Yes, and the Tower of London is a very famous example of a Norman castle.
they built castles from the wood they supplyed
They built churches and castles and stuff like that
Because the Normans built the motte and baileys when they invaded. The south east is where they arrived because it is closest to Wales
The first castles were in France, in the motte-and-bailey style and entirely of earth and timber. They were built by the French to ward off Viking incursions. The earliest ones date to shortly before 1000. The earliest castles in England were built by Norman military advisers to King Edward the Confessor in 1051 and 1052, some 14 years before the Norman conquest. The Normans, who were Viking settlers in France, learned castle-building from the French.
No. The great stone castles were build by the Normans.
Because the normans built castles because soldiers were safe as they had an advantage of height as the castle was built on a motte.
They didn't bring castles, they built them!!
Castles were built in lots of different countries. Initially they were built in England by the Normans.
In 1066 by the Normans
Nothing changed
because the English would of be defeated. The Normans built castles better than us
They built churches and castles and stuff like that
they built castles from the wood they supplyed
The Normans built their castles shortly after the battle of Hastings's. this was from 1066 onwards
After 1066 in England but the Normans had already built some in France before then.
The oldest medieval castles were made in the 9th century AD. They were made until the end of the middle ages.
In the time of the normans from 1066 onwards