This Tumblr Thread Discusses How Fierce Medieval Battle Tactics Really Were

No matter how you feel about warfare and fighting, it’s difficult to deny that people have definitely come up with some pretty incredible battle tactics.

People are especially inventive during the Medieval Period or Middle Ages.

This Tumblr thread breaks down a few of the more powerful, surprising, and downright fierce Medieval battle tactics that existed.

For starters, staircases in castles were designed to benefit right-handed castle defenders over anyone else.

Here’s one example that gives you an idea of how tough it would be for anyone trying to attack by going up the stairs:

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

Once noble families started living in castles as their homes (instead of, say, a fortress), wider staircases came into fashion.

It turns out the advent of gunpowder was a pretty big gamechanger for castle interior design.

The placement of walls was also entirely strategic.

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

The strategic placement of walls is seen all over the world. On the East Coast in what is now the United States, homes and property were usually protected with palisades or wooden fences.

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

Basically, it comes down to one fairly universal truth: it’s pretty challenging to defend yourself if there’s a wall in your way, right?

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

Castles also used to have another form of protection. For example, the  Bodiam Castle in Sussex has a right-angled bridge to further endanger attacking forces.

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

Since most people were right-handed, the tactic was definitely effective.

Being right-handed was also beneficial (if not all but required) when using a sword and shield.

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

The same is true of jousting: if you’re left-handed, it just wasn’t going to work out.

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

This was so entrenched in Medieval warfare and the like that even the horses were trained to swerve to the right.

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

Right-handed preference extended well into our recent past as well.

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

While it is technically possible to hold the instrument in your left hand, you need to be right-handed to properly wield it.

Eventually, some left-handed families started redesigning their castles to benefit themselves.

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

This was probably pretty confusing for anyone who expected the usual design!

Photo Credit: Cheezburger

These tactics are definitely pretty wild! It’s always so cool to read about how things worked in the days of yore.

Which part of this surprised you the most? Let us know in the comments!

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French People Have Spent 20 Years Building a Castle with Medieval Techniques, and It’s Almost Done

This is spectacular!

You don’t need to be a fan of history or obsessed with the Middle Ages to appreciate the hard work and determination that went into this incredible project.

The Guédelon is a castle built over the past 20 years in Burgundy, France, with only technology and materials that were available during the 13th century.

Posted by Guédelon on Saturday, July 13, 2019

That means stones are transported by cart, and specially designed cranes (13th-century style, of course) are used to get heavy rocks to the top of the castle.

Posted by Guédelon on Saturday, July 13, 2019

The project began in 1997 with Michel Guyot and Maryline Martin, who spearheaded the effort to get the castle built. Final completion is expected around 2023.

Posted by Guédelon on Tuesday, June 25, 2019

During the lengthy construction phase the site drew 300,000 curious visitors each year. Guédelon even has a historically accurate backstory attached to it as well, which he uses to guide all the castle’s design and construction decisions.

The backstory begins in 1228, and with each year that passes, the researchers and volunteers who work on the castle must adapt to changes in technology that actually occurred. The backstory now places the castle in 1248.

One of the guides at the castle said that the backstory somehow needed a little extra something to get visitors excited:

“The rule is that only what we know from documents that existed at the time is allowed. Funnily enough, we found that even though we knew we were being accurate, somehow the castle lacked soul. So we invented a character – the owner – who would have likes and dislikes, wanting this and not wanting that.”

Les préparations pour la nouvelle saison continuent !Preparations for the coming season are under way!

Posted by Guédelon on Thursday, March 6, 2014

So the “owner” of the castle is Seigneur Guilbert, a middle-ranking feudal lord who was allowed to build his castle on the land because he sided with the French crown during a rebellion. Clever, isn’t it?!?!

What a wonderful project.

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