Yes, it has two.
"Drawbridge" is the real name of a drawbridge.
the drawbridge was raised and lowered to allow or prevent acsess into the castle.
Windsor Castle, Tintagel Castle, Alnwick Castle. In Scotland there is Edinburgh Castle and in Wales Caernarvon Castle.
That is the correct spelling of "drawbridge" (a bridge acoss a castle moat).
A moat is a body of water that circles a castle, and a drawbridge is part of the castle that lowers to allow people to cross the moat.
What building has a drawbridge and a moat? Simply the answer is a castle, what else does anyway. Only thing I could think of!
Originally Rochester castle had a drawbridge outside its main gate on the east side of the castle. Neither the gate nor the drawbridge exist today.
Not really, it is the same place - the castle of Edward I in Caernarfon, North Wales. The difference is the spelling - Caernarvon is the English spelling, Caernarfon is the Welsh. There is no 'V' in the Welsh alphabet, and a single 'F' is hard, like 'V'.
It is called the drawbridge if it can be lifted and lowered.
The ones I know are: Caerphilly, Beaumaris, Harlech, Caernarvon and Conway
No it is not. It has a dock to one side of it and is then in the middle of the square in town.
Ist July, 1969 at Caernarvon Castle.