A medieval castle is like a super-strong toy fort that can keep out even the biggest kids trying to knock it down.
Bricks and walls are like the hard parts of your favorite building blocks, they’re thick, heavy, and really hard to push over. That’s why castles have thick stone walls, like the toughest lego bricks you can imagine. If a group of kids try to push on one side with a big wooden ramp (called a siege ramp), the wall just stays standing strong.
How Castles Use Tricks
Sometimes, a castle has towers that stick up high, it's like having extra layers of blocks stacked on top. These towers make it harder for enemies to climb over or break through with big wooden ladders (called siege ladders).
Also, castles have gates, like the front door of your house. If someone wants to get in, they might try to smash it down, but if it's made of strong wood and iron, it can take a lot of hits before giving way.
Sometimes, there are even drawbridges that can be pulled up, imagine a bridge you walk on, but then it lifts like a door so people can’t cross over!
Examples
- A castle has thick stone walls that are hard to break through with simple tools like battering rams.
- Archers on the walls can shoot enemies trying to climb up the castle.
- A moat around the castle makes it harder for people to get close.
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See also
- How Does a Medieval Castle Defend Against Sieges?
- Did Adolf Hitler ever address the fact that his own appearance was almost an exact?
- Did Imperial Japan choose to ally with Nazi Germany because of ideological?
- Did medieval scholars believe the Earth was round?
- Cultural understanding of Penelope's suitors