Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/02/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Right you are Mark. There are more real fighting castles in Wales than anywhere else. We spent a couple of years living in north Wales on the island of Anglesey. This area is dotted with castles built by England?s Edward I in the late 13 th century to discourage the troublesome Welsh. Here is a website devoted to Welsh castles: http://www.a2bwales.com/blog/castles/ Edward hired the premier stonemason of Britain, James of St. George to supervise construction. James revealed an unexpected genius as a military architect as well being a master of the practical aspects of stone masonry. He was responsible for planning and building at least 12 of Edward?s castles, each more sophisticated and militarily defensible than the last. These may have been the last purely fighting castles ever made since gunpowder and wall busting cannons arrived on the European continent about a century later. James was also a very compulsive bookkeeper. His pay records and daily accounts survive to this day. They show that he was honest as well as parsimonious. Unlike modern day public works, no scandal or graft attached to the construction and the castles rose on schedule, one every two or three years. For this he was amply rewarded by the king and lived out his retirement in bourgeois splendor. Three of the castles in the ?iron ring?, Caernarfon, Beaumaris, and Conwy were near our house. All are along the North coast of Wales on the stretch of water connecting Caernarfon and Conwy bays. The Menai Strait runs between those bays. Caernarfon Castle and Conwy Castle are on the mainland while Beaumaris is on the island of Anglesey. The castles are about a day's medieval foot soldier march apart or a half hour's drive by car. Disclaimer - I did not take any of these photos. They are courtesy of the Welsh Tourist Board. My own are buried so deep in my files that it would be days before I could locate them. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Larry+Z/Caernarfon+Castle.jpg.html Caernarfon Castle is big and impressive with octagonal towers. The castle?s size was intended to intimidate foes more than its military strength was intended to resist them. It is the theoretical home palace of the Prince of Wales but it's unlikely that Charles ever spent the night there since it has had no roof since the 16th century. The castle is next to a protected boat harbor and in the center of town. Pubs, shops and B&Bs nestle up to the castle walls. Caernarfon is also the county seat of Gwynedd, the center of Welsh nationalism. The town has expanded well beyond the castle walls and is a manufacturing and market center. It was also the home of Lord Caernarfon, the amateur anthropologist who financed the search for King Tut?s tomb and later died suddenly of either bad oysters or King Tut?s curse. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Larry+Z/Beaumaris+Castle.jpg.html Beaumaris castle, on Anglesey, was just a long walk from our house. This castle is a lean, mean, fighting machine, reputed to be the most advanced example of 13 th century military technology. This castle seems less imposing than the others but that's because the construction money ran out before the towers were raised to full height. The compact size is an optical illusion. The physical dimensions are quite a bit bigger than other castles in the ?iron ring?. Beaumaris castle consists of four concentric rings of walls and an outer moat. Each wall is a complete defense system with an independent supply of food and water. Arrow slots and holes for dumping boiling oil cover both sides of each wall. Any attacker would have to conquer four successive defenses before getting to the central chamber. The war with Wales was over before it was finished. As it is, the castle was tested in battle only during the War of the Roses where it held out for years with just 23 defenders. Apparently the towers were high enough. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Larry+Z/Conwy+Castle.jpg.html Conwy Castle is the best preserved of the casrles. The 13 th century town walls still exist and it is possible to walk the wall around the whole center section of the city. It was used as a military base until the 1600's and was fortified and attacked during the Cromwell rebellion. The reason for the castles?s preservation has little to do with the British love for antiquity. Rather is is due to the fact that the main highway to England bypassed the town, leaving it as an occasionally visited backwater. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Larry+Z/Harlech+Castle.jpg.html Harlech Castle was a couple of driving hours away from our house but we visited it several times when going to Cardiff. This was the first of the ring of castles that Edward I built to contain the Welsh. It was originally on a steep sided hill next to the water so that it could resist attack from land and could be resupplied by sea. Now the land has risen so much that the sea is 1/2 mile away. The hill and castle are still there though. I knew nothing about Harlech Castle except that it is said to have inspired the song ?Men of Harlech? which Welsh law decrees must be sung in every film about Wales. Actually the song has nothing to do with the castle but refers to a rowdy gang that used to hang at Harlech Pub on the other side of town. History is being rewritten every day. You can?t believe anything any more. Larry Z