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2006-06-21 09:38:44 · 7 answers · asked by ................................ 2 in Education & Reference Homework Help

7 answers

* Arrow Slit: A vertical 'window', very narrow on the outside, spreading to a larger size one could stand in on the inside, out of which one shot, guess what, arrows. Later ones had a horizontal slot in the middle to give a wider angle of fire for crossbows.
* Bailey: The courtyard of a castle, the word normally being used in conjunction with a Motte, which was the inner keep of a Norman castle. Larger castles had more than one bailey -- e.g., outer bailey, middle bailey, inner bailey. (Also called a Ward.)
* Barbican: Additional defenses in front of a gatehouse whose purpose was to restrict access to the main gate. Often contained drawbridges and parapets from which defenders could shoot down into the roadway.
* Bartizan: A projecting circular turret placed on top of a wall, usually at a corner (mainly Scots).
* Battered Plinth: Lovely jargon. This refers to the base of a wall being provided with a widening slope, both to strengthen the bottom of the wall against undermining and to provide a ricochet surface for objects such as rocks being dropped down from machicolations that would bounce off horizontally and zap the attackers.
* Battlements: The working defenses atop a castle wall, consisting of a Wall Walk fronted by a Parapet (crenelated), often corbelled out to allow for machicolations, or in earlier castles protected by a Hoarding.
* Buttery: The "Butler's" room off the Great Hall. Wine cellar, serving room, silverware, etc. See also Pantry (I'm not sure how the allocation of functions between the buttery and the pantry were differentiated -- in Norman French/English buttery means 'bottle room' and pantry means 'bread room').
* Chemin de ronde: Rare in England, very characteristic of French castles, this is the 'crown' at the top of a round tower, a machicolated gallery below or replacing the parapet. French castle towers also had conical roofs, but this was never common in England where they usually had flat tops.
* Concentric Castle: Developed in the Crusades, this was the provision of a castle with rings of defense, walls within walls, with flanking towers.
* Curtain Wall: The defending wall of a castle.
* Donjon: The French word for the Keep tower. Not a dungeon in the sense we know. Most castles had a miserable little place that was used as a prison, but they were for the most part punishment pits for one or two recalcitrants. After castles had lost their original purpose in the 17th Century, quite a few gatehouses were converted into prisons (why gatehouses, I'm not too sure).
* Drawbridge: Everyone knows what a drawbridge is. There were basically three types: (1) a simple sliding platform over the ditch that could be pulled back, (2) a raising bridge pulled up by chains attached to the outer corners, and (3) a bridge with posts reaching out over the top, with the chains hanging vertically from the posts (this had 'leverage' advantages).
* Enfilade: Describing the arrangement of Arrow Loops or Gun Ports whereby one could achieve a cross-fire and hit the enemy from the side.
* Forebuilding: A sort of 'Barbican' for a Keep, it protected the entrance, which was usually on the second story, and contained a grand stair and additional chambers (often a chapel).
* Garderobe: A privy or loo. Usually hollowed out of the wall in a tower. Some garderobes had a chute that went down into a sewer pit; others just dumped into the moat.
* Gatehouse: The most important part of a castle as far as its defense was concerned, the entry being the weakest point. Older ones were little more than a strong arch with heavy iron-bound wooden gates and drawbars and a guard chamber on top or to the side. Later on, flanking towers were added to the gateway, and Portcullises and Drawbridges. Whereas the Keep was a passive defense, the gatehouse was right up in front, and became the most elaborate building in the later castles.
* Great Hall: The main chamber of the castle. Here is where the all the business and social activity of the castle was conducted. A great hall usually had a Solar, Buttery, Pantry, and kitchen attached to it.
* Gun Port (Loop): The replacement for the Arrow Slit in the later Middle Ages as the use of gunpowder became more widespread. These tended to be horizontal rather than vertical.
* Keep: The central refuge of last resort. In Norman castles, usually a very large square or round tower. The lord's accommodations were usually inside the keep.
* Hoarding: A wooden gallery built out from the Battlements that provided additional protection and fighting space at the wall top; replaced in later castles by a Machicolated stone Parapet.
* Machicolation: The projection of the parapet over corbels so that slots could be provided that faced straight down to the bottom of the wall and one could fire at, or pour boiling water or oil on, attackers who had reached that point.
* Moat: The ditch surrounding a castle, filled with water when the castle was on a stream or river, but most often just a dry ditch. When wet, they did not contain alligators, but there was other revolting stuff in them.
* Motte: An artificial round mound on which in the original Norman castles a wooden (later, stone)Keep tower was constructed. Outside of this was an embanked Bailey containing the Great Hall, stables, chapel, kitchen, etc. These were easily and cheaply constructed (they conscripted the local peasants to do the digging) by the Normans to subdue the native populace after the Conquest.
* Mural Chamber: A small room hollowed out within a wall.
* Murder Hole: A hole in the ceiling of a gate passage through which you could pour boiling oil or whatever (see Machicolation).
* Pantry: Associated with the Buttery in the Great Hall complex. I'm not sure what its function was as differentiated from the former. Pantry actually means 'bread room' (pan French equals bread). The lower end of a great hall, opposite the lord's dais at the upper end, almost always had three doors: buttery, pantry, and passage to kitchen.
* Parapet: The crenelated wall protecting the soldiers on the Wall Walk.
* Portcullis: A metal or iron-bound wooden grating that slides down in slots in front of a gateway.
* Shell Keep: The old motte-and-bailey castles were generally wooden stockades. As power was consolidated, the richer Norman lords built round stone walls on top of their mottes which were thus rendered fireproof. (At the same time, the Bailey curtain wall was also built up in stone.)
* Solar: The lord's private room behind the Great Hall. The ladies' room.
* Tower: Defensive towers were placed at strategic places along the curtain wall (corners, changes of direction, mid-wall) to provide flanking protection; at first mostly square, they were built round as time went on with a resulting better field of fire. The D-shaped tower was even superior, with a defensive round side facing the field, and a square side (which allowed for more convenient rectangular rooms) facing the Ward.
* Turret: A small tower; more specifically the buttressed corner of a keep that provided extra protection to a most vulnerable part of the building. (A corner, if 'blind' to the field, could be undermined and bring down parts of two walls.)
* Wall Walk: The fighting platform atop the Curtain Wall
* Ward: Another term for a castle courtyard (see Bailey).

2006-06-21 09:42:44 · answer #1 · answered by xtragicallyxbeautifulx 3 · 3 0

"The keep is the strong central tower of the castle. Castle building was a very common task as boundaries were pushed and territory conquered. The walls would most commonly go up first, so nothing could hurt the castle while it was being built. Then came the castle so the Town Lord could govern easily. Then a cathedral would be built. This would often be the longest job, due to the intricate artwork that went into it. Then the villagers would be left to build their houses and shops, often with a separate kitchen building. Fields would be built and crops harvested. A castle town is built. Castles could take many years to complete, this varied greatly on type, localtion, resources, time period, construction materials, etc.. for example a castle built on top of a hill would generally take much longer to build than a castle located on terrain that was easier to build upon, while a Norman motte and baily castles could be constructed in a year or less, a large stone castle could take decades. Castles may have also been partially constructed in on generation and later generations filled in and added on" - wikipedia


"In addition to the castle walls, other defensive features include towers at the angular direction changes of walls, moats, drawbridges, battlements, portcullises, and concentric walls." - wikipedia

2006-06-21 09:42:41 · answer #2 · answered by Hax 3 · 0 0

Dining Kitchen Bed Chamber Dance Hall Dungeon

2016-03-15 14:03:03 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2015-01-24 08:38:38 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well...what does your textbook say? Or were you asleep/stoned/drunk/absent from class today.

Being a very knowledgeable person in Medieval politics and history but I'm afraid I can't impart this answer to you.

Have a good night and good luck on the exam

2006-06-21 09:44:13 · answer #5 · answered by Quasimodo 7 · 0 0

you choose it
A) watch tower - so watch the enemy line
B) emergency exit -if the castle is getting seiged
C) kitchen - To feed the king etc.
D) Main hall - To gather all types of people from top to bottom

2006-06-21 09:50:22 · answer #6 · answered by saleem k 3 · 0 0

The moat, drawbridge, wall, gatehouse, tower, and the keep.

2006-06-21 10:11:15 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

weapons room, dining hall, throne room, library, bedrooms, dungeon . . . why?

2006-06-21 09:42:26 · answer #8 · answered by galindo_christina 3 · 0 0

walls, floors, ceilings

2006-06-21 09:42:01 · answer #9 · answered by Bors 4 · 0 0

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