of
the following forms: written document, website, video

Tip
These are a few examples of websites you can use:
http://www.castlexplorer.co.uk/
http://www.britainirelandcastles.com/
http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/
http://cadw.gov.wales/?skip=1&lang=en
https://www.historicenvironment.scot/

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Over dit lesmateriaal

Colofon
Auteur Frank Scholten
Laatst gewijzigd 01 juli 2016 om 11:28
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3.0 Nederlands licentie. Dit houdt in dat je onder de voorwaarde van
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Aanvullende informatie over dit lesmateriaal


Van dit lesmateriaal is de volgende aanvullende informatie beschikbaar:

Leerniveau HBO - Bachelor;


Leerinhoud en Engelse taal en cultuur;
doelen
Eindgebruiker leerling/student
Moeilijkheidsgraad gemiddeld

Bronnen
Bron Type
https://youtu.be/oeeak9AVCAk Video
https://youtu.be/oeeak9AVCAk

Pagina 6 Castles in Great Britain

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