Medieval Castle & Siege Terminology *********************************** Allure - Wall-walk, passage behind the parapet of a castle wall. Arrow Loop - A narrow vertical slit cut into a wall through which arrows could be fired. Bailey - Courtyard. Ballista - Engine resembling a crossbow, used in hurling missiles or large arrows. Baluster - A short shaft, such as is used in balustrades, usually thicker in the middle than at the ends. Barbican - An outwork or forward extension of a castle gateway. Bastille - Redoubt or outwork. Bastion - A small tower at the end of a curtain wall or in the middle of the outside wall. Batter - A sloping part of a curtain wall. The sharp angle at the base of all walls and towers along their exterior surface. Battlement - Narrow wall built along the outer edge of the wall walk Bay - A constituent portion or compartment of a building, complete in itself and corresponding to other portions. Berm - Flat space between the base of the curtain wall and the inner edge of the moat. Buttery - Room for the service of beverages. Cat - Assault tower. Catapult - Stone-throwing engine, usually employing torsion. Cesspit - The opening in a wall in which the waste from one or more garderobes was collected. Chamfer - A surface formed by paring off an angle. Chemise - Inner walled enclosure of a castle. Corbel - A stone or timber bracket supporting a projection from a wall. Crenelation - A notched battlement made up of alternate crenels (openings) and merlons (square saw-teeth). Curtain - Those portions of a fortified wall which connect adjacent flanking-towers. Daub - A mud of clay mixture applied over wattle to strengthen and seal it. Dead angle - An angle, the ground contained by which cannot be seen by the defenders, and is therefore indefensible. Dongjon or keep - The inner stronghold of a castle, usually found in one of the towers. Drawbridge - A heavy timber platform built to span a moat between a gate house and surrounding land that could be raised when required to block an entrance. Embrasure - The low segment of the alternating high and low segments of a battlement. Enceinte - An enclosing wall, usually exterior, of a fortified place. Escalade - Scaling of a castle wall. Finial - A slender piece of stone used to decorate the tops of the merlons. Forebuilding - A projection in front of a keep or donjon, containing the stairs to the main entrance. Garderobe - Small latrine or toilet, either built into the thickness of the wall or projected out from it. Gate House - The complex of towers, bridges, and barriers built to protect each entrance through a castle or town wall. Great Hall - the building in the inner ward that housed the main meeting and dining area for the castle's residents. Groining - The angular edges formed by the intersection of vaults in a ceiling. Half-timber - The common form of medieval construction in which walls were made of a wooden frame structure filled with wattle and daub. Hall - Principal living quarters of a medieval castle or house. Hall for hynds - Servants' hall. Herring-bone pattern - The placing of stones aslant in a wall so that each two rows form a succession of angles resembling the backbone of a herring. Hoarding - A temporary wooden balcony suspended from the tops of walls and towers before a battle, from which missiles and arrows could be dropped or fired accurately toward the base of the wall. Inner Curtain - The high wall that surrounds the inner ward. Inner Ward - The open area in the center of a castle. Keep - See donjon. Lantern or louvre - A small open turret placed on a roof as an outlet for smoke. Lights - The spaces between the mullions of a window. Machicolation - A projection in the battlements of a wall with openings through which missiles can be dropped on besiegers. Mangonel - A form of catapult. Merlon - The high part of the square "sawtooth" between crenels in a battlement. Meurtriere - Arrow loop, slit in battlement or wall to permit firing of arrows, or for observation. Moat - A deep trench dug around a castle to prevent access from the surrounding land. It could be either left dry or filled with water. Motte - An earthwork mound on which a castle was built. Mullions - The vertical divisions of stone or wood between the lights of windows. Oriel - Projecting room on an upper floor. Outer Curtain - The wall which enclosed the outer ward. Outer Ward - The area around the outside of and adjacent to the inner curtain. Palisade - A sturdy wooden fence usually built to enclose a site until a permanent stone wall could be erected. Parapet - Protective wall at the top of a fortification, around the outer side of the wall-walk. Pier - The mass of masonry between arches and other openings. Pilaster - A square or rectangular pillar, engaged in, and projecting slightly from, a wall. Portcullis - Vertical sliding wooden grille shod with iron suspended in front of a gateway, let down to protect the gate. Postern or sally-port - Secondary gate or door. Putlog Hole - A hole intentionally left in the surface of a wall for insertion of a horizontal pole. Quoins - Dressed corner-stones. Ram - Battering-ram. Rubble - A random mixture of rocks and mortar. Sapping - Undermining, as of a castle wall. Scaffolding - The temporary wooden framework built next to a wall to support both workers and materials. Screens - Wooden partition at the kitchen end of a hall, protecting a passage leading to the buttery, pantry, and kitchen. Solar - Originally a room above ground level, but commonly applied to the great chamber or a private sitting room off the great hall. Springald - War engine of the catapult type, employing tension. Steward - The man responsible for running the day-to-day affairs of the castle in the absence of the lord. Trebuchet - War engine developed in the Middle Ages employing counterpoise. Truss - One of the timber frames built to support the roof over the Great Hall. Turret - A small tower rising above and resting on one of the main towers, usually used as a lookout point. Ward - Courtyard or bailey. Wattle - A mat of woven sticks and weeds.