A shield wall, also shield-wall or Schildmauer, refers to the highest and strongest curtain wall, or tower of a castle that defends the only practicable line of approach to a castle built on a mountain, hill or headland.[1][2][3] German sources may refer to a shield wall that protects two or more sides as a Hoher Mantel or Mantelmauer, which is variously translated as "mantle-wall",[4] "mantle wall"[5] or "high screen-wall".[6] There is often no clear, definitive distinction between a shield wall and a mantle wall.
Occurrence
editShield walls are found on many German and Austrian hill castles, but are not common in Great Britain or Ireland where the terrain of the rocky hills on which castles were built did not favour such constructions. However some castles in those areas built on headlands such as Tantallon and Old Head do have a similar feature.[1]
Origin and description
editThe construction of shield walls was common in the late 12th century in Germany and Austria and may have been a reaction to the increasing use of heavy siege engines such as the trebuchet (the height of the walls protecting the buildings beyond from arching fire).[7] The thickness of a shield wall could, in extreme cases, be as much as 12 metres (39 ft) (e.g. Neuscharfeneck Castle). Behind the battlements at the top of the wall there was usually an allure or wall walk; the shield wall could also be flanked by two wall towers. In many cases the shield wall replaced the bergfried, for example in the ruined castle of Sporkenburg[8] in the Westerwald forest or the ruins of the Alt Eberstein[9] near the city of Baden-Baden. In other cases, for example at Liebenzell Castle, the bergfried was built in the centre of the shield wall.[10]
Gallery
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The shield wall of Berneck Castle in the Black Forest
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The shield wall of the Schönburg near Oberwesel
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The shield wall of the Sporkenburg
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The shield wall of Liebenzell Castle which is combined with a bergfried
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The shield wall of Törzburg (Bran Castle) in Transylvania
References
edit- ^ a b Cairns 1989, p. 31.
- ^ Skaarup 2003, p. 203.
- ^ Taylor 1998, p. 318.
- ^ Castles of the Western World by Armin Tuulse, p. 86. Accessed on 17 Jul 2013
- ^ Castle by Christopher Gravett, p. 20. Accessed on 17 Jul 2013
- ^ Burgen und feste Plätze by K.G. Saur, p. 231. Accessed on 17 Jul 2013
- ^ Freudenrich 2013.
- ^ Sporkenburg at alleburgen.de. Accessed on 17 Jul 2013
- ^ Ebersteinburg at www.burgen-web.de. Accessed on 17 Jul 2013
- ^ The Style of European Art by Herbert Read, p. 187.
Sources
edit- Cairns, Conrad (1989), Medieval Castles, Cambridge Topic Books (illustrated, reprint ed.), Lerner Publications Company, p. 31, ISBN 9780822512356
- Freudenrich, Craig (2013), How Castles Work, How Stuff Works, retrieved 17 July 2013
- Skaarup, Harold (2003), Siegecraft - No Fortress Impregnable, Universe, p. 203, ISBN 9780595275212
- Taylor, Robert R. (1998), The Castles of the Rhine: Recreating the Middle Ages in Modern Germany, Wilfrid Laurier University Press, ISBN 9780889202689
Further reading
edit- Horst Wolfgang Böhme, Reinhard Friedrich, Barbara Schock-Werner (ed.): Wörterbuch der Burgen, Schlösser und Festungen. Philipp Reclam, Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 3-15-010547-1, p. 228–230;
- Alexander Antonow: Burgen des südwestdeutschen Raums im 13. und 14. Jahrhundert – unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Schildmauer. Verlag Konkordia, Bühl/Baden 1977, ISBN 3-7826-0040-1;
- Friedrich-Wilhelm Krahe: Burgen des deutschen Mittelalters – Grundriss-Lexikon. Sonderausgabe, Flechsig Verlag, Würzburg 2000, ISBN 3-88189-360-1, p. 34−36;
- Friedrich-Wilhelm Krahe: Burgen und Wohntürme des deutschen Mittelalters, Band 1: Burgen. Jan Thorbecke Verlag, Stuttgart 2002, ISBN 3-7995-0104-5, p. 33−36;