An Illustrated Glossary of Castle Architecture (2024)

An Illustrated Glossary of Castle Architecture (1)

Alure (Wall Walk)

The walkway along the higher and interior part of a wall which often gives access to the higher floors of towers within the wall. Typically protected by battlements.

Apse

A semicircular projecting part of a building, usually vaulted.

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Arcade

An area of columned arches.

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Arrow Loop

The narrow window of a wall or tower through which arrows and crossbow bolts could be fired. Usually a vertical slit, sometimes with a short horizontal slit to improve sighting.

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Ashlar

Regular-shaped blocks of dressed masonry set in even horizontal rows.

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Bailey (Ward)

The courtyard of a castle containing the principal buildings, including sometimes a tower keep, which may be surrounded by its own fortified wall.

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Ballista

A large, fixed crossbow which fired large wooden bolts or iron-headed bolts. Used by both attackers and defenders.

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Barbican

A short stretch of fortification outside the castle, especially used to provide extra protection for gates.

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Barrel Vault

An arched vault between two walls.

Bartizan

A turret which overhangs the wall below. Common at the juncture of two walls, they provide extra defensive visibility.

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Bastion

An angular projection from a curtain wall which gives an improved range of defensive fire.

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Batter

The angled additional base to a wall or tower which increases the difficulty in climbing or dismantling the wall by attackers. See Talus.

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Battlements

The crenellated top row of stones on a wall or tower. The merlons (raised section) and crenets (gaps) alternate to provide both cover and a line of fire for defenders.

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Belfry

A mobile siege tower used to attack castles but sometimes also used by defenders.

Berm

The narrow area between the outer wall and its protective ditch or moat.

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Blind Arcade

A row of false arches added to decorate a wall.

Boss (Keystone)

The central stone in a vault, often with decorative carving.

Burgus

An area of settlement connected to a castle by encircling earthworks.

Buttery

A room used to store drinks, especially wine, beer, and ale.

Buttress

A stone support of a wall, needed when the wall carries a roof or vault, or to provide extra defensive stability against dismantling or bombardment by attackers.

Chamber

A private room in a castle, for example, a bedroom.

Chemise

A wall which closely surrounds a keep.

Cistern

A tank for capturing rainwater and/or storing water.

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Corbel

A stone which projects from a wall to support a roof timber or stone arch.

Countermine

A mine dug by the defenders in order to intersect and/or collapse the mine of the attackers.

Counterscarp

The outer slope of a ditch or moat.

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Crenellations

The top row of stones on a wall or tower which alternate between merlons (raised sections) and crenets (gaps) to provide both cover and a line of fire for defenders.

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Crenet (Embrasure)

The gap between raised sections (merlons) in the battlements of a wall or tower.

Cruck

The curved timber which is set in the ground to support a roof or wall.

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Curtain Wall

The outer wall of a castle.

Demesne

The lands owned by and farmed in the name of the castle owner but which were not usually leased.

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Donjon

The medieval name for a tower keep.

Drawbar

The large horizontal beam of wood used to lock a gate.

Drawbridge

A short hinged bridge which can be raised to block a gateway or lowered to cover a section of the moat. Usually operated via a chain and winch.

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Drum Tower

A round tower set within a curtain wall.

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Earthworks

Raised areas of earth on which palisades and walls were built in early castles. May also refer in general to such defensive structures as moats.

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Embrasure

The splayed opening in a wall for an arrow loop or ordinary window which gives a defender room to stand and manoeuvre. Also an alternative name for a crenet.

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Enceinte

The area enclosed by a fortified wall of a castle or town.

Fictive Masonry

The lines painted on a wall to make it resemble ashlar masonry. Often used on chamber interiors using red paint.

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Forebuilding

The structure immediately in front of the tower keep which protects its entrance.

Gable

The triangular section of a wall between the sloping roofs of two adjoining buildings.

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Garderobe

Another name for the latrine or toilet.

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Gatehouse

The structure which developed to better protect gates, eventually having twin round towers and other defences like a drawbridge and portcullis.

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Great Hall

The main reception and dining room of the castle. Usually with an impressive beam or vaulted ceiling and enormous fireplace.

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Hall Keep

A keep which does not have the height of a tower keep.

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Hoardings

Wooden structures added to the top of walls and towers to provide a covered walkway and a secure place for defensive fire. Sometimes they could be removed during peacetime.

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Keep

The term used from the 16th century CE to describe the main residential building of a castle. Known also as a great tower or donjon. They may be of only a few stories (Hall Keep) or four or more floors (Tower Keep).

Keystone (Boss)

The central stone in a vault, often with decorative carving.

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Latrine

Toilet or garderobe, usually with a waste shaft emptying directly outside the walls.

Lintel

The large horizontal stone or beam above a doorway or window.

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Machicolation (Murder Hole)

A hole in the projecting overhang of a wall or tower through which missiles may be dropped on the enemy and through which the base of the wall can be monitored.

Mangonel

A stone-throwing catapult which was powered by the torsion of ropes. Used by both defenders and attackers.

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Merlon

The raised section which alternates with crenets (gaps) in the battlements of a wall or tower.

Mine

A tunnel dug under a castle by attackers to cause a partial collapse of it.

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Moat

A ditch which encircles or partially encircles a castle's walls. They may be dry or filled with water (temporarily or permanently) and have wooden stakes driven into their sides to make them more slippery and so more difficult to climb by attackers.

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Motte & Bailey Castle

An early type of castle with an artificial or natural mound (motte) on which a tower is built with a courtyard (bailey) below, surrounded by a palisade and moat.

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Mural Tower

A tower built into a curtain wall.

Mural Chamber

A small vaulted room built within a castle wall.

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Mural Passage

A vaulted passageway which is built within the wall itself.

Murder Hole (Machicolation)

A hole in the projecting overhang of a wall or tower through which missiles may be dropped on the enemy and through which the base of the wall can be monitored.

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Outworks

Those defensive arrangements outside the castle walls proper, for example, a moat or barbican.

Palisade

A wooden defensive wall.

Pantry

A room used to store food, especially bread, usually located near the Great Hall.

Parados

The low inner wall of a wall walk or alure.

Parapet

The raised top part of a wall, often with battlements, which offers some protection to defenders on the wall walk behind it.

Plinth

The lower projecting part of a wall or tower.

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Portcullis

A grill made from wood, iron covered wood or purely iron which has a spiked base and is lowered to block a gate entrance. Usually raised and lowered via a chain and winch.

Postern Gate (Sally Port)

A small gate for pedestrians only which was used as a secondary entrance or emergency exit.

Rampart

An earth bank.

Ravelin

A triangular fortification structure set outside the curtain walls.

Rendering

The plaster covering of a stone wall, often lime-washed.

Revetment

A wooden or stone wall to protect one side of a moat or ditch.

Ringwork

An oval or circular earthwork with a bank and ditch which encloses domestic or other buildings.

Sally Port (Postern Gate)

A small gate for pedestrians only which was used as a secondary entrance or emergency exit.

Scarp

The inner slope of a ditch or moat or the edge of the earth platform on which a castle may be built to increase its height.

Screens Passage

The passageway which leads from the Great Hall to the service area.

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Shell Keep

When the keep is built on an artificial or natural mound (motte) and surrounded by a stone circuit wall on the mound itself.

Solar Room

A private chamber within a tower keep, usually a high floor but of uncertain use.

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Talus

The massive angled additional base to a wall or tower which increased the difficulty in climbing and dismantling the wall by attackers. Larger than a batter.

Tiltyard

The area used by knights to practise jousting, tilt being the wooden barrier which separates horsem*n as they charge at each other.

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Tower Keep

The main residential building of a castle consisting of many floors.

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Tracery

Decorative patterned wood or stonework in a window frame.

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Trebuchet

A stone-throwing catapult which was powered by a counterweight. Used by both defenders and attackers, it was more accurate and had a greater range than the mangonel.

Turning Bridge

An alternative to a drawbridge which swings on a central pivot so that the rear end lowers into a ditch or pit.

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Turret

A small tower, sometimes added to the corners of a tower keep.

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Vault

An arched ceiling made of stone.

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Vice

A spiral staircase.

Wall Walk (Alure)

The walkway along the higher and interior part of a wall which often gives access to the higher floors of towers within the wall.

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Ward (Bailey)

The courtyard of a castle containing the principal buildings, including sometimes a tower keep, which may be surrounded by its own fortified wall.

Wattle & Daub

The combination of clay or earth (daub) with a strengthening latticework of wood (wattle) which was used in buildings instead of more expensive stone. In a motte and bailey castle, the interior buildings would have been mostly of wattle and daub.

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Window Seat

A seat set into the wall by a window which provides good light for such activities as reading and embroidery.

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Wing-wall

A fortification wall that descends into a moat.

Editorial ReviewThis article has been reviewed by our editorial team before publication to ensure accuracy, reliability and adherence to academic standards in accordance with our editorial policy.

An Illustrated Glossary of Castle Architecture (2024)

FAQs

What were the first castles built out of ____________________ and ________________? ›

They were designed to be difficult to attack and easy to defend. Castles protected owners from rivals and invaders; however, castles were also used to protect the local citizens. Early castles were built in the 9th and 10th centuries and were constructed of earth and wood; usually constructed on higher ground.

What was the main purpose of a castle's architecture? ›

Castle architecture can serve a variety of purposes. The original and most compelling reason for castles to be built is as a form of protection from sieges. Later castles were also built to emphasize the wealth and power of those who inhabited them.

What is a castle structure? ›

castle, medieval stronghold, generally the residence of the king or lord of the territory in which it stands. Strongholds designed with the same functionality have been built throughout the world, including in Japan, India, and other countries.

What is the main building of a castle? ›

A keep was a great tower or other building that served as the main living quarters of the castle and usually the most strongly defended point of a castle before the introduction of concentric defence.

What castle was built last? ›

Castle Drogo is a country house and mixed-revivalist castle near Drewsteignton, Devon, England. Constructed between 1911 and 1930, it was the last castle to be built in England. The client was Julius Drewe, the hugely successful founder of the Home and Colonial Stores.

When did castles stop being built? ›

After the 16th century, castles declined as a mode of defense, mostly because of the invention and improvement of heavy cannons and mortars. This artillery could throw heavy cannonballs with so much force that even strong curtain walls could not hold up.

Which castle was built first? ›

The Citadel of Aleppo, a towering testament to human ingenuity, holds the distinction of being the world's oldest castle. Dating back an astonishing 5,000 years to the 3rd millennium BCE, it has witnessed the rise and fall of empires, from the Hittites to the Byzantines.

What do castles symbolize? ›

Worldwide, castles have had many purposes and meanings. They may be coveted possessions of strategic and political importance, symbolising power, sovereignty and conquest. They are sites of attack, defence, vigilance; places of imprisonment, but conversely also of protection, sanctuary and refuge.

Why is a castle called a castle? ›

The word 'castle' derives from the old English word 'castel', which meant village. Villages were often fortified, but in peaceful times the villages expanded, leaving only the central part fortified.

What are the small windows in a castle called? ›

In the 13th century, it became common for arrowslits to be placed all around a castle's defences. Elements of fortification such as arrowslits became associated with high social standing and authority.

What was the most important room in any castle? ›

The most important room in a castle was the Great Hall. This is where all the members of the household sat down to eat at tables set up for every meal. It was where feasts were held for special days, or when there were guests. King Arthur's Pentecost Feast takes place in such a Hall.

What is a balcony in a castle called? ›

Hoarding - A temporary wooden balcony suspended from the tops of walls and towers before a battle, from which missiles and arrows could be dropped or fired accurately toward the base of the wall. Inner Curtain - The high wall that surrounds the inner ward. Inner Ward - The open area in the center of a castle.

What is the strongest part of a castle? ›

Particularly large towers are often the strongest point of the castle: the keep or the bergfried. As the gate is always a vulnerable point of a castle, towers may be built near it to strengthen the defences at this point.

What is the architecture of a castle? ›

Most of a castle was made up by relatively open, flat, enclosed spaces called baileys or wards. In the earliest castles, these were defined by earthworks and timber defences; in later versions, these were replaced by stone. Castles might have up to three or four baileys of varying size, linked by gateways or bridges.

What is the entrance to a castle called? ›

A portcullis is a heavy castle door or gate made of metal strips that form a grid. A castle guardian might lower the portcullis to protect the people inside from an invading army. It was common during medieval times for castles to be protected by a portcullis or two.

What were early castles built from? ›

Early castles: motte and bailey

Called motte and bailey castles, these early Medieval castles were made of readily available material: earth and timber. Many of these castles were built as fortresses in France during the eleventh and twelfth centuries, and in England after the Norman Conquest (1066).

What was the castle built out of? ›

Castles usually contained two types of masonry, rubble and ashlar. Rubble was lumps of irregularly-shaped stone, which was used for walls that were not going to be visible as it was cheap and easy to lay. Ashlar was good quality, regularly-cut stone that was used for exterior walls and was more neatly laid and jointed.

What materials were the first castles made of? ›

Castles evolved throughout the several centuries they were employed. At first, medieval castles were simple but sturdy wooden structures built in the motte-and-bailey style. Eventually, however, larger and more complex stone castles replaced the wooden ones.

Were the first castles made of wood? ›

Initially, castles were built out of wood, but eventually, people made castles from stone because they were stronger and lasted longer. Castles usually consisted of a group of buildings that were surrounded by a huge wall and a moat designed to keep attackers out.

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