Most castles were usually made of stone and metal, so the usual colors were gray, black, and white.
Some castles had HUNDREDS of servants.
The name of the castle as "medieval" places it in the time it was built. The Middle Ages is a time in history that covers a 1000 years of time and when a historian states that something is medieval or in the middle ages it places it on the timeline.
Poor farms used thatch hay, and then it went up to wood, shingles, and finally stone for castles.
Dark Ages and\or Medieval Ages
There's security guards in and out the castle and there's no need to know who lives in it.
There is a link below to a website on famous medieval castles.
yes
To protect the king
Some castles had HUNDREDS of servants.
The name of the castle as "medieval" places it in the time it was built. The Middle Ages is a time in history that covers a 1000 years of time and when a historian states that something is medieval or in the middle ages it places it on the timeline.
The oldest medieval castles were made in the 9th century AD. They were made until the end of the middle ages.
Some catapults were used in the middle ages to try and get into Medieval Castles. The Romans had catapults. I had a hand catapult when I was a youngster.
Medieval ladies usually lived in manor houses. Sometimes they lived in castles. Especially in the later part of the Middle Ages, some members of the nobility had town houses in towns or cities, so a few ladies lived in these.
As they are "medieval" castled, they were built to dominate the land in "medieval" times - that is in the Middle Ages, a period of European history encompassing the 5th to the 15th centuries, from the collapse of the Roman Empire to the beginning of the Renaissance.
Poor farms used thatch hay, and then it went up to wood, shingles, and finally stone for castles.
Castles in the Middle Ages were used to keep out enemies.
Mainly for protection. They made a deal with the person who owned the castle. If they protected them, they would give them a certain percent of their crops.