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Cathar Wars - Medieval Warfare - Towers, Keeps (Donjons) and Curtain Walls

 

Towers come in numerous varieties and serve several purposes. Here we will look at the following:

  • The Keep (Donjon)
  • Towers and Curtain walls
  • Battlements
  • Eschauguettes

 

 
a classic Motte & Bailey - this one has a moat

 

The Keep or Donjon

The Keep (donjon) at Puivert

 

An old and simple system is the Motte and Bailey, familiar to many from school history lessons. A defensive tower built on top of a mound is surrounded by a fence and an outer ditch. The tower may be made of wood or stone and the mound may be natural or man-made. The motte is the mound, and the Bailey is the fence. A baileywick - "fenced-town" - was originally the area circumscribed by the bailey and controled by a Bailiff.

This Motte and Bailey model is recognisable at the forerunner of any catle or fortified town. The keep remains as a citadel and the baily becomes a surrounding wall or encient.

Incidentally, when castles fell out of use in Tudor times, they were often used as gaols (jails). The donjon in particular became associated with prisons, and the name became attached to places of imprisonment. This, combined with memories of seigneural and ecclesiastical torture chanbers, seems to be resonsible for the word donjon developing into the English word dungeon - no longer a tower, now a place of underground imprisonment.

The Keep (donjon) at Pieusse- longing today like an elongated shed.
Cabaret (Lastours).
 
The Keep (donjon) at Arques

 

Towers and Curtain Walls

Carcassonne - an external view of a tower

The Romans discovered that walled fortresses were more easily defended if towers were built into the defensive walls. These towers made it easy to give covering fire for the walls.

Although the upper parts are later, the the Roman pattern is preserved in the inner wall or enceint at Carcassonne.

Left - a drawing of how it would have looked in Medieval times

Right - as they look today

 

Carcassonne - a tower viewed from inside the encient

 

   

 

Tower Hourds at Toulouse
Hourds at Carcassonne
Chemin de Ronde

 

   

 

Echaugettes

Echaugette

Not all towers reach down to the ground. some are built into walls, emerging from the curtain wall or from a corner.

Here are a couple of examples.

Echaugette

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Carcassonne
   


Medieval warfare