Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Castle Engineering 101

Episode Date: October 18, 2022

Centuries ago, if you were a ruler, you needed to protect yourself and your realm. You’d obviously need an army and soldiers, but you would also need some sort of defensive fortification to protect... yourself from attack.  The solution to this problem in the middle ages was the development of massive structures which could resist direct attack and often served as a seat of administration for a region.  Over the centuries, the thought and engineering which went into these structures became one of the era's highlights.  Learn more about medieval castles and fortifications and how and why they were built on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast!  https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen   Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast. Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Centuries ago, if you were a ruler, you needed to protect yourself in your realm. You obviously needed an army and soldiers, but you also needed some sort of defensive fortification to protect yourself from attack. The solution to this problem in the Middle Ages was the development of massive structures which could resist direct attack and often served as a seat of administration for a region. Over the centuries, the thought and engineering that went into these structures became one of the highlights of the era. Learn more about medieval castles and fortifications, and how in the world,
Starting point is 00:00:30 why they were built on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed. It effectively turned day into night. And how it shaped the world now. Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR. For a moment, let's suppose that you are a mid-year-old.
Starting point is 00:01:16 evil lord, king, queen, or some member of the upper nobility. You have a realm that you have to protect. You have knights and peasants and a whole bunch of land which is under your protection. You also have rivals who have their own lands and have made some sort of claim against your land. You need to both protect yourself and hopefully deter any attack from ever happening. You don't want to appear weak. To that end, you decide to build a castle. A castle is really just a residence and a defensive fortification all in one. A fort or a fortification might not have a residence, and something like a palace would not have a defensive fortification.
Starting point is 00:01:51 For the rest of this episode, I'm just going to be referring to all the defensive fortifications I'll be talking about as castles. So, you want to build a castle. The first and most important thing you have to consider is geography. You don't want to just plop a castle anywhere. You ideally want to build one where there's terrain and landscape that will do much of the defensive work for you. Most castles will be built on hilltops.
Starting point is 00:02:15 This allows the castle to have a better view of the surrounding landscape and advance warning of possible attacks. It also ensures that you will always have the high ground if anyone tries to attack you. In times of peace, there is an additional benefit of making the castle visible to everyone in the area, serving as a symbol of strength and security. If you're more concerned about defense, then you might want to put your castle in an exceptionally well-fortified position. Mont Saint-Michel in France is one of the best defensive locations on Earth. It's situated on an island in a tidal flat. Every day when the tide comes in, it's surrounded by water, and when the tide goes out,
Starting point is 00:02:50 it's surrounded by mud. Anyone attacking by land would only have a few muddy hours to storm the defenses before the tide came in and wash them away. And likewise, if you try to take the fortification by sea, you'd only have a few hours before your ships were on the ground. And that is why no one ever successfully attacked Montse-Michel. Likewise, other castles had been built on the tops of mountains, with a sea. single narrow path leading up to the gate. These two are near impossible to take, but it doesn't
Starting point is 00:03:18 make it the best option. If your castle is to be a seat of administrative power, you need people to be able to access it. Sitting on the top of a mountain might not be the best spot if you want to collect taxes efficiently. And more on this in a bit. Once you've picked your spot, you first need to focus on your outer curtain wall. This is your primary means of defense, and hopefully the last thing that any attacking force will have to deal with. A curtain wall has to be made out of stone. Brick will not suffice as it wouldn't withstand the force of a massive object being thrown by a trebice. Because large stones had to be quarried and were expensive, most castle curtain walls usually had stones on the exposed inside and outside, and in between it was usually just filled
Starting point is 00:04:00 with rubble and earth. The two key features that determine the quality of any wall are height and width. The higher the wall, the more difficult it would be for attackers to get over it. it. And the thicker the wall, the more difficult it would be for attackers to go through it. How high and how thick a wall was built was a function of time and money. As we'll later see, castles were enormous investments and took a very long time to build. Bankrupting yourself on the perfect wall would probably not be worth it. The next thing you need to do is to protect the wall. So long as the wall stands, you're probably going to be in good shape. One of the most common means of protecting a wall was with a moat. Most people think that moats are designed.
Starting point is 00:04:40 to keep attackers away from the wall, and this is partially true. However, the real reason for a moat is to prevent attackers from tunneling under the wall. If you can tunnel under a wall, you can make it collapse, which is really difficult to do if you're underwater. For this reason, some castles actually have moats on the inside of their walls. They can still serve the same purpose of flooding any efforts to tunnel under the wall, but they also serve some additional purposes as well, again, as we'll see in a bit. Motes were independently discovered in ancient Egypt, West Africa, Japan, North America, and Europe. You and your people will need to get in and out of the castle, so your wall will need a gate. The gate is the weakest part of any wall, but it's necessary. If you have a moat, that gate
Starting point is 00:05:25 will probably also connect to a bridge and possibly have a drawbridge. This necessitates the construction of a gatehouse. The gatehouse in most castles would be permanently manned, and there would be accommodations inside the gatehouse for guards. If there's a bridge over the moat, then at the other end you might want to build a barbacon. A barbacon is a small fortification outside the main defensive line that controls the castle's access. The outer curtain wall may need to be actively defended, which means various battlements will have to be built into and on top of the wall. Crenelations are gaps in the top of the wall which allows defenders to shoot at attackers while protected. hoardings are something that were very common in most castles, but something you'll hardly ever see if you visit a castle today.
Starting point is 00:06:09 Hortings are wooden structures built on the top of walls that would stick out over the edge. The hoardings would have holes in the floor which allowed defenders to shoot straight down on attackers or to drop things on them. Permanent stone holes to drop things down were called matriculations, and a hoarding would probably be redundant on a castle that had a moat. Contrary to popular belief, boiling oil was never used to dump on attack. in Europe. There simply wasn't any oil, and even other substances like lead were too expensive. Boiling water could do the job just as well. You will also need towers along your wall. Towers and turrets could support siege weapons on the top, such as a trebuche or a scorpion. The tower could also have murder holes or arrow slits to allow defenders to fire arrows or bolts with maximum protection.
Starting point is 00:06:55 So with all this, we have a pretty good exterior curtain wall. Now, depending on how paranoid you are, you might want to build an interior curtain wall. The rules for an interior curtain wall would be the same as for the exterior wall, except everything is probably a bit smaller as it's the second line of defense, and it probably won't have a moat. The total enclosed area of the outer curtain wall is often called a bailey. Inside your bailey, you're next going to want to build your keep, sometimes known as a mott. Your keep is a defensive structure as well, but it will also have to serve as a functioning building. Your keep will probably have a great hall. where you'll hold court and entertain other nobles. It'll also have dining rooms, bedrooms, a kitchen, a chapel, and other assorted rooms and offices. You'll probably also want to have a well-fortified storeroom and vault for all of your valuables. While your keep will have a practical function, it will also have a defensive role as well. For starters, you probably want the keep to be on the highest section of land and have the highest tower. This will allow you to observe the surrounding area from a safe distance. There will also be a large door that could be bolted shut if attackers
Starting point is 00:08:01 ever made it past the wall. Likewise, murder holes and matriculations will be built into the keeps walls to shoot down on anyone outside. If you ever visit a castle, one of the things you'll probably notice are spiral staircases. Most spiral staircases and castles go up in a clockwise direction. The reason for this is because a clockwise staircase is easier to defend than one that goes counterclockwise. 90% of all humans are right-handed, and this was especially true in the middle ages when lefties were forced to use their right hand. In a clockwise staircase, a right-handed person defending from above will have their left arm facing the interior of the stairwell, whereas the right arm will have more room to swing on the exterior of the stairwell. And an attacker would have
Starting point is 00:08:45 just the opposite problem with too little room to swing their weapon. Also, stairs would purposely be built with steps with uneven heights. Anyone living in the keep would be accustomed to it over time, but an attacker would be unfamiliar with the steps and would be more likely to trip and fall. So at this point, you got a wall, you got a keep, and you got fortifications around your wall and inside your keep. You've done everything correctly, and an enemy probably wouldn't even bother trying to storm your castle. In fact, the storming of castles was a pretty rare thing in the Middle Ages. The advantage was on the defender's side, so attacking could be very costly for the attacker. More likely, an enemy would just lay siege to your castle.
Starting point is 00:09:26 They don't have to take it. They just have to surround it and wait you out. This means your castle will need a large supply of food to withstand a siege and a supply of water. Now before I mentioned that the top of a mountain might not be the best place to put a castle, and this is why. While it might be difficult to attack, it would also be difficult to escape and to provide supplies. Many castles were built along the banks of rivers for this reason. The river would provide a natural fortification, but it would also supply water and the potential to bring supplies to the castle if it was under siege. If you have adequate defenses, which many castles did, then your ability to withstand a siege was wholly a function of food and water. Of course, you might
Starting point is 00:10:07 want to do more than just sit and take it. You will probably want to fight back or possibly have someone escape to send a message to an ally. For this, you might want to put in what are known as sally ports into your wall. These are much smaller, more easily defended openings where you can send out troops to attack defenders. And likewise, you might also want to build a tunnel that goes far enough away from the castle should you ever need to escape entirely. All of this will probably cost you an enormous amount of money. In 12th century England,
Starting point is 00:10:37 the cost of building a castle would be anywhere from a few hundred pounds for a simple fortification up to 100,000 pounds. And remember, a pound was an enormous amount of money at that time. To put it into perspective, in the year 1270, 10,000 pounds could buy 13,000 horses, or pay for a million days wages of skilled craftsmen. Master James of St. George, one of the most renowned castle architects of the 13th century, built the Bomeras Castle in England.
Starting point is 00:11:05 He wrote of the construction, quote, In case you should wonder where so much money could go in a week, we would have you know that we have needed and shall continue to need 400 masons, both cutters and layers, together with 2,000 less skilled workmen, 100 carts, 60 wagons, 30 boats bringing stone and seacole, 200 quarrymen, 30 smiths, and carpenters for putting in the joists and floorboards and other necessary jobs. All of this takes no count of the garrison, nor the purchase of material, of which there will have to be a great quantity. End quote. A decade was not an unreasonable amount of time
Starting point is 00:11:41 to complete a castle, and some took much longer than that. In 1997, a small group in France began construction of what is known as Goudelon Castle, or Chateau de Goudelon. Goudelon Castle is is actually a medieval castle being built with medieval building techniques. It's considered an exercise and experimental archaeology. Many of the techniques used at Chateau de Goudelon were actually adapted for use in the reconstruction of the Notre Dame Cathedral after the fire. They have been at work for 25 years, albeit with a smaller team of workers than a 13th century king would have it as disposable. Goudelon Castle gets 300,000 visitors annually, and it's a two-hour train ride from Paris, if you ever want to visit. Castles serve their purpose as defensive
Starting point is 00:12:23 fortifications for hundreds of years. What ended their construction was the advent of gunpowder. While cannons ended the era of castles, it didn't necessarily end the era of defensive fortifications. It just changed the fortifications to something new, called Star forts or Bastion forts, which were specifically designed to protect against cannons. However, I will leave that for another episode. There are more than 10,000 castles and ruins of castles in Europe, with probably thousands more around the world in places like the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. Some are enormous, and some are small. But all of them tell the story of the people and places where they were built. Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast. The executive producer is Darcy Adams.
Starting point is 00:13:11 The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett. I just wanted to extend a big thank you to everyone who is supporting the show over at patreon.com. I have show merchandise available there, including hoodies, t-shirts, and stickers. Plus, it really just helps me get this show out every single day, including, of course, weekends and holidays. Remember, if you leave a review or send me a boostogram, you too can have it read on the show.

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