Can a medieval castle be made today? [closed]

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Not sure if it fit well this website, history.SE, or if it's off-topic, but I have a simple question:



Can we build a medieval castle, with the same methods as they used at that time, in 21 century? Do we have enough knowledge, or are some knowledge lost? is it even legal?







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closed as off-topic by RonJohn, Culyx, Erin Thursby, EveryBitHelps, dot_Sp0T Aug 17 at 21:28


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question does not appear to be about worldbuilding, within the scope defined in the help center." – RonJohn, Culyx, Erin Thursby, EveryBitHelps, dot_Sp0T
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • There aren't many "big" stone masons anymore, and you'd have to ask History.SE how they cut, moved and lifted the blocks, plus the interior designs. etc. The architecture, design and building techniques were almost certainly transmitted via apprenticeships. Was it ever written down?
    – RonJohn
    Aug 17 at 19:18






  • 2




    A simple google search would've saved you the time of opening the thread and then waiting for answers. Generally, doing some amount of research and honest attempt of solving an issue yourself is strongly encouraged on this SE as far as I am aware. But I need to ask this at some point in the meta because I'm not sure this is true anymore. Anyhow, if you want to know if something is legal, you need to specify where and a lot more that you think could make it illegal
    – Raditz_35
    Aug 17 at 19:29










  • How is this question not about world-building? I would agree that the question could use some elaboration but we have many questions about building materials and techniques this seems no different. A quick google search will not answer questions of legality (this should be explained better in the question) nor does a quick google search explain whether or not some skills have been lost.
    – James♦
    Aug 19 at 3:01










  • Holy Chicken, welcome to the site. When you have a chance check out the help center and tour particularly this bit If you edit your question to include context and point out what you have already learned via research we can get this reopened.
    – James♦
    Aug 19 at 3:06














up vote
4
down vote

favorite












Not sure if it fit well this website, history.SE, or if it's off-topic, but I have a simple question:



Can we build a medieval castle, with the same methods as they used at that time, in 21 century? Do we have enough knowledge, or are some knowledge lost? is it even legal?







share|improve this question












closed as off-topic by RonJohn, Culyx, Erin Thursby, EveryBitHelps, dot_Sp0T Aug 17 at 21:28


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question does not appear to be about worldbuilding, within the scope defined in the help center." – RonJohn, Culyx, Erin Thursby, EveryBitHelps, dot_Sp0T
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.












  • There aren't many "big" stone masons anymore, and you'd have to ask History.SE how they cut, moved and lifted the blocks, plus the interior designs. etc. The architecture, design and building techniques were almost certainly transmitted via apprenticeships. Was it ever written down?
    – RonJohn
    Aug 17 at 19:18






  • 2




    A simple google search would've saved you the time of opening the thread and then waiting for answers. Generally, doing some amount of research and honest attempt of solving an issue yourself is strongly encouraged on this SE as far as I am aware. But I need to ask this at some point in the meta because I'm not sure this is true anymore. Anyhow, if you want to know if something is legal, you need to specify where and a lot more that you think could make it illegal
    – Raditz_35
    Aug 17 at 19:29










  • How is this question not about world-building? I would agree that the question could use some elaboration but we have many questions about building materials and techniques this seems no different. A quick google search will not answer questions of legality (this should be explained better in the question) nor does a quick google search explain whether or not some skills have been lost.
    – James♦
    Aug 19 at 3:01










  • Holy Chicken, welcome to the site. When you have a chance check out the help center and tour particularly this bit If you edit your question to include context and point out what you have already learned via research we can get this reopened.
    – James♦
    Aug 19 at 3:06












up vote
4
down vote

favorite









up vote
4
down vote

favorite











Not sure if it fit well this website, history.SE, or if it's off-topic, but I have a simple question:



Can we build a medieval castle, with the same methods as they used at that time, in 21 century? Do we have enough knowledge, or are some knowledge lost? is it even legal?







share|improve this question












Not sure if it fit well this website, history.SE, or if it's off-topic, but I have a simple question:



Can we build a medieval castle, with the same methods as they used at that time, in 21 century? Do we have enough knowledge, or are some knowledge lost? is it even legal?









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Aug 17 at 19:05









Holy Chicken

332




332




closed as off-topic by RonJohn, Culyx, Erin Thursby, EveryBitHelps, dot_Sp0T Aug 17 at 21:28


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question does not appear to be about worldbuilding, within the scope defined in the help center." – RonJohn, Culyx, Erin Thursby, EveryBitHelps, dot_Sp0T
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by RonJohn, Culyx, Erin Thursby, EveryBitHelps, dot_Sp0T Aug 17 at 21:28


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question does not appear to be about worldbuilding, within the scope defined in the help center." – RonJohn, Culyx, Erin Thursby, EveryBitHelps, dot_Sp0T
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.











  • There aren't many "big" stone masons anymore, and you'd have to ask History.SE how they cut, moved and lifted the blocks, plus the interior designs. etc. The architecture, design and building techniques were almost certainly transmitted via apprenticeships. Was it ever written down?
    – RonJohn
    Aug 17 at 19:18






  • 2




    A simple google search would've saved you the time of opening the thread and then waiting for answers. Generally, doing some amount of research and honest attempt of solving an issue yourself is strongly encouraged on this SE as far as I am aware. But I need to ask this at some point in the meta because I'm not sure this is true anymore. Anyhow, if you want to know if something is legal, you need to specify where and a lot more that you think could make it illegal
    – Raditz_35
    Aug 17 at 19:29










  • How is this question not about world-building? I would agree that the question could use some elaboration but we have many questions about building materials and techniques this seems no different. A quick google search will not answer questions of legality (this should be explained better in the question) nor does a quick google search explain whether or not some skills have been lost.
    – James♦
    Aug 19 at 3:01










  • Holy Chicken, welcome to the site. When you have a chance check out the help center and tour particularly this bit If you edit your question to include context and point out what you have already learned via research we can get this reopened.
    – James♦
    Aug 19 at 3:06
















  • There aren't many "big" stone masons anymore, and you'd have to ask History.SE how they cut, moved and lifted the blocks, plus the interior designs. etc. The architecture, design and building techniques were almost certainly transmitted via apprenticeships. Was it ever written down?
    – RonJohn
    Aug 17 at 19:18






  • 2




    A simple google search would've saved you the time of opening the thread and then waiting for answers. Generally, doing some amount of research and honest attempt of solving an issue yourself is strongly encouraged on this SE as far as I am aware. But I need to ask this at some point in the meta because I'm not sure this is true anymore. Anyhow, if you want to know if something is legal, you need to specify where and a lot more that you think could make it illegal
    – Raditz_35
    Aug 17 at 19:29










  • How is this question not about world-building? I would agree that the question could use some elaboration but we have many questions about building materials and techniques this seems no different. A quick google search will not answer questions of legality (this should be explained better in the question) nor does a quick google search explain whether or not some skills have been lost.
    – James♦
    Aug 19 at 3:01










  • Holy Chicken, welcome to the site. When you have a chance check out the help center and tour particularly this bit If you edit your question to include context and point out what you have already learned via research we can get this reopened.
    – James♦
    Aug 19 at 3:06















There aren't many "big" stone masons anymore, and you'd have to ask History.SE how they cut, moved and lifted the blocks, plus the interior designs. etc. The architecture, design and building techniques were almost certainly transmitted via apprenticeships. Was it ever written down?
– RonJohn
Aug 17 at 19:18




There aren't many "big" stone masons anymore, and you'd have to ask History.SE how they cut, moved and lifted the blocks, plus the interior designs. etc. The architecture, design and building techniques were almost certainly transmitted via apprenticeships. Was it ever written down?
– RonJohn
Aug 17 at 19:18




2




2




A simple google search would've saved you the time of opening the thread and then waiting for answers. Generally, doing some amount of research and honest attempt of solving an issue yourself is strongly encouraged on this SE as far as I am aware. But I need to ask this at some point in the meta because I'm not sure this is true anymore. Anyhow, if you want to know if something is legal, you need to specify where and a lot more that you think could make it illegal
– Raditz_35
Aug 17 at 19:29




A simple google search would've saved you the time of opening the thread and then waiting for answers. Generally, doing some amount of research and honest attempt of solving an issue yourself is strongly encouraged on this SE as far as I am aware. But I need to ask this at some point in the meta because I'm not sure this is true anymore. Anyhow, if you want to know if something is legal, you need to specify where and a lot more that you think could make it illegal
– Raditz_35
Aug 17 at 19:29












How is this question not about world-building? I would agree that the question could use some elaboration but we have many questions about building materials and techniques this seems no different. A quick google search will not answer questions of legality (this should be explained better in the question) nor does a quick google search explain whether or not some skills have been lost.
– James♦
Aug 19 at 3:01




How is this question not about world-building? I would agree that the question could use some elaboration but we have many questions about building materials and techniques this seems no different. A quick google search will not answer questions of legality (this should be explained better in the question) nor does a quick google search explain whether or not some skills have been lost.
– James♦
Aug 19 at 3:01












Holy Chicken, welcome to the site. When you have a chance check out the help center and tour particularly this bit If you edit your question to include context and point out what you have already learned via research we can get this reopened.
– James♦
Aug 19 at 3:06




Holy Chicken, welcome to the site. When you have a chance check out the help center and tour particularly this bit If you edit your question to include context and point out what you have already learned via research we can get this reopened.
– James♦
Aug 19 at 3:06










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
24
down vote













Not only you can, but it is currently done: Guédelon



Guédelon



Guédelon Castle is the perfect example to prove you can do it. It's both an experimental archaeology project, and a touristic place.



The goal is to build a 13th-century medieval castle, using only medieval technique. even ressources are made with medieval technology, with wood coming from the forest and stone coming from a quarry.
Some of the knowledge is lost, but that's the goal of experimental technology: try to find the lost thing by doing it with the same constraints they had. The project started in 1997, and will probably end circa 2030.



Currently, seigniorial dweling and chapel is ended, while the walls are almost ended. Aside the castle, there is also a village with a wattermill, a smithy, and lot of other building for several crafters such as potters, ropemaker, carpenter... All of them work with medieval technique, at the begining with only theorical knowledge, and now with practical ones, as they experiment a lot.



This is a 30 year project, and by itself, proven to be possible. However, it is possible thanks to Michel Guyot, who bough several castles in order to restore them. Due to scientific, historical craft interest, lots of people work here for free. Also, lots of earnings come from both tourist and regional/governmental funds. Therefore, if you want to make a castle only for yourself, as a private project, it will be much more costly.






share|improve this answer






















  • I don't know how advertising is restricted in Worldbuilding.SE, but if you visit Burgundy, in France, and like medieval period, this is a really great place to visit. I visit it several times as a child, always awesome. The best thing is that it advance year after year, so not only it isn't a problem to visit it twice in a lifetime, but it is even encouraged
    – Kepotx
    Aug 17 at 19:54






  • 1




    Early medieval castles were often motte and bailey types where a big enclosing ditch was made, the dirt from the ditch was piled into a flat topped conical hill, and a wooden palisade was made around the inner side of the ditch to enclose the living area. Another palisade was made around the top of the conical hill and a tall tower was built in the center of the hill top. Wooden building were built inside both the palisades. And the wooden parts were often replaced with stone decades or centuries later. Some castles were also made of brick.
    – M. A. Golding
    Aug 18 at 1:22


















up vote
10
down vote













We are actually building a medieval castle with medieval technology:



Guédelon Castle




Guédelon Castle is a newly built castle construction project located in Treigny, France. The object of the project is to build a castle using only the techniques and materials used in the Middle Ages. When completed in the 2020s, it should be an authentic recreation of a 13th-century medieval castle. (Wikipedia)




Guédelon Castle in August 2015



This is a typical project of experimental archaeology:




In order to fully investigate the technology required in the past, the project is using only period construction techniques, tools, and costumes. Materials, including wood and stone, are all obtained locally. Jacques Moulin, chief architect for the project, designed the castle according to the architectural model developed during the 12th and 13th centuries by Philip II of France. (Wikipedia)




The project aims to test the historians' and engineers' understanding of medieval construction techniques. When completed the castle will serve as a great tourist attraction; since actual medieval castles are historical monuments, tourist access is limited: in this neo-medieval castle there will be much more freedom of movement.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    2
    down vote













    Yes you can, but it would be expensive and may not meet modern building codes.






    share|improve this answer
















    • 4




      and medieval building methods will violate modern worker-safety codes :)
      – Bald Bear
      Aug 17 at 19:15










    • Though volunteers and researchers have been building this one. It is possible, just very time consuming. tiphero.com/french-medieval-castle
      – SEK1977
      Aug 17 at 19:17










    • but i doubt any of the knowledge is lost. Construction methods are pretty easy to reverse-engineer.
      – Bald Bear
      Aug 17 at 19:17










    • Clay, generally speaking one line answers are frowned upon. Answers should address the question and provide support. Please consider editing in some information to support your claim or the answer could be deleted.
      – James♦
      Aug 17 at 19:21










    • We've lost plenty of knowledge in just the last 70 years: for example, how to create the thick armor belts of American WW2 battleships.
      – RonJohn
      Aug 17 at 19:22

















    up vote
    1
    down vote













    yes, we can, there are some minor details that are likely to have been lost, more so for wooden castles since the wood of course decomposes much faster than stone but for the most part researchers do know medieval building techniques.

    There is even a modern day recreation project in France called Guedelon that is only using medieval techniques.






    share|improve this answer



























      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      24
      down vote













      Not only you can, but it is currently done: Guédelon



      Guédelon



      Guédelon Castle is the perfect example to prove you can do it. It's both an experimental archaeology project, and a touristic place.



      The goal is to build a 13th-century medieval castle, using only medieval technique. even ressources are made with medieval technology, with wood coming from the forest and stone coming from a quarry.
      Some of the knowledge is lost, but that's the goal of experimental technology: try to find the lost thing by doing it with the same constraints they had. The project started in 1997, and will probably end circa 2030.



      Currently, seigniorial dweling and chapel is ended, while the walls are almost ended. Aside the castle, there is also a village with a wattermill, a smithy, and lot of other building for several crafters such as potters, ropemaker, carpenter... All of them work with medieval technique, at the begining with only theorical knowledge, and now with practical ones, as they experiment a lot.



      This is a 30 year project, and by itself, proven to be possible. However, it is possible thanks to Michel Guyot, who bough several castles in order to restore them. Due to scientific, historical craft interest, lots of people work here for free. Also, lots of earnings come from both tourist and regional/governmental funds. Therefore, if you want to make a castle only for yourself, as a private project, it will be much more costly.






      share|improve this answer






















      • I don't know how advertising is restricted in Worldbuilding.SE, but if you visit Burgundy, in France, and like medieval period, this is a really great place to visit. I visit it several times as a child, always awesome. The best thing is that it advance year after year, so not only it isn't a problem to visit it twice in a lifetime, but it is even encouraged
        – Kepotx
        Aug 17 at 19:54






      • 1




        Early medieval castles were often motte and bailey types where a big enclosing ditch was made, the dirt from the ditch was piled into a flat topped conical hill, and a wooden palisade was made around the inner side of the ditch to enclose the living area. Another palisade was made around the top of the conical hill and a tall tower was built in the center of the hill top. Wooden building were built inside both the palisades. And the wooden parts were often replaced with stone decades or centuries later. Some castles were also made of brick.
        – M. A. Golding
        Aug 18 at 1:22















      up vote
      24
      down vote













      Not only you can, but it is currently done: Guédelon



      Guédelon



      Guédelon Castle is the perfect example to prove you can do it. It's both an experimental archaeology project, and a touristic place.



      The goal is to build a 13th-century medieval castle, using only medieval technique. even ressources are made with medieval technology, with wood coming from the forest and stone coming from a quarry.
      Some of the knowledge is lost, but that's the goal of experimental technology: try to find the lost thing by doing it with the same constraints they had. The project started in 1997, and will probably end circa 2030.



      Currently, seigniorial dweling and chapel is ended, while the walls are almost ended. Aside the castle, there is also a village with a wattermill, a smithy, and lot of other building for several crafters such as potters, ropemaker, carpenter... All of them work with medieval technique, at the begining with only theorical knowledge, and now with practical ones, as they experiment a lot.



      This is a 30 year project, and by itself, proven to be possible. However, it is possible thanks to Michel Guyot, who bough several castles in order to restore them. Due to scientific, historical craft interest, lots of people work here for free. Also, lots of earnings come from both tourist and regional/governmental funds. Therefore, if you want to make a castle only for yourself, as a private project, it will be much more costly.






      share|improve this answer






















      • I don't know how advertising is restricted in Worldbuilding.SE, but if you visit Burgundy, in France, and like medieval period, this is a really great place to visit. I visit it several times as a child, always awesome. The best thing is that it advance year after year, so not only it isn't a problem to visit it twice in a lifetime, but it is even encouraged
        – Kepotx
        Aug 17 at 19:54






      • 1




        Early medieval castles were often motte and bailey types where a big enclosing ditch was made, the dirt from the ditch was piled into a flat topped conical hill, and a wooden palisade was made around the inner side of the ditch to enclose the living area. Another palisade was made around the top of the conical hill and a tall tower was built in the center of the hill top. Wooden building were built inside both the palisades. And the wooden parts were often replaced with stone decades or centuries later. Some castles were also made of brick.
        – M. A. Golding
        Aug 18 at 1:22













      up vote
      24
      down vote










      up vote
      24
      down vote









      Not only you can, but it is currently done: Guédelon



      Guédelon



      Guédelon Castle is the perfect example to prove you can do it. It's both an experimental archaeology project, and a touristic place.



      The goal is to build a 13th-century medieval castle, using only medieval technique. even ressources are made with medieval technology, with wood coming from the forest and stone coming from a quarry.
      Some of the knowledge is lost, but that's the goal of experimental technology: try to find the lost thing by doing it with the same constraints they had. The project started in 1997, and will probably end circa 2030.



      Currently, seigniorial dweling and chapel is ended, while the walls are almost ended. Aside the castle, there is also a village with a wattermill, a smithy, and lot of other building for several crafters such as potters, ropemaker, carpenter... All of them work with medieval technique, at the begining with only theorical knowledge, and now with practical ones, as they experiment a lot.



      This is a 30 year project, and by itself, proven to be possible. However, it is possible thanks to Michel Guyot, who bough several castles in order to restore them. Due to scientific, historical craft interest, lots of people work here for free. Also, lots of earnings come from both tourist and regional/governmental funds. Therefore, if you want to make a castle only for yourself, as a private project, it will be much more costly.






      share|improve this answer














      Not only you can, but it is currently done: Guédelon



      Guédelon



      Guédelon Castle is the perfect example to prove you can do it. It's both an experimental archaeology project, and a touristic place.



      The goal is to build a 13th-century medieval castle, using only medieval technique. even ressources are made with medieval technology, with wood coming from the forest and stone coming from a quarry.
      Some of the knowledge is lost, but that's the goal of experimental technology: try to find the lost thing by doing it with the same constraints they had. The project started in 1997, and will probably end circa 2030.



      Currently, seigniorial dweling and chapel is ended, while the walls are almost ended. Aside the castle, there is also a village with a wattermill, a smithy, and lot of other building for several crafters such as potters, ropemaker, carpenter... All of them work with medieval technique, at the begining with only theorical knowledge, and now with practical ones, as they experiment a lot.



      This is a 30 year project, and by itself, proven to be possible. However, it is possible thanks to Michel Guyot, who bough several castles in order to restore them. Due to scientific, historical craft interest, lots of people work here for free. Also, lots of earnings come from both tourist and regional/governmental funds. Therefore, if you want to make a castle only for yourself, as a private project, it will be much more costly.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Aug 17 at 21:10









      Southpaw Hare

      7021816




      7021816










      answered Aug 17 at 19:18









      Kepotx

      2,55111229




      2,55111229











      • I don't know how advertising is restricted in Worldbuilding.SE, but if you visit Burgundy, in France, and like medieval period, this is a really great place to visit. I visit it several times as a child, always awesome. The best thing is that it advance year after year, so not only it isn't a problem to visit it twice in a lifetime, but it is even encouraged
        – Kepotx
        Aug 17 at 19:54






      • 1




        Early medieval castles were often motte and bailey types where a big enclosing ditch was made, the dirt from the ditch was piled into a flat topped conical hill, and a wooden palisade was made around the inner side of the ditch to enclose the living area. Another palisade was made around the top of the conical hill and a tall tower was built in the center of the hill top. Wooden building were built inside both the palisades. And the wooden parts were often replaced with stone decades or centuries later. Some castles were also made of brick.
        – M. A. Golding
        Aug 18 at 1:22

















      • I don't know how advertising is restricted in Worldbuilding.SE, but if you visit Burgundy, in France, and like medieval period, this is a really great place to visit. I visit it several times as a child, always awesome. The best thing is that it advance year after year, so not only it isn't a problem to visit it twice in a lifetime, but it is even encouraged
        – Kepotx
        Aug 17 at 19:54






      • 1




        Early medieval castles were often motte and bailey types where a big enclosing ditch was made, the dirt from the ditch was piled into a flat topped conical hill, and a wooden palisade was made around the inner side of the ditch to enclose the living area. Another palisade was made around the top of the conical hill and a tall tower was built in the center of the hill top. Wooden building were built inside both the palisades. And the wooden parts were often replaced with stone decades or centuries later. Some castles were also made of brick.
        – M. A. Golding
        Aug 18 at 1:22
















      I don't know how advertising is restricted in Worldbuilding.SE, but if you visit Burgundy, in France, and like medieval period, this is a really great place to visit. I visit it several times as a child, always awesome. The best thing is that it advance year after year, so not only it isn't a problem to visit it twice in a lifetime, but it is even encouraged
      – Kepotx
      Aug 17 at 19:54




      I don't know how advertising is restricted in Worldbuilding.SE, but if you visit Burgundy, in France, and like medieval period, this is a really great place to visit. I visit it several times as a child, always awesome. The best thing is that it advance year after year, so not only it isn't a problem to visit it twice in a lifetime, but it is even encouraged
      – Kepotx
      Aug 17 at 19:54




      1




      1




      Early medieval castles were often motte and bailey types where a big enclosing ditch was made, the dirt from the ditch was piled into a flat topped conical hill, and a wooden palisade was made around the inner side of the ditch to enclose the living area. Another palisade was made around the top of the conical hill and a tall tower was built in the center of the hill top. Wooden building were built inside both the palisades. And the wooden parts were often replaced with stone decades or centuries later. Some castles were also made of brick.
      – M. A. Golding
      Aug 18 at 1:22





      Early medieval castles were often motte and bailey types where a big enclosing ditch was made, the dirt from the ditch was piled into a flat topped conical hill, and a wooden palisade was made around the inner side of the ditch to enclose the living area. Another palisade was made around the top of the conical hill and a tall tower was built in the center of the hill top. Wooden building were built inside both the palisades. And the wooden parts were often replaced with stone decades or centuries later. Some castles were also made of brick.
      – M. A. Golding
      Aug 18 at 1:22











      up vote
      10
      down vote













      We are actually building a medieval castle with medieval technology:



      Guédelon Castle




      Guédelon Castle is a newly built castle construction project located in Treigny, France. The object of the project is to build a castle using only the techniques and materials used in the Middle Ages. When completed in the 2020s, it should be an authentic recreation of a 13th-century medieval castle. (Wikipedia)




      Guédelon Castle in August 2015



      This is a typical project of experimental archaeology:




      In order to fully investigate the technology required in the past, the project is using only period construction techniques, tools, and costumes. Materials, including wood and stone, are all obtained locally. Jacques Moulin, chief architect for the project, designed the castle according to the architectural model developed during the 12th and 13th centuries by Philip II of France. (Wikipedia)




      The project aims to test the historians' and engineers' understanding of medieval construction techniques. When completed the castle will serve as a great tourist attraction; since actual medieval castles are historical monuments, tourist access is limited: in this neo-medieval castle there will be much more freedom of movement.






      share|improve this answer
























        up vote
        10
        down vote













        We are actually building a medieval castle with medieval technology:



        Guédelon Castle




        Guédelon Castle is a newly built castle construction project located in Treigny, France. The object of the project is to build a castle using only the techniques and materials used in the Middle Ages. When completed in the 2020s, it should be an authentic recreation of a 13th-century medieval castle. (Wikipedia)




        Guédelon Castle in August 2015



        This is a typical project of experimental archaeology:




        In order to fully investigate the technology required in the past, the project is using only period construction techniques, tools, and costumes. Materials, including wood and stone, are all obtained locally. Jacques Moulin, chief architect for the project, designed the castle according to the architectural model developed during the 12th and 13th centuries by Philip II of France. (Wikipedia)




        The project aims to test the historians' and engineers' understanding of medieval construction techniques. When completed the castle will serve as a great tourist attraction; since actual medieval castles are historical monuments, tourist access is limited: in this neo-medieval castle there will be much more freedom of movement.






        share|improve this answer






















          up vote
          10
          down vote










          up vote
          10
          down vote









          We are actually building a medieval castle with medieval technology:



          Guédelon Castle




          Guédelon Castle is a newly built castle construction project located in Treigny, France. The object of the project is to build a castle using only the techniques and materials used in the Middle Ages. When completed in the 2020s, it should be an authentic recreation of a 13th-century medieval castle. (Wikipedia)




          Guédelon Castle in August 2015



          This is a typical project of experimental archaeology:




          In order to fully investigate the technology required in the past, the project is using only period construction techniques, tools, and costumes. Materials, including wood and stone, are all obtained locally. Jacques Moulin, chief architect for the project, designed the castle according to the architectural model developed during the 12th and 13th centuries by Philip II of France. (Wikipedia)




          The project aims to test the historians' and engineers' understanding of medieval construction techniques. When completed the castle will serve as a great tourist attraction; since actual medieval castles are historical monuments, tourist access is limited: in this neo-medieval castle there will be much more freedom of movement.






          share|improve this answer












          We are actually building a medieval castle with medieval technology:



          Guédelon Castle




          Guédelon Castle is a newly built castle construction project located in Treigny, France. The object of the project is to build a castle using only the techniques and materials used in the Middle Ages. When completed in the 2020s, it should be an authentic recreation of a 13th-century medieval castle. (Wikipedia)




          Guédelon Castle in August 2015



          This is a typical project of experimental archaeology:




          In order to fully investigate the technology required in the past, the project is using only period construction techniques, tools, and costumes. Materials, including wood and stone, are all obtained locally. Jacques Moulin, chief architect for the project, designed the castle according to the architectural model developed during the 12th and 13th centuries by Philip II of France. (Wikipedia)




          The project aims to test the historians' and engineers' understanding of medieval construction techniques. When completed the castle will serve as a great tourist attraction; since actual medieval castles are historical monuments, tourist access is limited: in this neo-medieval castle there will be much more freedom of movement.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Aug 17 at 19:22









          AlexP

          31.4k772121




          31.4k772121




















              up vote
              2
              down vote













              Yes you can, but it would be expensive and may not meet modern building codes.






              share|improve this answer
















              • 4




                and medieval building methods will violate modern worker-safety codes :)
                – Bald Bear
                Aug 17 at 19:15










              • Though volunteers and researchers have been building this one. It is possible, just very time consuming. tiphero.com/french-medieval-castle
                – SEK1977
                Aug 17 at 19:17










              • but i doubt any of the knowledge is lost. Construction methods are pretty easy to reverse-engineer.
                – Bald Bear
                Aug 17 at 19:17










              • Clay, generally speaking one line answers are frowned upon. Answers should address the question and provide support. Please consider editing in some information to support your claim or the answer could be deleted.
                – James♦
                Aug 17 at 19:21










              • We've lost plenty of knowledge in just the last 70 years: for example, how to create the thick armor belts of American WW2 battleships.
                – RonJohn
                Aug 17 at 19:22














              up vote
              2
              down vote













              Yes you can, but it would be expensive and may not meet modern building codes.






              share|improve this answer
















              • 4




                and medieval building methods will violate modern worker-safety codes :)
                – Bald Bear
                Aug 17 at 19:15










              • Though volunteers and researchers have been building this one. It is possible, just very time consuming. tiphero.com/french-medieval-castle
                – SEK1977
                Aug 17 at 19:17










              • but i doubt any of the knowledge is lost. Construction methods are pretty easy to reverse-engineer.
                – Bald Bear
                Aug 17 at 19:17










              • Clay, generally speaking one line answers are frowned upon. Answers should address the question and provide support. Please consider editing in some information to support your claim or the answer could be deleted.
                – James♦
                Aug 17 at 19:21










              • We've lost plenty of knowledge in just the last 70 years: for example, how to create the thick armor belts of American WW2 battleships.
                – RonJohn
                Aug 17 at 19:22












              up vote
              2
              down vote










              up vote
              2
              down vote









              Yes you can, but it would be expensive and may not meet modern building codes.






              share|improve this answer












              Yes you can, but it would be expensive and may not meet modern building codes.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Aug 17 at 19:13









              Clay Deitas

              3,240622




              3,240622







              • 4




                and medieval building methods will violate modern worker-safety codes :)
                – Bald Bear
                Aug 17 at 19:15










              • Though volunteers and researchers have been building this one. It is possible, just very time consuming. tiphero.com/french-medieval-castle
                – SEK1977
                Aug 17 at 19:17










              • but i doubt any of the knowledge is lost. Construction methods are pretty easy to reverse-engineer.
                – Bald Bear
                Aug 17 at 19:17










              • Clay, generally speaking one line answers are frowned upon. Answers should address the question and provide support. Please consider editing in some information to support your claim or the answer could be deleted.
                – James♦
                Aug 17 at 19:21










              • We've lost plenty of knowledge in just the last 70 years: for example, how to create the thick armor belts of American WW2 battleships.
                – RonJohn
                Aug 17 at 19:22












              • 4




                and medieval building methods will violate modern worker-safety codes :)
                – Bald Bear
                Aug 17 at 19:15










              • Though volunteers and researchers have been building this one. It is possible, just very time consuming. tiphero.com/french-medieval-castle
                – SEK1977
                Aug 17 at 19:17










              • but i doubt any of the knowledge is lost. Construction methods are pretty easy to reverse-engineer.
                – Bald Bear
                Aug 17 at 19:17










              • Clay, generally speaking one line answers are frowned upon. Answers should address the question and provide support. Please consider editing in some information to support your claim or the answer could be deleted.
                – James♦
                Aug 17 at 19:21










              • We've lost plenty of knowledge in just the last 70 years: for example, how to create the thick armor belts of American WW2 battleships.
                – RonJohn
                Aug 17 at 19:22







              4




              4




              and medieval building methods will violate modern worker-safety codes :)
              – Bald Bear
              Aug 17 at 19:15




              and medieval building methods will violate modern worker-safety codes :)
              – Bald Bear
              Aug 17 at 19:15












              Though volunteers and researchers have been building this one. It is possible, just very time consuming. tiphero.com/french-medieval-castle
              – SEK1977
              Aug 17 at 19:17




              Though volunteers and researchers have been building this one. It is possible, just very time consuming. tiphero.com/french-medieval-castle
              – SEK1977
              Aug 17 at 19:17












              but i doubt any of the knowledge is lost. Construction methods are pretty easy to reverse-engineer.
              – Bald Bear
              Aug 17 at 19:17




              but i doubt any of the knowledge is lost. Construction methods are pretty easy to reverse-engineer.
              – Bald Bear
              Aug 17 at 19:17












              Clay, generally speaking one line answers are frowned upon. Answers should address the question and provide support. Please consider editing in some information to support your claim or the answer could be deleted.
              – James♦
              Aug 17 at 19:21




              Clay, generally speaking one line answers are frowned upon. Answers should address the question and provide support. Please consider editing in some information to support your claim or the answer could be deleted.
              – James♦
              Aug 17 at 19:21












              We've lost plenty of knowledge in just the last 70 years: for example, how to create the thick armor belts of American WW2 battleships.
              – RonJohn
              Aug 17 at 19:22




              We've lost plenty of knowledge in just the last 70 years: for example, how to create the thick armor belts of American WW2 battleships.
              – RonJohn
              Aug 17 at 19:22










              up vote
              1
              down vote













              yes, we can, there are some minor details that are likely to have been lost, more so for wooden castles since the wood of course decomposes much faster than stone but for the most part researchers do know medieval building techniques.

              There is even a modern day recreation project in France called Guedelon that is only using medieval techniques.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                yes, we can, there are some minor details that are likely to have been lost, more so for wooden castles since the wood of course decomposes much faster than stone but for the most part researchers do know medieval building techniques.

                There is even a modern day recreation project in France called Guedelon that is only using medieval techniques.






                share|improve this answer






















                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  yes, we can, there are some minor details that are likely to have been lost, more so for wooden castles since the wood of course decomposes much faster than stone but for the most part researchers do know medieval building techniques.

                  There is even a modern day recreation project in France called Guedelon that is only using medieval techniques.






                  share|improve this answer












                  yes, we can, there are some minor details that are likely to have been lost, more so for wooden castles since the wood of course decomposes much faster than stone but for the most part researchers do know medieval building techniques.

                  There is even a modern day recreation project in France called Guedelon that is only using medieval techniques.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Aug 17 at 19:18









                  BKlassen

                  67317




                  67317












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