Synopses & Reviews
Romanticised as ruins, treated as relics of forgotten military campaigns or as mere lessons in architectural history, the castles of England and Wales have too rarely been examined as places in which real people lived. Fresh both in style and approach and richly illustrated, Michael Thompson's book aims now to redress the balance. Examining the rise of the castle from its European origins in the tenth century to c.1400, the author devotes particular attention to the domestic accommodation - colourfully adorned but often cold and claustrophobic - that castles offered their aristocratic inhabitants. The book closes with the castle at its zenith, reviewing the extravagant outburst of self-conscious construction that took place in the fourteenth century as display and appearance came for the first time to play as important a part as function in determining building design.
Synopsis
Examines the rise of the castle from its European origins in the tenth century to c.1400.
Synopsis
Fresh both in style and approach and richly illustrated, Michael Thompson's book examines the rise of the castle from its European origins in the tenth century to c.1400. The author devotes particular attention to the domestic accommodation - colourfully adorned but often cold and claustrophobic - that castles offered their aristocratic inhabitants
Table of Contents
Preface; 1. Introduction; 2. Germany; 3. France; 4. Wooden castles; 5. Stone towers; 6. Dwelling and defence divided; 7. Defence paramount; 8. The castle as midwife: monasteries; 9. The castle as midwife: towns; 10. Indian summer: the fourteenth century; Appendix 1: the sequence of halls in bishops' palaces in England and France; Appendix 2: the spiritual castle; List of abbreviations; Notes; Select bibliography; List of illustrations with acknowledgements; Index.