Film Categories
Art Periods
- 1.Early Cultures
- 2.First Civilizations
- 3.Africa
- 4.Pre-Columbian America
- 5.Romanesque and Gothic
- 6.Renaissance and Mannerism
- 7.Northern Renaissance
- 8.Rembrandt
- 9.Baroque and Rococo
- 10. Neo-classicists and Romantics
- 11. The Victorians
- 12. Impressionists and Post-Impressionists
- 13. Art Nouveau
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- 16. Into Abstraction
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- 18. Dada and Surrealism
- 19. Modern Masters
- 20. Modern and Contemporary Sculptors
- 21. Contemporary Painters
- 22. New Directions New Dimensions
- 23. Modern Architecture and Design
Films to Buy
- French Romanesque Art
- Romanesque Painters
- Romanesque Architecture of Alsace
- Romanesque Architecture of Burgundy
- Romanesque Architecture of Languedoc
- Romanesque Architecture of Normandy
- Romanesque Architecture of Poitou-Charente
- Romanesque Architecture of Provence
- The Norman Conquest of England
- English Romanesque Art
- Pisa, Story of a Cathedral Square
- The Romanesque in Austria
- And They Sang a New Song
- Popular Art in Brittany
- The Master Builders: The Construction of a Great Church
- Looking at an Abbey
- Building an Abbey: Rievaulx
- Villard de Honnecourt: Builder of Cathedrals
- Visions of Light
- Antelami: The Baptistery of Parma
- Art in the Making: Italian Painting before 1400*
- The Birth of European Painting
- Dijon: The Four Grand Dukes of Burgundy
- An Eye for Detail*
- Beaune: Rogier van der Weyden
- Buildings and Beliefs
- Ecce Homo
- Carved in Ivory*
- Looking at a Castle
- Castles of Northumberland
Looking at a Castle
The Complex Arrangements of Medieval Life
14 minutes, color, age range: 9 - 13 years, #99A
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Goodrich CastlePhoto: English Heritage
The remains of the fortifications and domestic quarters of Goodrich Castle, near Ross-on-Wye, Hereford and Worcester, England, show the complex arrangements of life in a medieval castle. The presenter acts as a detective, identifying and reading the clues which the building contains. For example, how was the castle defended against attack? There is a pit for a drawbridge; sockets and grooves in the gatehouse point to doors and a portcullis; and there are 'murder holes' and arrow slits. A castle is essentially a collection of houses with a strong outer wall. But where are the houses? Looking carefully, it is possible to see angles where roofs, long since gone, were once sealed and joined to the main structure.
Fireplaces and the remains of the ovens reveal where the kitchen was, and there is evidence for a covered way that provided a service passage between houses and kitchen. Looking up at the different floor levels in the towers and large buildings enables the presenter to show that there was space here for five separate households. A useful introduction to castles in general, since most medieval castles have layouts similar to Goodrich's.
Part of the series Looking at...
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Credits
English Heritage:
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