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GenZStyle > Blog > Culture > The Technology That Brought Down Medieval Castles and Changed the Middle Ages
Culture

The Technology That Brought Down Medieval Castles and Changed the Middle Ages

GenZStyle
Last updated: September 14, 2025 2:12 pm
By GenZStyle
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The Technology That Brought Down Medieval Castles and Changed the Middle Ages
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zm49z6r1mks

Civilizations have moved past the use of castles long ago, but their images endure popular culture. Even young children here in the 24th have ideas about what the castle looks like. But why do they look like that? Certainly, that’s a bit of a trick question. The general concept of castles tends to be inspired by medieval examples, but in historical fact, the castle’s design changed dramatically over time, although it was slow at first. You can hear the process being explained You reach the point The above videotells the story of the “Fortress of the Stars,” a constructed response to “technology that ended the Middle Ages.”

You may be familiar with the concept of “Motte and Bailey”, but it is now the most widely understood. Specific argument tactics that are frustrating on the internet. However, it actually refers to the style of castles built in Europe between the 10th and 13th centuries. In the case of attacks, the fight could take place primarily in Bailey, and a setback to Motte can occur when strategically needed. Motte and Bailey’s Castle is “a great idea,” and the video’s narrator says, “You’re not filming the cannon.”

The castle explains, “it was a reflection of the military at the time. It built a large wall and kept the wild bars out.” However, once the cannons appeared on the scene, the once practically impermeable stone walls became a serious responsibility. It was clearly demonstrated in 1453 when the “Ottoman Empire famously ran down the massive walls of Constantinople with cannons, bringing the Middle Ages to the full age, not just the Roman Empire of 1500. In response, the castle architects added a dirty slope Glaciercircular fortress to deflect cannon fire at the edges and at the corners – inconveniently, enemy soldiers created a “dead zone” protected from defenses raised from within the castle.

The solution was to instead make the fortress triangles and add more triangular structures between them. From the side, the castle has become much lower and wider. From above, they were increasingly pointed and complicated in shape. Sebastian Le Prestore, a marquise of Vauban, Louis XIV, became a recognized master of this form. Trace Italienne. You may not know his name, but his designs have become “literally impossible to infiltrate France.” But it would be difficult to get to the top because of its pure beauty Starfort’s plan to protect Florence in the 1520s By a versatile artist named Michelangelo. Have you ever heard of him?

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Look at the medieval castle of the 21st century, built solely of medieval tools and materials.

Based in Seoul Colin marshall Write and broadcasting stationTS about cities, languages, and culture. His projects include the Substack Newsletter Books about cities And the book The Stateless City: Walking through 21st century Los Angeles. Follow him on social networks previously known as Twitter @colinmarshall.

Source: Open Culture – www.openculture.com

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