The tower at the top of a motte-and-bailey castle, known as the keep, served as the primary fortified residence for the lord and his family. It provided a stronghold during attacks, offering a secure location for defense. Additionally, the keep housed essential supplies and could serve as a vantage point for spotting approaching enemies. Its elevated position also symbolized the lord's power and control over the surrounding area.
It was pushed up to the castle walls and soldiers climbed over it into the castle.
It is used for the Marshall family in 1244. It was a tower of London copyright.
Guy's tower at Warwick castle stands at 39m. It was completed in 1935. It contains five floors: the first four floors used for accommodation and the fifth floor used as a guardroom.
In a motte-and-bailey castle - the motte is a fortified tower standing on a raised mound.
A scaling tower, or siege tower, is used to breach castle defenses by allowing attackers to reach the walls safely. It is a tall, mobile structure equipped with ramps or ladders, enabling soldiers to ascend to the castle's parapets. The tower is typically covered to protect the attackers from projectiles while it advances close to the walls. Once positioned, troops can quickly exit the tower and engage the defenders directly.
The exact weight of the Tower of London would be impossible to say since it cannot be physically weighed. There was more than 11,000 tons of concrete used to build the original castle.
Castles were important in the Middle Ages because a castle defended it's country from foreign invaders. A castle was a residence for the lord and his family. It protected all of the people in the land and kept out other enemies too. A castle was a defense tower and could provide homes for soldiers and other travelers.
Your question does not make sense. A rook is a piece in the game of Chess. It is the piece that (normally) looks like a castle tower.
In medieval times, a Keep is a fortified tower found within a castle. It was usually the most fortified interior part of the castle and was used as a last line of defense, where the nobility would hole themselves up in with their guards should the outer castle be taken.
A castle is a fort. It was designed to be a place where people could stay in times of trouble. Typically it had a raised area called a motte, a curtain wall or palisade, and an open area within the wall called a bailey. Early castles were made of wood, and later ones made of stone. The stone castles usually had a large building called a keep, which often looked like a large tower. There was a gate house with a gate that could be easily defended. Often the castle was surrounded by a moat and getting to the gate meant crossing a drawbridge. The moat was often full of water. There is a link to an article on castles below.
A keep is a strong central tower that is used as a dungeon or a fortress. Often, the keep is the most defended area of a castle, and as such may form the main habitation area, or contain important stores such as the armoury, food, and the main water well, which would ensure survival during a siege.
In the medieval period it was called a donjon. After the medieval period, when castles were no longer being built, the term used was "keep", a word that is widely used, incorrectly, today.