Castles of England
Arundel Castle
Welcome to the Wikibook on
The Castles of England
This book is about castles in England, their development and design through the medieval period. Castles developed throughout this period in response to the changing demands placed on them. Before the beginning of the period covered, England was under threat from invaders like the Vikings, driving people to construct fortifications to protect their land and holdings. Following the Norman invasion, more powerful castles were required so that the Normans could consolidate their hold over the country. Castles continued to develop in response to more effective siege weapons and the various civil wars and conflicts. Finally, as England became more peaceful, the castle became more a comfortable home than a defensive structure, although still needing to be strong enough to defend against small roving bands of men.
As an understanding of history is necessary to place the castle design in context, each chapter begins with an outline of the history of the period before moving on to cover castle designs and describe some example castles in detail. The book concludes with modules on the defensive and domestic features of a castle as well as describing the common techniques for assaulting a castle.
A glossary and a time line illustrating the development of castles through history can be found at the end of the book along with a reference section detailing every castle in England.
Part 1: English Castles Through History
[edit | edit source]- The Development of the Castle
- Norman Castles
- Civil War Castles
- Baronial War Castles
- Tudor Castles
- Later History of Castles
- Castle Life
Part 2: Understanding English Castles
[edit | edit source]- English Castle Design
- Domestic Area Design
- Construction Techniques
- Castle Estates
- Methods of Attack
- Time Line
- Glossary
- Further Reading and References
Part 3: English Castle Catalogue
[edit | edit source]Part 4: Additional Information
[edit | edit source]This book is dual licensed under the GFDL and Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.