castle life!

isabell miniars
castle_in_loveland.jpg this is the castle in loveland!



  • The curtains around the bed kept them snug and warm.
  • Servants had to seep on the hard, cold floor.
  • The people in the castle had to get up early, so times there are a person who rings the bell at dawn to wake everyone up.
  • Stone castle could be damp and chilly, huge fires help to keep the rooms warm.
  • People take hot baths in wooden tubes; the servants heat the water over the fire.
  • The castle was a noisy place because children play, servants work and dog barks.
  • The owners slept in comfortable rooms and they slept in big soft beds.
  • The castle belongs to the kings, nobles and knights-the most important people in the land.
  • The castle was the sign that the owner had power both in time of war and peace.
  • They were designed to be difficult for enemy to attack.
  • The first castle was built in the 9th and 10th centuries, from earth and wood.
  • Designs gradually changed to keep up with new fighting methods.
  • In the early days castle, lords were to busy to learn how to read and write so clerks wrote his letter for him, to prove it was from him, he sealed them with wax and stamped his mark with a seal.
  • Many kings had a castle in each country. Since they can not be everywhere at once, they chose live-in officials run them.
  • The job of these officials was to raise taxes for the king and catch wrong-doers-so they weren’t too popular with the locals.
  • The stewards were assisted by clerks
  • Being among the few in the castle who could read and write, the clerks were kept busy recording rents.
  • Recording of the lord’s law court also had to be kept.
  • And if the lord was an official of the king, such as the sheriff, he has to send regular reports to court-not to mention friendly letter to keep good with the king.
  • Most lords have several manors-even if they only had one castle.
  • Each manor had a manor house, occupied by the lesser lord or knight.
  • These knights were helped by bailiffs, who oversaw the peasants work and collected rent.
  • Under the bailiffs were reeves, elected by the peasants to guard their interests to the lord, and speak up for them in court.
  • Among the men-at-arms were archers, who used longbows or crossbows.
  • Of course, in a crisis they’d used whichever weapon was handy.
  • While the constable gave them military orders, their immediate boss was a sergeant.
  • The soldiers kept a permanent watch from the battlements for approaching visitors, whether friend or foe.

castle.jpg this is a scttish castle