A new way of looking at the medieval castle - as a cultural reflection
of the society that produced it, seen through art and literature.
Medieval castles have traditionally been explained as feats of military
engineering and tools of feudal control, but Abigail Wheatley takes a
different approach, looking at a range of sources usually neglected in
castle studies. Evidence from contemporary literature and art reveals
the castle's place at the heart of medieval culture, as an architecture
of ideas every bit as sophisticated as the church architecture of the
period.
This study offers a genuinely fresh perspective. Most castle scholars
confine themselves to historical documents, but Wheatley examines
literary and artistic evidence for its influence on and response to
contemporary castle architecture. Sermons, sealsand ivory caskets, local
legends and Roman ruins all have their part to play. What emerges is a
fascinating web of cultural resonances: the castle is implicated in
every aspect of medieval consciousness, from private religious
contemplation to the creation of national mythologies. This book makes a
compelling case for a new, interdisciplinary approach to castle studies.
ABIGAIL WHEATLEY gained her PhD at the Centre for Medieval Studies,
University of York.