The Archaeology of Medieval Germany by Fehring Günter P
Author:Fehring, Günter P.
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 978-1-317-60510-2
Publisher: Taylor & Francis (CAM)
b) Mottes
The fortification type, motte, using the French word (an earthen mound), or more fully château à motte, is frequently called Turmhügel in Germany following C. Schuchhardtâs example and also Hausberg in Austria. The motte, often joined by a single- or double-walled bailey (Latin suburbium, French basse court, German Vorburg) at ground level, consisted of the stump of a conical or pyramidal earthen mound topped with a tower or a house. There is a characteristic consistency between mottes in their nearly identical form compared, for example, with the Carolingian sites in Hessen cut out of hill promontories or compared with the tower-forts erected on cone-shaped hills in southern Germany from the eleventh century onwards. Mottes for the most part lie not in the mountains but frequently in plains and valleys that had long been settled (Hinz 1981).
Ordinary mottes between 5 and 10m high are distinguished from large mottes over 10m and from small mottes under 5m. The motte may lie inside the bailey (undivided), one or more baileys may abut the motte (bipartite or multiple enclosures), and in rare cases the motte even lies separate from the courtyard. Although the motte was protected by one or more ramparts and ditches, the last ditch spanned by a wooden bridge, the main defences were situated on the platform of the mound. Excavations, depictions on the eleventh century Bayeux tapestry, as well as written sources reveal that the edge of the platform at the top of the mound was encircled by a palisade, occasionally with a wall-walk and the central area often carried a tower-like main building; an impressive example of this is the excavated motte of Abiger in Surrey, dated around 1100 (fig. 38). Occasionally one also finds small ancillary buildings on the motte. The central buildings were constructed in wood in the early period. Not infrequently they were replaced by stone towers in the twelfth or thirteenth century. According to documentary sources cellars and store rooms were found on the ground floor, above which was the stately chamber of the lord of the castle, on the second floor were rooms for the children, servants, and the watch-guards, and above this one presumes was a fighting platform.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The European History Highway: A Guide to Internet Resources by Dennis A. Trinkle Scott A. Merriman(498)
The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World by Michael Denis Higgins(480)
European Security in a Global Context by Thierry Tardy(472)
European Security without the Soviet Union by Stuart Croft Phil Williams(472)
The Routledge companion to Christian ethics by D. Stephen Long Rebekah L. Miles(461)
Hudud Al-'Alam 'The Regions of the World' - a Persian Geography 372 A.H. (982 AD) by V. V. Minorsky & C. E. Bosworth(402)
Gorbachev And His Generals by William C. Green(393)
Get Real with Storytime by Julie Dietzel-Glair & Marianne Crandall Follis(392)
Tibetan Studies in Comparative Perspective by Chih-yu Shih Yu-Wen Chen(387)
Governance, Growth and Global Leadership by Espen Moe(385)
Hyperculture by Byung-Chul Han(382)
CliffsNotes on Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby by Kate Maurer(363)
The Oxford History of the World by Fernández-Armesto Felipe;(357)
How Languages Are Learned 5th Edition by Patsy M Lightbown;Nina Spada; & Nina Spada(356)
The Egyptian Economy, 1952-2000 by Khalid Ikram(355)
Oral Poetry and Narratives from Central Arabia: The Poetry of Ad-Dindan : A Bedouin Bard in Southern Najd (Studies in Arabic Literature, Vol 17) (English and Arabic Edition) by P. M. Kupershoek P. Marcel Kurpershoek(345)
The Oxford Handbook of the Incas by Sonia Alconini(336)
Europe Contested by Harold James(323)
The Hutchinson Dictionary of Ancient and Medieval Warfare by Peter Connolly John Gillingham John Lazenby(308)
