Lancaster
Caster is a place-name suffix in England that came from the Roman castra indicated that a fort once stood there. Places in England ending in caster include: Lancaster, Ancaster, Brancaster, Hincaster, Doncaster, Tadcaster, and Muncaster.
The Cape fort is called "the castle"
The first fort on Castle Island was built in 1634 for the sea defense of Boston. :D
it stated of as a fort
Elmina Castle (Elmina) Fort Santo Antonio,Axim English Fort(Fort Vrendenburg), Komenda Fort Metal Cross,Dixcove Fort San Sebastien,Shama Fort Batenstein,Butri Fort Amsterdam,Abandze Osu Castle (The seat of government) Fort Ussher,Accra
Nassau
fort or castle
it has a bouncy castle
A castle. A Martello Tower. A fort.
A medieval castle was nearly always a fort. It was run in a military fashion.
I once lived in a humongous castle with a fort which was 144ft high!
Rochester in Kent, England was a Roman town and there was a Roman fort there but the castle as it is now was not started until some 500 years after the Britain ceased to be part of The Roman Empire. Rochester Castle is more usually described as a Norman Castle.