Dictionary Definition
castle
Noun
1 a large and stately mansion [syn: palace]
2 a large building formerly occupied by a ruler
and fortified against attack
3 (chess) the piece that can move any number of
unoccupied squares in a direction parallel to the sides of the
chessboard [syn: rook]
4 interchanging the positions of the king and a
rook [syn: castling] v
: move the king two squares toward a rook and in the same move the
rook to the square next past the king
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From Latin castellum, literally little camp, from castrum, camp, from casa, hut or cottagePronunciation
- käs'(ə)l, /ˈkɑːs(ə)l/, /"kA:s(@)l/
- kăs'(ə)l, /ˈkæs(ə)l/, /"kæs(@)l/
Noun
- A large building that is fortified and contains many defences; in previous ages often inhabited by a nobleman or king.
- A chess piece shaped like a castle tower which is also called a rook.
- A close
helmet.
- 1786, Francis Grose, A Treatise on Ancient Armour and Weapons,
p. 12,
- The castle was perhaps a figurative name for a close headpiece deduced from its enclosing and defending the head, as a castle did the whole body; or a corruption from the Old French word casquetel, a small or light helmet.
- 1786, Francis Grose, A Treatise on Ancient Armour and Weapons,
p. 12,
Usage notes
For the chess piece, chess players prefer the term rook.Derived terms
Translations
fortified building
- trreq Armenian
- Breton: kastell , kestell
- Chinese: 城堡 (chéngbǎo)
- Croatian: dvorac
- Czech: hrad
- Danish: slot , borg ; herregård
- Dutch: kasteel , fort , burcht , slot
- Esperanto: kastelo
- Estonian: linnus, kindlus
- Finnish: linna
- French: château , château-fort
- Georgian: ციხე-დარბაზი (tsixe-darbazi)
- German: Burg , Festung
- Greek: κάστρο (kástro)
- Hebrew: טירה (t'ira)
- Hindi: किल्ला (qilla)
- Hungarian: vár
- Icelandic: kastali
- Ido: kastelo
- Interlingua: castello
- Irish: caisleán
- Italian: castello
- Japanese: 城 (しろ, shiro)
- Korean: 성 (seong), 성곽 (seonggwak)
- Kurdish:
- Latin: castellum , castrum
- Latvian: pils
- Lithuanian: pilis
- Maltese: kastell
- Marathi: किल्ला (qilla), दुर्ग (durg, fort), गड (gad, fort)
- Mongolian: цайз (cayz)
- Norwegian: borg
- Occitan: castèl
- Persian: (dezh)
- Polish: zamek
- Portuguese: castelo
- Romanian: castel
- Russian: (zámok)
- Sanskrit: दुर्ग (durg, fort)
- Scottish Gaelic: caisteal
- Serbian: замaк , zamak
- Slovak: hrad
- Slovene: grad
- Spanish: castillo , castro
- Swedish: slott , borg , befästning , fästning
- Thai: (bpraa-sàat)
- Turkish: kale
- Volapük: kased
- Welsh: caer , castell
- West Frisian: kastiel
chess piece
- Afrikaans: toring
- Albanian: kala
- Basque: gaztelu
- Breton: tour
- Bulgarian: топ (top)
- Catalan: torre
- Croatian: top
- Czech: věž
- Danish: tårn
- Dutch: toren
- Esperanto: turo
- Estonian: vanker
- Faroese: rókur
- Finnish: torni
- French: tour
- Galician: torre
- Georgian: ეტლი (etli), როქი (rok‘i)
- German: Turm
- Greek: πύργος (pírgos)
- Hebrew: צרִיחַ (tzeryakh)
- Hungarian: bástya
- Icelandic: hrókur
- Indonesian: benteng
- Irish: caiseal
- Italian: rocco , torre
- Latin: turris
- Latvian: tornis
- Lithuanian: bokštas
- Macedonian: топ (top)
- Maltese: kastell
- Norwegian: tårn
- Occitan: castel
- Polish: wieża
- Portuguese: torre
- Romanian: turn
- Romansh: tur
- Russian: ладья (lad’já) , тура (turá)
- Serbian:
- Slovak: veža
- Slovene: trdnjava
- Spanish: torre
- Swedish: torn
- Turkish: kale
- Ukrainian: тура (tura)
- Welsh: castell
- West Frisian: stins
Verb
- To perform the move of castling.
Translations
Extensive Definition
A castle is a defensive structure seen as one of
the main symbols of the Middle Ages.
The term has a history of scholarly debate surrounding its exact
meaning, but it is usually regarded as being distinct from the
general terms fort or
fortress in that it
describes a building which serves as a residence of a monarch or
noble and commands a specific defensive territory.
Roman forts and
hill
forts were the main antecedents of castles in Europe, which
emerged in the 9th century in Carolingian
France. The
advent of cannon and gunpowder changed the needs of
warfare in Europe, limiting the effectiveness of the castle and
leading to the rise of the fort.
Definition
Castle comes from the Latin word castellum. This is a diminutive of the word castrum, which means "fortified place". The word "castle" (castel) was introduced into English shortly before the Norman Conquest to denote this type of fortress, then new to England, brought in by the Norman knights. In Spain, a fortified dwelling on a height for the administering authority retains its Moorish name of alcázar, whilst shiro also figure prominently in Japanese history, where the feudal daimyō inhabited them.A French castle is a château-fort, for in French
a simple château connotes a grand country
house at the heart of an estate,
with non-military, purely residential function. When European
castles were opened up and expanded into pleasure dwellings and
power houses from the late 15th century, their "castle"
designations, relics of the feudal age, often remained
attached to the dwelling, resulting in many non-military castles
and châteaux.
In Germany there are
two names for what would be called a castle in English, Burg and
Schloss. A Burg is a medieval structure of military significance,
while a Schloss was built after the Middle Ages as a palace and not
for defensive purposes. However, these are not usually palaces in
the French style, but instead are styled on medieval mountain
castles and fairytale notions, and from all appearances are often
castles to an English speaker.
In Celtic countries, Caer or castell (Welsh),
dún and
caisleán (Irish),
dùn and caisteal (Scots
Gaelic) are used.
In spite of the generally accepted definition,
the word "castle" is sometimes used to mean a citadel (such as the castles of
Badajoz and
Burgos) or
small detached forts d'arrêt in modern times and, traditionally, in
Britain it
has also been used to refer to prehistoric
earthworks (e.g. Maiden
Castle). The use of the Spanish equivalent castillo can be
equally misleading, as it can refer to true castles and forts (eg.
Castillo
de San Marcos); terms such as Fortaleza ("fortress") are in
similar situations.
Defining features
The chief distinguishing features of castles, as
opposed to other defensive structures, can be defined as
follows:
- Castles were places of protection from an invading enemy, a place of retreat. This is the purpose behind such stereotypical castle features as portcullises, battlements and drawbridges.
- Castles were also offensive weapons, built in otherwise hostile territories from which to control surrounding lands, as forward camps. In particular, during the High Middle Ages, castles were often built for territorial expansion and regional control. A castle was a stronghold from which a lord could control surrounding territory.
- Castles were either built as, or evolved into, residences for the monarch or lord who built them.
These three purposes distinguish the castle from
other fortresses — which are usually purely defensive
(like citadels and city walls) or purely offensive (a military
camp) — or edifices that are entirely residential in
nature, like palaces. Castles such as the Tower of
London served as prisons.
Evolution
A castle was not only a bastion and place for detention of prisoners but also a social place where a knight or lord could entertain his peers. Over time the aesthetics of the design increased in importance, as the appearance and size began to reflect the prestige and power of the occupant.Castles were built as defensive measures and
offensive weapons, but often over time comfortable homes evolved
within the fortified walls. An example is the Windsor
Castle, first built as a Norman
Conquest fortress; today a home to the Queen of the
United Kingdom. The Alhambra in
Al-Andalus
incorporated both defensive and residential features, but after the
Reconquista
unified Spain, its importance
shifted and it became a palace
under Charles V.
Architecture and development
Early castles
Antecedents
From as early as Neolithic times (between 8500 BC-2500 BC), people built hill forts to protect themselves. Many earthworks survive today, along with evidence of palisades to accompany the ditches. The Romans commonly encountered hill forts (called oppida) built by their enemies. Though primitive, they were often effective and required extensive siege engines and other siege warfare techniques to overcome, such as at the Battle of Alesia. The Romans own fortifications (castra) varied from simple temporary earthworks thrown up by armies on the move, to elaborate permanent stone constructions, notably the milecastles of Hadrian's Wall. Roman forts were generally rectangular with rounded corners. The Roman engineer Vitruvius was the first to note the three main advantages of round corner towers: more efficient use of stone, improved defence against battering rams and improved field of fire. It was not until the 13th century that these advantages were rediscovered.The first castles
The earliest recorded structures universally acknowledged by historians as 'castles' were built in the late 9th century, and included wood, earth and stone structures. Other late Antiquity-early Medieval castles survive in Brescia and Trento in Italy Construction of new castles in Europe is attested from the Carolingian era, but their construction seems to have been related mainly to the defence of frontiers and state properties, and the right to fortify was a royal privilege. As early as 864, Charles the Bald issued an edict ordering the destruction of private fortifications erected without his permission. However, changes took place from the late 9th century, probably under the pressure of raids by the Vikings and Magyars, and due to the general decline of the Carolingian Empire, and the consequent loss of centralized authority, which resulted in a proliferation of castles.}}Defensive features
Keep
Most castles, even from the earliest times, followed certain standards of design and construction. Generally, the central feature of the castle was the keep, or donjon, the main commanding tower. The primary function of the keep varied, but usually it was a residential structure functioning as a redoubt in times of trouble, but could also be used as a secure storage area, or, later, as a prison. In motte and bailey castles, the keep typically surmounted the motte. Many early castles and certain later ones were nothing more than simple towers. The tower houses of Britain and Ireland, as well as peel towers, are examples of this type. Most, however, required outer walls of some sort. The keep was contained within the walls or attached to the walls. The area delineated by the walls was known as the bailey or the court, and the enclosure known as the enceinte.Enceinte
The enceinte of the castle is another recognizable feature. Essentially the enceinte is the entire fortified enclosure of the castle precincts. In some cases this area was demarcated by a simple defensive wall or barrier. More often the wall was surmounted by a walkway to defend the castle. As with Roman and earlier architecture, projecting flanking towers were usually added to the wall to improve defence. Later castles were built on a concentric plan, where enceinte walls (also called curtain walls) and towers formed two rings around the keep, resulting in an inner and an outer court, pushing the enemy further from the core walls and keep.Gatehouse
The gates were a weak point in the defenses of castles, so gatehouses could be strengthened with flanking towers, a turning or removable bridge, doors, and a heavy portcullis. There would often be multiple portcullises, with arrow slits in the sides of the gate passage, allowing the defenders to trap the enemy and kill them within the gate. Additionally, gates were often placed in such a manner as to channel attacking forces against a series of perilous defensive fortifications, enabling the defenders to defend on their terms. Many gatehouses had a second body. Archers in the second body could shoot down at their enemies while they were defenseless.Additional features
Castles featured an array of defences to delay the attackers' progress towards the keep. Moats and ditches formed the most obvious, as these would have to be filled in before heavy siege engines could be moved towards the walls. Overhanging wooden hoardings could be constructed if a castle was under threat. These covered walkways would allow several lines of fire. Nevertheless, castles could take many years to complete, although the time needed depended greatly from type, location, resources, time period, construction materials, etc.Finding stone was the first concern of medieval
builders, and a major preoccupation was to have quarries close at
hand. There are famous examples of some castles where stone was
quarried on site, such as Chinon, Château
de Coucy and Château
Gaillard. Beaumaris
Castle in Wales, has surviving records from 1295–96 which
describe 200 quarrymen, 400 stonemasons and as many as 2000 minor
workmen. Castles, not surprisingly were expensive to build,
considering workers and materials. For example, costs for
Beaumaris, which was in and of itself part of a bigger castle
program, was £14,500 (roughly $8–9 billion in today's money).
In some cases, transporting stone over large
distances was altogether impractical, and in the Low
countries, a lack of good building stone meant that castles
were generally brick. Brick castles were predominant in Scandinavia
and the Baltic.
Later developments
Innovation and scientific design
During the Crusades,
opportunities were afforded to western engineers to study the
massive fortifications of the Byzantine
Empire as well as fortifications built by the Islamic
inhabitants of the Holy Land. The buildings they encountered in the
late 10th century featured innovations which were not common in
Europe at that time. This included in part regularly-spaced
flanking towers of round or variable construction, and geometric
scientific design. This revolutionized the art of castle-building
in Europe, which henceforward followed these principles.
Designers soon realized that a second line of
defences should be built within the main enceinte, and a third line
or keep inside the second line, while a wall must be flanked by
projecting towers. Thus from the Byzantine engineers, European
castles derived the principle of mutual defence of all the parts of
a fortress. The donjon of Western Europe was regarded as the
fortress, the outer walls as accessory defences; in the East each
envelope was a fortress in itself, and the keep became merely the
last refuge of the garrison, used only when all else had been
captured. Many scholars have noted that in the 13th century there
was a tendency toward the strengthening of the enceinte, and a
reduced role of the keep in both military and residential
context.
In Richard
I of England's fortress of Château-Gaillard
Les
Andelys, the innermost ward was protected by an elaborate
system of strong appended defences, which included a strong
tête-de-pont protecting the Seine bridge. The
castle stood upon high ground and consisted of three distinct
enceintes or wards besides the keep, which was in this case merely
a strong tower forming part of the innermost ward.
Frederick II's Castel del
Monte in Puglia has no keep at all: built on high ground, it is
an octagonal structure with eight polygonal corner towers.
Round towers, rather than square towers, were now
becoming common, with the finest examples of their employment as
keeps being at Conisborough in England and at Falaise and
Coucy in
France. Siege artillery of the 13th century was primitive, but it
was realized that against mining
and battering rams, corners in castle stonework were more
vulnerable than a uniform curved surface.
The next development was the extension of the
principle of successive lines of defence to form what is called the
"concentric"
castle, in which each ward was placed wholly within another
which enveloped it. This was inspired by the Walls
of Constantinople, and thus places built on a flat site became
for the first time more formidable than strongholds perched upon
rocks and hills, where some points could not be as heavily
fortified as others for lack of space. In these cases, the fall of
the inner ward by surprise, escalade, or even sometimes by
ordinary siege, entailed the fall of the whole castle. The adoption
of the concentric system precluded any such mischance, and thus,
even though siege engines improved during the 13th and 14th
centuries, the defences of strong concentric castle, or naturally
inaccessible castles, retained its importance during the Late
Middle Ages.
Construction of castles in this period was often
connected to the necessity to establish a strong central power
against local fragmentation, or in newly conquered lands: examples
are the large building programs of Edward
I of England in Wales, Philip I August of France, the Ezzelino
IV da Romano and the Scaligers in northern Italy, Frederick II
and Charles
I of Anjou in southern Italy (often reusing former Norman or even
Byzantine and Lombard structures), King
Denis I in Portugal, and notably the Teutonic
Knights in their conquest of Pagan lands in Prussia and
Poland. In
Germany, stone structures appeared in Hesse, Thuringia,
Alsace and
Saxony,
commissioned by the powerful local aristocracy. Structures in
northern Germany were usually simpler, often taking advantage of
water streams.
Response to the advent of gunpowder
The advent of gunpowder in the Middle Ages signalled a change in the purpose of a castle - from being purely a military building, it became increasingly a residential one. From the Renaissance onward, this loosening of military importance allowed for a more aesthetic approach to construction, for example the Castello Estense of Ferrara in Italy, the castles of Valderrobres and Manzanares el Real in Spain and the series of highly decorated castles built (or rebuilt) in France along the Loire starting from the 15th centuryWhilst siegecraft had consisted of throwing
machines such as trebuchets, the primary aims
in the construction of castle walls were height and thickness.
However it became almost impossible to follow this ideal to cope
with ever more powerful cannons. Existing castles which
retained military importance were updated, as far as practically
possible, to cope with new siege technologies. One example is the
English fortress of Bodiam, built from
1385, provided with opposite slit to allow firing from arquebuses. But inevitably,
those fortifications previously deemed impregnable, eventually
proved inadequate in the face of gunpowder. These include Friesack
Castle (which was reduced in two days (during February 1414), by
Frederick I with "Heavy Peg" (Faule Grete), and other guns;
Constantinople
(the massively strong walls of which were breached in 1453 to the
Ottomans after lengthy cannon bombardment); and Nanstein Castle
(Franz
von Sickingen's stronghold at Landstuhl, was ruined in one day
in 1523 by the artillery of Philip of Hesse). Architects of the
Late Middle Ages and Renaissance, many of whom were also renowned
as engineers, were called to plan countermeasures; e.g. Guillén
Sagrera,
Giuliano da Sangallo the Younger,
Francesco di Giorgio Martini, Baldassarre
Peruzzi and Leonardo
da Vinci. Viollet-le-Duc,
in his Annals of a Fortress, gives a full account of the repeated
renovations of a fortress (at an imaginary site in the valley of
the Doubs), the construction by Charles
the Bold of artillery towers at the angles of the castle, the
protection of the masonry by earthen outworks, boulevards and
demi-boulevards, and, in the 17th century, the final service of the
medieval walls and towers as a pure enceinte de sfireti. The
general adoption of cannons led therefore to the disappearing (or
to the loss of importance) of majestic towers and merlons. Walls of
new fortresses were thicker and angulated, towers became lower and
stouter. Examples of the late type of castle-fortress are that in
Sarzana
(Italy), that
built by Henry
VIII of England in Deal, the Fort de
Salses constructed by Ferdinand
II of Aragon and the Imperial Castle of Nurnberg.
In the end, the introduction of gunpowder led to
a disappearing of traditional castles, in the meaning of a building
intended for both military and residential roles. This transition
began in the 14th century and was fully underway by the 15th. In
the 16th century the feudal fastness had become an anachronism.
Here and there we find old castles serving in secondary roles, as
forts d'arret or block-houses in
mountain
passes and defiles,
and in some few cases, as at Dover, they
formed the nucleus of purely military places of arms. Normally
castles, when they were not let to fell into ruins, became peaceful
mansions, or were merged in the fortifications of the town which
has grown up around it. In the Viollet-le-Duc's Annals of a
Fortress the site of the feudal castle is occupied by the citadel
of the walled town, for once again, with the development of the
middle class and of commerce and industry, the art of the engineer
came to be displayed chiefly in the fortification of cities. The
baronial "castle" assumes pan passu the form of a mansion,
retaining indeed for long some capacity for defence, but in the end
losing all military characteristics save a few which survived as
ornaments.
However, some true castles were built in the
Americas
by the Spanish and
French
colonies. The first stage of Spanish fort construction has been
termed the "castle period", which lasted from 1492 until the end of
the 16th century. Starting with Fortaleza Ozama, "these castles
were essentially European medieval castles transposed to America."
Among other defensive structures (including forts and citadels),
castles were also built in New France
towards the end of the 17th century. Where artillery was not as
developed as on the battle-fields of Europe, some of Montreal's
outlying forts were built like the fortified manor houses of
France. Fort Longueuil, built from 1695–1698 by a
baronial family, has been described as "the most medieval
looking fort built in Canada". The manor
house and stables were within a fortified bailey, with a tall round
turret in each corner. The "most substantial castle-like fort" near
Montréal was Fort
Senneville, built in 1692 with square towers connected by thick
stone walls, as well as a fortified windmill. Stone forts such as
these served as defensive residences, as well as imposing
structures to prevent Iroquois
incursions.
To guard against artillery and gunfire,
increasing use was made of earthen, brick and stone breastworks
and this redoubts, such
as the geometric fortresses of the 17th century French Marquis
de Vauban. These soon replaced castles in Europe, and
eventually castles in the Americas were superseded by bastions and
forts.
Revival castles and the castle as a country house
From the late 18th century to the early 20th century, as a manifestation of a romantic interest in the Medieval period, and as part of the broader Gothic Revival in architecture, many so-called castles were built. These Castles had no defensive purpose, but incorporated stylistic elements of earlier castles, such as castellation and towers. These features were personified in the Scottish Baronial style. Most of them were country houses. These revival or "mock" castles were particularly common in the British Isles, for example Belvoir Castle and Eastnor Castle. Edwin Lutyens' Castle Drogo was the last flicker of this movement in England. In Ireland, a considerable number of vast, complicated mock-castles were built, including Belfast Castle and Castle Oliver. Famous revival castles in other countries include Neuschwanstein in Germany, Miramare in Italy, and Castillo de Chapultepec in Mexico.See also
- List of castles
- Castles in Britain
- List of castles in Germany
- Chinese city wall (Chinese castle counterpart)
- Alcázar (Spanish castles)
- Shiro (Japanese castles)
- Kremlin (Russian castles)
- Water Castles
Footnotes
Sources
- English Castles
- Castellarium Anglicanum: An Index and Bibliography of the Castles in England, Wales and the Islands (2 vols)
- The Castle in England and Wales: An Interpretative History
- Medieval Siege Warfare
- Timber Castles
- Behind the Castle Gate: From Medieval to Renaissance
- Medieval Fortifications
- The Medieval Castle in England and Wales: A Social and Political History
- The Decline of the Castle
- The Rise of the Castle
External links
castle in Afrikaans: Kasteel
castle in Arabic: قلعة
castle in Asturian: Castiellu
castle in Belarusian: Замак
castle in Samogitian: Pėlis
castle in Catalan: Castell
castle in Czech: Hrad
castle in Welsh: Castell
castle in Danish: Borg
castle in German: Burg
castle in Esperanto: Burgo
castle in Spanish: Castillo
castle in Estonian: Linnus
castle in Finnish: Linna
castle in French: Château fort
castle in Hebrew: טירה (מבצר)
castle in Hungarian: Vár
castle in Indonesian: Kastil
castle in Icelandic: Kastali
castle in Italian: Castello
castle in Japanese: 城
castle in Korean: 성 (건조물)
castle in Latvian: Pils
castle in Lithuanian: Pilis
castle in Macedonian: Крепост
castle in Dutch: Burcht (kasteel)
castle in Narom: Câté
castle in Occitan (post 1500): Castèl
(construccion)
castle in Polish: Zamek
castle in Portuguese: Castelo
castle in Romanian: Cetate (edificiu)
castle in Russian: Замок (строение)
castle in Scots: Castle
castle in Simple English: Castle
castle in Slovak: Hrad
castle in Slovenian: Grad
castle in Albanian: Kalaja
castle in Serbian: Замак
castle in Swedish: Borg
castle in Turkish: Kale (yapı)
castle in Ukrainian: Замок (споруда)
castle in Chinese: 城堡
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
acropolis, bastion, beachhead, bishop, blockhouse, bridgehead, bunker, chateau, chessman, citadel, court, donjon, fasthold, fastness, fort, fortress, garrison, garrison house,
hall, hold, keep, king, knight, man, manor, mansion, martello, martello tower,
mote, motte, palace, palais, palatial residence,
palazzo, pawn, peel, peel tower, piece, pillbox, post, queen, rath, rook, safehold, strong point,
stronghold, tower, tower of strength, villa, ward