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Counter-castle

Counter-castles were built in the Middle Ages to counter the power of a hostile neighbour or as a siege castle, that is, a fortified base from which attacks could be launched on a nearby enemy castle.

The counter-castle of Katz

Purpose edit

 
View of Thurant Castle on the Moselle from the Bleidenberg hill

In castle science, and according to mediaeval usage, a counter-castle was a type of castle that was built to secure a territorial lord's claims to power or to besiege and conquer the estates of rival rulers. In such cases, it may also be referred to as a siege castle. These terms are not used uniformly by specialist authors. Usually a distinction is made between counter-castles and siege castles. Where this is the case, a siege castle refers to one built near the enemy castle within the range of trebuchets and catapults that could act as a strongpoint, a route barrier, a refuge in the event of counter-attacks, a barracks and a battery position for ballistic weapons.

A counter-castle is often used to describe a castle that was built at a greater distance from enemy fortifications and castles. It did not support the immediate siege of a castle, but was constructed as a base in an area of rival power in order to prevent enemy attempts to expand their influence and control.

Siege castles are only evident from the period of the Late Middle Ages onwards. They were usually built as a temporary fortifications using wood and earth above the castle to be captured and within sight and the range of their guns. From this location the target would be bombarded.

Sometimes only a trebuchet position was established instead of a masonry or wooden siege castle. A favourable point in the terrain, within range of the besieged castle, was levelled and lightly fortified. From this position, the enemy castle could be engaged relatively safely with a trebuchet or catapult and its occupants psychologically ground down. Such a position may be seen today about 430 metres northeast and above Thurant Castle on the Moselle.

Trebuchets were used in sieges from the early 13th century. Large catapults had a range of about 400 to 500 metres. However, only wealthy feudal lords could finance the use of such a large, costly siege engine or even the construction of a counter-castle.

 
Eltz and Trutzeltz castles

Only occasionally did the attackers have the time and financial resources to build their fortress of stone. Rare examples are Ramstein Castle, the Rauschenburg at Mermuth in the Hunsrück and Trutzeltz Castle. The last-named was built during the Eltz Feud as a counter-castle to Eltz. The Rauschenburg was also built in connection with the Eltz Feud as counter castle to the castles of Ehrenburg, Waldeck and Schöneck.

In the majority of known cases, siege castles were abandoned after the fighting and fell into disrepair. Sometimes the lord of the formerly besieged castle was given the counter-castle in a peace agreement or even took it over as a fief, as in the case of Trutzeltz Castle. In exceptional cases, such structures were - when the conquest was successful - expanded into independent castles. Examples include the Hohenfels and Schadeck Castle at Runkel on the Lahn.

The few surviving stone counter or siege castles generally show evidence of less careful construction. In order to build the fortification quickly, clay was mixed with the lime mortar. These defences are therefore dangerous today in view of their condition and can be made safe through painstaking renovation.

Academic research has only investigated counter and siege castles to any great extent since the end of the 20th century. After scholars like Joachim Zeune had concerned themselves in the 1980s and 1990s more with the symbolism of medieval fortifications, subsequent research began to be more critical of the then established theses. As part of the new focus on the functional and military aspects of military architecture, the counter castle became more of a focus of military historical interest.

Early Norman occupation castles in England edit

 
The construction of the castle of Hastings (left), Bayeux Tapestry

The Norman Conquest of England had undergone long preparation and is generally reckoned as one of the most notable military-strategic campaigns of the early High Middle Ages. The Normans attacked the island just at the time when the English were busy defending a Norwegian attack in the north. The English Army under King Harold succeeded in repelling the Vikings but now exhausted, had to fight roughly 7,000 well-equipped Norman warriors.

During the invasion numerous simple 'occupation castles' were built, the first, at Pevensey, being at the landing-place of William's army. In addition to mottes, circular ramparts with palisades were built and older Celtic or Saxon fortifications were reactivated. The wooden components of these wood and earth castles had in some cases been prepared on the continent and were later assembled on the spot. This enabled the rapid establishment of a dense network of military strongpoints, some of which were later turned into stone castles.

These castles can be made out on the famous Bayeux Tapestry. Occasionally even the barrels are depicted in which the invaders transported nails for the construction of forts on the other side of the Channel.

The Welsh occupation castles of Edward I of England edit

 
Caernarfon Castle.
 
Harlech Castle.

Right at the start of his conquest of Celtic Wales, the English king, Edward I, ordered in 1277 the construction of several castles at strategically important places. Among these early English castles of occupation were those in Aberystwyth, Builth, Flint and Rhuddlan.

The outbreak of new unrest in 1282 caused the king to initiate a huge construction programme. The English Army was accompanied by 355 carpenters, 70 stonemasons, and 1,000 stone breakers and earthworks builders. In addition, 1,700 lumberjacks were gathered from the whole of England. After a year this force was increased by 25 carpenters and 100 stonemasons.

Within a short period of time a complete network of the most modern fortifications sprang up, which are today seen as the epitome of mediaeval profane architecture. With supplies coming in from the sea, these strongpoints enabled the land to be secured militarily. The Welsh castle-building programme cost huge sums of money that had to be raised by parliament and even the church. A subsequent plan to defeat Scotland in the same way foundered due to the cost of such a building campaign.

Among the most important English occupation castles were those of built by James of St. George including Caernarfon, Conway and Harlech.

Siege and counter-castles in the Holy Land edit

 
Montreal Castle, Jordan

During the siege of larger, fortified cities and towns castles were sometimes built as protection against sallies and relief troops.

During the First Crusade the Crusaders built the first siege castles before the gates of Islamic towns and cities in the Holy Land. In 1097 Malregard Castle was built in front of the St. Paul's Gate at Antioch.[1] A little later the castles of la Mahomerie and Tancred's Castle were built in front of other gateways.

In 1103 Raymond IV of Toulouse ordered the construction of the siege castle, Mons Pelegrinus, at Tripoli. Raymond was the Count of St. Gilles, which is why the castle in the centre of the town is known locally as Qualat Sandjill.

As well as siege castles, counter-castles were also built at greater distance from the besieged towns. For example, in 1117, King Baldwin I built a counter-castle "ad coercendum praedictam urbem" (to conquer the aforementioned town) of Tyre near İskenderun. Despite this siege Tyre did not fall until 1124.

The king also attempted to monitor the important caravan route of Derb el-Hadj from several new castles. Here the Pilgrim's Way ran to Mecca and Medina. Around Petra the castles of Montreal/Shobaq (1115) and Li Vaux Moisee were built and, in 1116, fortified strongpoints were added at Aqaba and on the Isle de Graye/Jazirat Fara’un.

In 1142, construction started on the mighty fortress of Kerak (Krak de Moab) in northern Transjordan, to which a harbour on the Dead Sea belonged. From here Raynald of Châtillon undertook numerous raids in the surrounding area. In retaliation, Sultan Saladin attacked the Frankish crusader states.

Between 1136 and 1142 four strong castles (at Castrum Arnaldi, Beth Gibelin, Ibelin and Blanchegarde) were built around the Egyptian-held city of Ashkelon.

German terminology edit

In the Holy Roman Empire, the term Trutzburg was commonly used to describe the defensive character of a castle that defied all attacks. The word is also used in German as a metaphor for things that are especially durable and resistant.

Where the Trutzburg was built specifically with the object of besieging enemy fortifications it was also known as a Gegenburg ("counter castle"), Okkupationsburg ("occupation castle") or Belagerungsburg ("siege castle"). These terms are used today by modern castle scientists and researchers in preference to the more generic Trutzburg.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hill, Rosalind (1962). The Deeds of the Franks and the Other Pilgrims to Jerusalem. London: Thomas Nelson and Sons LTD. p. 30.

Literature edit

  • Horst Wolfgang Böhme, Reinhard Friedrich, Barbara Schock-Werner (Hrsg.): Wörterbuch der Burgen, Schlösser und Festungen. Reclam, Stuttgart, 2004, ISBN 3-15-010547-1.
  • Daniel Burger: Burgen der Kreuzfahrer im Heiligen Land. In: Hans-Jürgen Kotzur (ed.): Die Kreuzzüge - Kein Krieg ist heilig. Mainz, 2004, ISBN 3-8053-3240-8.
  • Georg Ulrich Großmann: Burgen in Europa. Regensburg, 2005, ISBN 3-7954-1686-8.
  • Michael Losse: Kleine Burgenkunde. Regionalia, Euskirchen, 2011, ISBN 978-3-939722-39-7.
  • Olaf Wagener (ed.): … wurfen hin in steine - grôze und niht kleine … Belagerungen und Belagerungsanlagen im Mittelalter. Frankfurt am Main, 2006, ISBN 3-631-55467-2.
  • Joachim Zeune: Okkupationsburgen. In: Horst Wolfgang Böhme, Busso von der Dollen (et al., eds.): Burgen in Mitteleuropa, Band II - Geschichte und Burgenlandschaften. Stuttgart, 1999, ISBN 3-8062-1355-0, pp. 79–81.

External links edit

  • DBV Seminar zur Burgenforschung 2003/II: Überlegungen zu Belagerungen und Gegenburgen anhand von Beispielen des südwestdeutschen Sprachraums (PDF; 3.7 MB) (in German)

counter, castle, were, built, middle, ages, counter, power, hostile, neighbour, siege, castle, that, fortified, base, from, which, attacks, could, launched, nearby, enemy, castle, counter, castle, katz, contents, purpose, early, norman, occupation, castles, en. Counter castles were built in the Middle Ages to counter the power of a hostile neighbour or as a siege castle that is a fortified base from which attacks could be launched on a nearby enemy castle The counter castle of Katz Contents 1 Purpose 2 Early Norman occupation castles in England 3 The Welsh occupation castles of Edward I of England 4 Siege and counter castles in the Holy Land 5 German terminology 6 See also 7 References 8 Literature 9 External linksPurpose edit nbsp View of Thurant Castle on the Moselle from the Bleidenberg hillIn castle science and according to mediaeval usage a counter castle was a type of castle that was built to secure a territorial lord s claims to power or to besiege and conquer the estates of rival rulers In such cases it may also be referred to as a siege castle These terms are not used uniformly by specialist authors Usually a distinction is made between counter castles and siege castles Where this is the case a siege castle refers to one built near the enemy castle within the range of trebuchets and catapults that could act as a strongpoint a route barrier a refuge in the event of counter attacks a barracks and a battery position for ballistic weapons A counter castle is often used to describe a castle that was built at a greater distance from enemy fortifications and castles It did not support the immediate siege of a castle but was constructed as a base in an area of rival power in order to prevent enemy attempts to expand their influence and control Siege castles are only evident from the period of the Late Middle Ages onwards They were usually built as a temporary fortifications using wood and earth above the castle to be captured and within sight and the range of their guns From this location the target would be bombarded Sometimes only a trebuchet position was established instead of a masonry or wooden siege castle A favourable point in the terrain within range of the besieged castle was levelled and lightly fortified From this position the enemy castle could be engaged relatively safely with a trebuchet or catapult and its occupants psychologically ground down Such a position may be seen today about 430 metres northeast and above Thurant Castle on the Moselle Trebuchets were used in sieges from the early 13th century Large catapults had a range of about 400 to 500 metres However only wealthy feudal lords could finance the use of such a large costly siege engine or even the construction of a counter castle nbsp Eltz and Trutzeltz castlesOnly occasionally did the attackers have the time and financial resources to build their fortress of stone Rare examples are Ramstein Castle the Rauschenburg at Mermuth in the Hunsruck and Trutzeltz Castle The last named was built during the Eltz Feud as a counter castle to Eltz The Rauschenburg was also built in connection with the Eltz Feud as counter castle to the castles of Ehrenburg Waldeck and Schoneck In the majority of known cases siege castles were abandoned after the fighting and fell into disrepair Sometimes the lord of the formerly besieged castle was given the counter castle in a peace agreement or even took it over as a fief as in the case of Trutzeltz Castle In exceptional cases such structures were when the conquest was successful expanded into independent castles Examples include the Hohenfels and Schadeck Castle at Runkel on the Lahn The few surviving stone counter or siege castles generally show evidence of less careful construction In order to build the fortification quickly clay was mixed with the lime mortar These defences are therefore dangerous today in view of their condition and can be made safe through painstaking renovation Academic research has only investigated counter and siege castles to any great extent since the end of the 20th century After scholars like Joachim Zeune had concerned themselves in the 1980s and 1990s more with the symbolism of medieval fortifications subsequent research began to be more critical of the then established theses As part of the new focus on the functional and military aspects of military architecture the counter castle became more of a focus of military historical interest Early Norman occupation castles in England edit nbsp The construction of the castle of Hastings left Bayeux TapestryThe Norman Conquest of England had undergone long preparation and is generally reckoned as one of the most notable military strategic campaigns of the early High Middle Ages The Normans attacked the island just at the time when the English were busy defending a Norwegian attack in the north The English Army under King Harold succeeded in repelling the Vikings but now exhausted had to fight roughly 7 000 well equipped Norman warriors During the invasion numerous simple occupation castles were built the first at Pevensey being at the landing place of William s army In addition to mottes circular ramparts with palisades were built and older Celtic or Saxon fortifications were reactivated The wooden components of these wood and earth castles had in some cases been prepared on the continent and were later assembled on the spot This enabled the rapid establishment of a dense network of military strongpoints some of which were later turned into stone castles These castles can be made out on the famous Bayeux Tapestry Occasionally even the barrels are depicted in which the invaders transported nails for the construction of forts on the other side of the Channel The Welsh occupation castles of Edward I of England edit nbsp Caernarfon Castle nbsp Harlech Castle Right at the start of his conquest of Celtic Wales the English king Edward I ordered in 1277 the construction of several castles at strategically important places Among these early English castles of occupation were those in Aberystwyth Builth Flint and Rhuddlan The outbreak of new unrest in 1282 caused the king to initiate a huge construction programme The English Army was accompanied by 355 carpenters 70 stonemasons and 1 000 stone breakers and earthworks builders In addition 1 700 lumberjacks were gathered from the whole of England After a year this force was increased by 25 carpenters and 100 stonemasons Within a short period of time a complete network of the most modern fortifications sprang up which are today seen as the epitome of mediaeval profane architecture With supplies coming in from the sea these strongpoints enabled the land to be secured militarily The Welsh castle building programme cost huge sums of money that had to be raised by parliament and even the church A subsequent plan to defeat Scotland in the same way foundered due to the cost of such a building campaign Among the most important English occupation castles were those of built by James of St George including Caernarfon Conway and Harlech Siege and counter castles in the Holy Land edit nbsp Montreal Castle JordanDuring the siege of larger fortified cities and towns castles were sometimes built as protection against sallies and relief troops During the First Crusade the Crusaders built the first siege castles before the gates of Islamic towns and cities in the Holy Land In 1097 Malregard Castle was built in front of the St Paul s Gate at Antioch 1 A little later the castles of la Mahomerie and Tancred s Castle were built in front of other gateways In 1103 Raymond IV of Toulouse ordered the construction of the siege castle Mons Pelegrinus at Tripoli Raymond was the Count of St Gilles which is why the castle in the centre of the town is known locally as Qualat Sandjill As well as siege castles counter castles were also built at greater distance from the besieged towns For example in 1117 King Baldwin I built a counter castle ad coercendum praedictam urbem to conquer the aforementioned town of Tyre near Iskenderun Despite this siege Tyre did not fall until 1124 The king also attempted to monitor the important caravan route of Derb el Hadj from several new castles Here the Pilgrim s Way ran to Mecca and Medina Around Petra the castles of Montreal Shobaq 1115 and Li Vaux Moisee were built and in 1116 fortified strongpoints were added at Aqaba and on the Isle de Graye Jazirat Fara un In 1142 construction started on the mighty fortress of Kerak Krak de Moab in northern Transjordan to which a harbour on the Dead Sea belonged From here Raynald of Chatillon undertook numerous raids in the surrounding area In retaliation Sultan Saladin attacked the Frankish crusader states Between 1136 and 1142 four strong castles at Castrum Arnaldi Beth Gibelin Ibelin and Blanchegarde were built around the Egyptian held city of Ashkelon German terminology editIn the Holy Roman Empire the term Trutzburg was commonly used to describe the defensive character of a castle that defied all attacks The word is also used in German as a metaphor for things that are especially durable and resistant Where the Trutzburg was built specifically with the object of besieging enemy fortifications it was also known as a Gegenburg counter castle Okkupationsburg occupation castle or Belagerungsburg siege castle These terms are used today by modern castle scientists and researchers in preference to the more generic Trutzburg See also editCoercion castle Schanze Sconce fortification References edit Hill Rosalind 1962 The Deeds of the Franks and the Other Pilgrims to Jerusalem London Thomas Nelson and Sons LTD p 30 Literature editHorst Wolfgang Bohme Reinhard Friedrich Barbara Schock Werner Hrsg Worterbuch der Burgen Schlosser und Festungen Reclam Stuttgart 2004 ISBN 3 15 010547 1 Daniel Burger Burgen der Kreuzfahrer im Heiligen Land In Hans Jurgen Kotzur ed Die Kreuzzuge Kein Krieg ist heilig Mainz 2004 ISBN 3 8053 3240 8 Georg Ulrich Grossmann Burgen in Europa Regensburg 2005 ISBN 3 7954 1686 8 Michael Losse Kleine Burgenkunde Regionalia Euskirchen 2011 ISBN 978 3 939722 39 7 Olaf Wagener ed wurfen hin in steine groze und niht kleine Belagerungen und Belagerungsanlagen im Mittelalter Frankfurt am Main 2006 ISBN 3 631 55467 2 Joachim Zeune Okkupationsburgen In Horst Wolfgang Bohme Busso von der Dollen et al eds Burgen in Mitteleuropa Band II Geschichte und Burgenlandschaften Stuttgart 1999 ISBN 3 8062 1355 0 pp 79 81 External links edit nbsp Look up Trutzburg in Wiktionary the free dictionary DBV Seminar zur Burgenforschung 2003 II Uberlegungen zu Belagerungen und Gegenburgen anhand von Beispielen des sudwestdeutschen Sprachraums PDF 3 7 MB in German Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Counter castle amp oldid 1158584982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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