1 00:00:00,684 --> 00:00:03,351 (relaxed music) 2 00:00:05,350 --> 00:00:07,750 Miraculously preserved, restored, 3 00:00:07,750 --> 00:00:11,383 or in ruins, castles always fascinate the public. 4 00:00:12,240 --> 00:00:15,300 The Middle Ages is an era of builders. 5 00:00:15,300 --> 00:00:17,810 They left us extraordinary monuments 6 00:00:17,810 --> 00:00:20,023 which are important to our identity. 7 00:00:21,210 --> 00:00:22,970 Centuries after their appearance 8 00:00:22,970 --> 00:00:26,460 on the landscape, they remain with cathedrals symbols 9 00:00:26,460 --> 00:00:28,710 of the Middle Ages, of the power of those 10 00:00:28,710 --> 00:00:31,573 who built them, their lords or sovereigns. 11 00:00:32,838 --> 00:00:35,600 For Philip II, the construction 12 00:00:35,600 --> 00:00:38,460 of castles was a tool with which to restore 13 00:00:38,460 --> 00:00:40,763 the authority of the king of France. 14 00:00:41,950 --> 00:00:44,010 Their construction accompanied the political 15 00:00:44,010 --> 00:00:47,480 and cultural evolution of the medieval period. 16 00:00:47,480 --> 00:00:49,180 Hundreds were built in Europe 17 00:00:49,180 --> 00:00:51,130 and up to the gates of the Middle East. 18 00:00:52,250 --> 00:00:54,830 But their shape, layout, and characteristics 19 00:00:54,830 --> 00:00:56,923 evolved considerably over time. 20 00:00:58,823 --> 00:01:00,490 There's innovation, 21 00:01:00,490 --> 00:01:03,110 but there's also competition to build the best, 22 00:01:03,110 --> 00:01:06,640 most perfect, most original, newest castle. 23 00:01:06,640 --> 00:01:08,290 From the first stone towers 24 00:01:08,290 --> 00:01:11,020 erected in a few months to the colossal sites 25 00:01:11,020 --> 00:01:14,330 of Carcassone and Chambord, for five centuries 26 00:01:14,330 --> 00:01:17,776 between 1000 and 1500 A.D., these constructions 27 00:01:17,776 --> 00:01:21,730 shaped the landscape of a nation in the making. 28 00:01:21,730 --> 00:01:23,770 From then on, numerous powers 29 00:01:23,770 --> 00:01:25,320 are centered around the castle. 30 00:01:26,190 --> 00:01:28,260 Border fortresses like Salses 31 00:01:28,260 --> 00:01:30,710 or royal castles like Vincennes, 32 00:01:30,710 --> 00:01:32,979 these buildings will have three functions, 33 00:01:32,979 --> 00:01:37,979 accommodation, defense, and a statement of prestige. 34 00:01:38,090 --> 00:01:41,450 They're the markers of a world in constant mutation. 35 00:01:41,450 --> 00:01:43,510 Together, they tell the tale 36 00:01:43,510 --> 00:01:46,543 of 500 years of the Middle Ages. 37 00:01:52,240 --> 00:01:56,330 The appearance of castles in Europe owes nothing to chance. 38 00:01:56,330 --> 00:01:59,490 During the long period of Roman peace in the first centuries 39 00:01:59,490 --> 00:02:02,960 of our era, a few castra, or fortified villas, 40 00:02:02,960 --> 00:02:05,723 had been built at the empire's border, nothing more. 41 00:02:07,090 --> 00:02:09,860 In Latin texts, we see the term castrum. 42 00:02:09,860 --> 00:02:14,365 So castrum, or castellum, gradually becomes castle. 43 00:02:14,365 --> 00:02:16,860 Castellum simply means village. 44 00:02:16,860 --> 00:02:18,303 It's a very generic term. 45 00:02:19,150 --> 00:02:21,860 And during the ninth and 10th century, 46 00:02:21,860 --> 00:02:25,370 we gradually see the meaning changing from a stronghold, 47 00:02:25,370 --> 00:02:28,300 which can be a very large fortified city, 48 00:02:28,300 --> 00:02:31,060 to gradually become what we understand as a place 49 00:02:31,060 --> 00:02:35,253 that is indeed fortified, but is also a residence. 50 00:02:36,290 --> 00:02:37,990 And not just anyone's residence, 51 00:02:37,990 --> 00:02:40,412 but the residence of a person with power. 52 00:02:40,412 --> 00:02:41,430 (dramatic music) 53 00:02:41,430 --> 00:02:43,480 In the ninth century, the partition 54 00:02:43,480 --> 00:02:48,100 of Charlemagne's empire plunged western Europe into chaos. 55 00:02:48,100 --> 00:02:51,370 The authority of the king, but also that of his vassals, 56 00:02:51,370 --> 00:02:54,410 the counts, in considerably weakened. 57 00:02:54,410 --> 00:02:56,230 The fortified villas have to make way 58 00:02:56,230 --> 00:02:58,712 for new types of constructions, 59 00:02:58,712 --> 00:03:01,900 especially since from the eighth and ninth century, 60 00:03:01,900 --> 00:03:04,890 this vast region, which isn't yet France, 61 00:03:04,890 --> 00:03:07,393 is beset by numerous invasions. 62 00:03:08,300 --> 00:03:10,850 Hungarians to the east. 63 00:03:10,850 --> 00:03:13,590 Vikings to the north and west. 64 00:03:13,590 --> 00:03:15,283 Saracens to the south. 65 00:03:16,260 --> 00:03:21,260 To impede their progress, Europe covers itself with castles. 66 00:03:21,310 --> 00:03:23,900 First in the west and south of France, 67 00:03:23,900 --> 00:03:27,123 then in Normandy, Germany, and England. 68 00:03:31,200 --> 00:03:33,320 Feudalism is on the rise. 69 00:03:33,320 --> 00:03:36,350 The lords, emancipated from a weakened monarchy, 70 00:03:36,350 --> 00:03:38,780 set out to conquer territory. 71 00:03:38,780 --> 00:03:41,470 But they then need to protect it. 72 00:03:41,470 --> 00:03:43,660 They create fortifications that can be built 73 00:03:43,660 --> 00:03:46,610 in record time, around three months. 74 00:03:46,610 --> 00:03:50,453 Motte-and-bailey castles, set on artificial mounds. 75 00:03:52,480 --> 00:03:55,430 To symbolize and concrete entrench 76 00:03:55,430 --> 00:03:58,781 their castle, they had to artificially create an elevation 77 00:03:58,781 --> 00:04:03,400 in order to see far away and be seen from far away. 78 00:04:03,400 --> 00:04:06,010 The average size of these cone-shaped mounds is 79 00:04:06,010 --> 00:04:10,290 about 30 meters in diameter at the bass and 10 at the top. 80 00:04:10,290 --> 00:04:13,360 The height varies from six to 12 meters, 81 00:04:13,360 --> 00:04:17,240 creating a slope of 35 to 55 degrees. 82 00:04:17,240 --> 00:04:22,240 Upon this stands a keep, between 15 and 25 meters tall. 83 00:04:22,270 --> 00:04:26,770 Below it is a courtyard, which is usually circular or oval. 84 00:04:26,770 --> 00:04:28,540 It's surrounded by a ditch 85 00:04:28,540 --> 00:04:31,263 and a rampart surmounted by a wooden fence. 86 00:04:33,310 --> 00:04:36,410 A wooden gatehouse defends the entrance. 87 00:04:36,410 --> 00:04:39,290 This is where the service buildings, stables, 88 00:04:39,290 --> 00:04:43,685 ovens, wine presses, and forges are located. 89 00:04:43,685 --> 00:04:45,270 It's something simple 90 00:04:45,270 --> 00:04:47,782 that's technically very easy to build. 91 00:04:47,782 --> 00:04:50,600 It could be made from materials taken from the ditch, 92 00:04:50,600 --> 00:04:53,230 using the workforce that you have at your beck and call. 93 00:04:53,230 --> 00:04:56,493 So you don't need real technicians to build this structure. 94 00:04:57,781 --> 00:04:59,780 Motte-and-bailey castles 95 00:04:59,780 --> 00:05:02,683 will multiply over the 10th and 12th centuries. 96 00:05:03,520 --> 00:05:06,730 Their defense rests on a succession of obstacles, 97 00:05:06,730 --> 00:05:09,600 ditches, embankments, wooden fences, 98 00:05:09,600 --> 00:05:12,283 and the ability to withstand a siege. 99 00:05:13,500 --> 00:05:16,730 The keep, often accessible by a simple ladder, 100 00:05:16,730 --> 00:05:20,510 is a sign of the lord's prestige and authority. 101 00:05:20,510 --> 00:05:22,633 This is where he lives with his family. 102 00:05:23,890 --> 00:05:25,700 Aude, in the Pas-de-Calais, 103 00:05:25,700 --> 00:05:29,460 built about 1120, has four levels, 104 00:05:29,460 --> 00:05:32,560 a partially buried ground floor, acting as a cellar 105 00:05:32,560 --> 00:05:36,280 and granary, topped with an upper floor, 106 00:05:36,280 --> 00:05:39,063 consisting of a hall and the lord's bedchamber. 107 00:05:40,220 --> 00:05:43,430 Above this was the room reserved for the lord's children, 108 00:05:43,430 --> 00:05:45,253 and that assigned to the guards. 109 00:05:47,460 --> 00:05:51,053 Finally, at the very top was the lord's private chapel. 110 00:05:55,950 --> 00:05:58,330 Once again, this is a symbol 111 00:05:58,330 --> 00:06:00,370 to show the rest of the population 112 00:06:00,370 --> 00:06:02,030 and the rest of the aristocracy 113 00:06:02,030 --> 00:06:04,453 that you've made your mark on the landscape. 114 00:06:06,481 --> 00:06:09,638 (mysterious music) 115 00:06:09,638 --> 00:06:12,110 At this time, the lords are clashing 116 00:06:12,110 --> 00:06:16,253 in private wars in order to expand and assert their power. 117 00:06:17,680 --> 00:06:19,580 Motte-and-bailey castles spread 118 00:06:19,580 --> 00:06:22,520 in western Europe and into England. 119 00:06:22,520 --> 00:06:25,620 They represent authority and power, 120 00:06:25,620 --> 00:06:28,723 and allow the domain to be protected from enemy raids. 121 00:06:29,850 --> 00:06:32,470 These first wooden structures, effective 122 00:06:32,470 --> 00:06:35,120 against small troops of infantrymen and horsemen, 123 00:06:35,120 --> 00:06:38,033 nonetheless have a weak point, fire. 124 00:06:39,930 --> 00:06:43,540 During the 10th and 11th centuries, defensive installations 125 00:06:43,540 --> 00:06:46,778 will be reinforced by the use of stone, 126 00:06:46,778 --> 00:06:49,240 some stone defenses being built 127 00:06:49,240 --> 00:06:51,673 in place of the old wooden fortifications. 128 00:06:52,585 --> 00:06:56,490 Like Restormel Castle in southern England. 129 00:06:56,490 --> 00:06:59,930 In France, the architecture of the first fortifications 130 00:06:59,930 --> 00:07:02,990 is influenced by the Normans, firmly implanted 131 00:07:02,990 --> 00:07:06,260 over a vast area they now see as a kind of nation 132 00:07:06,260 --> 00:07:10,313 they have to protect from their neighbors' appetites. 133 00:07:11,160 --> 00:07:13,890 It's a constant risk in the feudal system, 134 00:07:13,890 --> 00:07:15,960 losing one's legitimacy by being 135 00:07:15,960 --> 00:07:18,070 swallowed up by someone stronger. 136 00:07:18,070 --> 00:07:20,964 So they defend themselves by keeping others out. 137 00:07:20,964 --> 00:07:24,010 In this constant quest for protection, 138 00:07:24,010 --> 00:07:27,160 masonry will strengthen the defense system of castles 139 00:07:27,160 --> 00:07:29,890 from the start of the 11th century. 140 00:07:29,890 --> 00:07:31,850 The most powerful and wealthy lords 141 00:07:31,850 --> 00:07:35,940 replace the wooden keeps with large stone towers. 142 00:07:35,940 --> 00:07:38,960 The most famous of these lords, Fulk Nerra, 143 00:07:38,960 --> 00:07:41,980 who became count of Anjou at only 17, 144 00:07:41,980 --> 00:07:44,780 will have 30 or so fortresses built, 145 00:07:44,780 --> 00:07:47,207 including Loches, in Indre-et-Noire, 146 00:07:47,207 --> 00:07:51,360 one of the oldest and most imposing stone keeps. 147 00:07:51,360 --> 00:07:54,870 With this construction, Fulk Nerra establishes himself 148 00:07:54,870 --> 00:07:57,716 in everyone's eyes as the king's equal. 149 00:07:57,716 --> 00:07:59,140 He has a choice 150 00:07:59,140 --> 00:08:01,460 between two kinds of construction. 151 00:08:01,460 --> 00:08:03,800 It can be strategic, but it can also be 152 00:08:03,800 --> 00:08:07,690 a kind of ostentatious castle palace that's the expression 153 00:08:07,690 --> 00:08:11,940 of both his power and his taste for pomp as a great lord. 154 00:08:11,940 --> 00:08:15,950 So, for example, a keep like Loche isn't a tool of war. 155 00:08:15,950 --> 00:08:20,203 It's built entirely of stone and dressed stone, what's more. 156 00:08:22,260 --> 00:08:25,260 Set back from the more recent fortifications, 157 00:08:25,260 --> 00:08:27,090 the rectangular keep at Loche 158 00:08:27,090 --> 00:08:30,320 measures about 25 by 15 meters. 159 00:08:30,320 --> 00:08:32,500 It is 37 meters tall. 160 00:08:32,500 --> 00:08:35,280 There is a door on the least vulnerable side. 161 00:08:35,280 --> 00:08:39,073 The windows are splayed a narrow on the outside. 162 00:08:40,180 --> 00:08:42,920 On the third floor, wider openings probably 163 00:08:42,920 --> 00:08:46,130 gave access to an overhanging wooden gallery, 164 00:08:46,130 --> 00:08:50,130 making it possible to change aim or to drop stones 165 00:08:50,130 --> 00:08:53,282 on attackers reaching the base of the walls. 166 00:08:53,282 --> 00:08:56,030 (stone rumbles) 167 00:08:56,030 --> 00:08:58,380 We see signs of residential keeps 168 00:08:58,380 --> 00:09:00,558 from around 900 in France, 169 00:09:00,558 --> 00:09:05,007 generally with one lower room or two levels of lower rooms. 170 00:09:05,007 --> 00:09:09,340 And a great hall, which often also led to the tower, which 171 00:09:09,340 --> 00:09:12,633 is a multifunctional reception room on the first floor. 172 00:09:13,497 --> 00:09:16,620 Above that is a space called the camera, 173 00:09:16,620 --> 00:09:19,840 the bedchamber, for example, which is more private. 174 00:09:19,840 --> 00:09:23,290 And then often a defensive floor in the upper part, 175 00:09:23,290 --> 00:09:26,763 which is a guard's room and also serves as a watchtower. 176 00:09:28,229 --> 00:09:30,290 The defense of such a fortress 177 00:09:30,290 --> 00:09:31,723 is purely passive. 178 00:09:33,970 --> 00:09:37,580 The wider and deeper the castles' ditches, 179 00:09:37,580 --> 00:09:39,443 the higher its walls, 180 00:09:40,710 --> 00:09:43,003 the better its defense from incursions. 181 00:09:45,313 --> 00:09:47,083 That's passive defense. 182 00:09:48,621 --> 00:09:51,220 (driving music) 183 00:09:51,220 --> 00:09:52,780 This passive defense 184 00:09:52,780 --> 00:09:55,614 is combined with deep defense. 185 00:09:55,614 --> 00:09:58,228 Most fortresses from the Roman period 186 00:09:58,228 --> 00:10:02,100 are located in particularly inaccessible places, 187 00:10:02,100 --> 00:10:05,600 at the crossroads of strategic communication routes. 188 00:10:05,600 --> 00:10:07,750 Numerous obstacles prevent the attacker 189 00:10:07,750 --> 00:10:09,810 from approaching the keep, 190 00:10:09,810 --> 00:10:13,343 ditches, ramparts, or wooden fences. 191 00:10:15,418 --> 00:10:17,440 The castle is built in a naturally 192 00:10:17,440 --> 00:10:21,160 well-defended place, on a hill, surrounded by a river, 193 00:10:21,160 --> 00:10:24,413 forming natural obstacles to a potential enemy's advance. 194 00:10:25,670 --> 00:10:28,318 They slow down the enemy's advance. 195 00:10:28,318 --> 00:10:30,790 They isolate and protect themselves, 196 00:10:30,790 --> 00:10:33,932 and design a castle as a refuge. 197 00:10:33,932 --> 00:10:36,640 That doesn't mean they do nothing at all, 198 00:10:36,640 --> 00:10:39,610 because we know that at the top of the castle walls, 199 00:10:39,610 --> 00:10:41,470 there were wall walks from which 200 00:10:41,470 --> 00:10:43,303 they could shoot and keep watch. 201 00:10:45,170 --> 00:10:46,963 But it's still relatively passive. 202 00:10:47,930 --> 00:10:52,310 Obstacles, walls, ditches, natural defenses. 203 00:10:52,310 --> 00:10:54,760 Many keeps built during the 11th century 204 00:10:54,760 --> 00:10:58,413 adopted the old square design that was easy to construct. 205 00:10:59,577 --> 00:11:02,880 The Anglo-Norman model of this type of building 206 00:11:02,880 --> 00:11:06,030 is the Tower of London, built around 1070 207 00:11:06,030 --> 00:11:07,483 by William the Conqueror. 208 00:11:08,910 --> 00:11:13,000 Or the large keep of Chateau de Falaise in Normandy, built 209 00:11:13,000 --> 00:11:14,793 at the start of the 12th century. 210 00:11:17,030 --> 00:11:21,260 But square keeps soon show their defense limits. 211 00:11:21,260 --> 00:11:25,150 Their badly defended corners, creating blind spots, 212 00:11:25,150 --> 00:11:27,800 are easily accessible to attackers. 213 00:11:27,800 --> 00:11:31,520 They can dig saps, tunnels underneath the foundations 214 00:11:31,520 --> 00:11:34,270 of the keeps or walls, which are then stuffed 215 00:11:34,270 --> 00:11:37,450 with flammable material to bring down the wall 216 00:11:37,450 --> 00:11:38,953 and allow access to the keep. 217 00:11:42,060 --> 00:11:45,490 These square keeps will soon disappear in favor 218 00:11:45,490 --> 00:11:48,810 of round ones, better suited to the art of war. 219 00:11:48,810 --> 00:11:51,230 This will be the great widespread innovation 220 00:11:51,230 --> 00:11:54,510 of the 12th and 13th centuries, but it won't happen 221 00:11:54,510 --> 00:11:57,343 until the reign of the builder king, Philip II. 222 00:11:59,823 --> 00:12:02,490 (relaxed music) 223 00:12:09,070 --> 00:12:12,070 From the early 12th century, the castle represents 224 00:12:12,070 --> 00:12:14,970 much more than just a fortification. 225 00:12:14,970 --> 00:12:18,300 It is also a place for everyday life. 226 00:12:18,300 --> 00:12:20,570 The peasants come there to work, 227 00:12:20,570 --> 00:12:23,360 maintaining the walls, clearing the ditches, 228 00:12:23,360 --> 00:12:26,183 or farming the lord's land, his domain. 229 00:12:27,700 --> 00:12:31,110 The master of the house lives there with his large family, 230 00:12:31,110 --> 00:12:34,340 brothers, sisters, cousins. 231 00:12:34,340 --> 00:12:37,710 The knights move into the fiefs granted them by their lord, 232 00:12:37,710 --> 00:12:39,603 where they build fortified homes. 233 00:12:40,940 --> 00:12:43,530 But this sudden independence has an effect 234 00:12:43,530 --> 00:12:47,583 on their relationship with the lord to whom they're bound. 235 00:12:49,743 --> 00:12:52,380 There are two great rituals, 236 00:12:52,380 --> 00:12:55,690 the oath of fealty and the act of homage. 237 00:12:55,690 --> 00:13:00,100 You swear an oath, something spiritual and mysterious, 238 00:13:00,100 --> 00:13:02,242 which is over your head, 239 00:13:02,242 --> 00:13:06,520 and you promise not to harm your lord. 240 00:13:06,520 --> 00:13:08,873 You are a part of his court. 241 00:13:10,368 --> 00:13:13,210 It's a society where a man's worth is measured 242 00:13:13,210 --> 00:13:16,293 by the number of people he has around him, serving him. 243 00:13:16,293 --> 00:13:18,460 From there, there are numerous 244 00:13:18,460 --> 00:13:20,500 powers centered around the castle. 245 00:13:20,500 --> 00:13:23,700 When the prince is away, homage is paid to the castle. 246 00:13:23,700 --> 00:13:25,670 In the same way, the king of France 247 00:13:25,670 --> 00:13:28,580 now demands that the great lords pay him homage 248 00:13:28,580 --> 00:13:31,810 and swear to give him military support and advice. 249 00:13:31,810 --> 00:13:33,820 This organization of the relationships 250 00:13:33,820 --> 00:13:37,320 between vassals sums up the feudal system. 251 00:13:37,320 --> 00:13:40,060 The pyramid of power rebuilds itself. 252 00:13:40,060 --> 00:13:43,310 Medieval society evolves. 253 00:13:43,310 --> 00:13:45,680 If the king, who had lost everything, 254 00:13:45,680 --> 00:13:49,350 gradually recovers his rights, recovers the ban, 255 00:13:49,350 --> 00:13:53,500 the power to command and punish, and from now on his courts 256 00:13:53,500 --> 00:13:56,720 are the only ones that can dispense justice, 257 00:13:56,720 --> 00:14:00,150 this process involves new castles, or in any case, 258 00:14:00,150 --> 00:14:01,700 conquering lords' castles 259 00:14:01,700 --> 00:14:03,980 and adapting them with new techniques. 260 00:14:03,980 --> 00:14:07,000 Castles are more beautiful, most sophisticated 261 00:14:07,000 --> 00:14:10,180 in military terms, even more impregnable, 262 00:14:10,180 --> 00:14:13,213 marking the recovery of the territory by the monarchy. 263 00:14:13,213 --> 00:14:14,907 Especially since in the 12th 264 00:14:14,907 --> 00:14:17,630 and 13th centuries, a period known 265 00:14:17,630 --> 00:14:19,740 as the golden age of castles, 266 00:14:19,740 --> 00:14:23,570 France and England are fighting a merciless war, 267 00:14:23,570 --> 00:14:27,002 a conflict in which castles play a vital part. 268 00:14:27,002 --> 00:14:29,120 We have political entities 269 00:14:29,120 --> 00:14:30,960 that are becoming more powerful, 270 00:14:30,960 --> 00:14:35,273 entering into open war in the 1180s and 1190s. 271 00:14:36,670 --> 00:14:38,270 And this inevitably leads 272 00:14:38,270 --> 00:14:40,510 to the construction of new castles, 273 00:14:40,510 --> 00:14:44,077 and as a result, to strongholds. 274 00:14:44,077 --> 00:14:45,740 There's innovation, 275 00:14:45,740 --> 00:14:48,340 but there's also competition to build the best, 276 00:14:48,340 --> 00:14:51,960 most perfect, most original, newest castle. 277 00:14:51,960 --> 00:14:55,740 When Philip II ascends the throne in 1180, 278 00:14:55,740 --> 00:14:57,770 the kingdom of France is hardly bigger 279 00:14:57,770 --> 00:15:00,220 than the current Ile-de-France. 280 00:15:00,220 --> 00:15:03,966 Normandy, Anjou, Maine, and even Touraine 281 00:15:03,966 --> 00:15:07,593 are under the thumb of King John of England. 282 00:15:09,619 --> 00:15:12,910 Philip II extends his kingdom at the expense 283 00:15:12,910 --> 00:15:15,493 of the Anglo-Norman rulers, the Plantagenets. 284 00:15:16,950 --> 00:15:18,790 He restores his influence in all 285 00:15:18,790 --> 00:15:21,423 the provinces held by the great vassals. 286 00:15:22,420 --> 00:15:25,203 He sets up an administration to run the kingdom. 287 00:15:26,875 --> 00:15:30,710 Benefiting from the growth of the cities he rallied to him 288 00:15:30,710 --> 00:15:32,350 and the weakening of the lords 289 00:15:32,350 --> 00:15:34,980 impoverished by the first crusades, 290 00:15:34,980 --> 00:15:38,119 Philip II, like his Capetian predecessors, 291 00:15:38,119 --> 00:15:42,750 embarks on a vast initiative to restore royal power. 292 00:15:42,750 --> 00:15:45,680 But he won't stop at territorial gains. 293 00:15:45,680 --> 00:15:48,800 He covers the kingdom with military infrastructures, 294 00:15:48,800 --> 00:15:51,193 at the forefront of which are castles. 295 00:15:52,435 --> 00:15:54,270 For Philip II, 296 00:15:54,270 --> 00:15:58,017 the construction of castles was obviously as a tool of war 297 00:15:58,017 --> 00:16:01,290 and confrontation, a stronghold. 298 00:16:01,290 --> 00:16:04,433 But it was also a special tool in the service of his power, 299 00:16:05,910 --> 00:16:08,640 his authority, his image. 300 00:16:08,640 --> 00:16:10,370 For him, it was a tool with which 301 00:16:10,370 --> 00:16:13,313 to restore the authority of the king of France. 302 00:16:14,169 --> 00:16:16,280 In all, about 30 buildings 303 00:16:16,280 --> 00:16:18,763 bear the king's mark throughout the kingdom. 304 00:16:19,690 --> 00:16:21,520 When he hadn't built them himself, 305 00:16:21,520 --> 00:16:25,233 he gave them a round tower, a symbol of his authority. 306 00:16:27,220 --> 00:16:31,840 In June, 1204, Philip II was made king of France, 307 00:16:31,840 --> 00:16:34,700 and no longer king of the Franks. 308 00:16:34,700 --> 00:16:37,050 In order to defend his kingdom and keep it 309 00:16:37,050 --> 00:16:40,730 from the ferocious appetites of the Plantagenet sovereigns, 310 00:16:40,730 --> 00:16:45,060 the new king builds fortresses with standardized plans. 311 00:16:45,060 --> 00:16:49,320 A square enclosure, ramparts flanked by circular towers 312 00:16:49,320 --> 00:16:52,890 at the corners, and semicircular towers in the middle. 313 00:16:52,890 --> 00:16:54,623 A keep in the center, 314 00:16:55,960 --> 00:16:58,310 but which soon moves to the corner. 315 00:16:58,310 --> 00:17:00,750 Walls with crenellations. 316 00:17:00,750 --> 00:17:03,360 A walkway around the tops of the walls, 317 00:17:03,360 --> 00:17:05,890 running from one tower to another. 318 00:17:05,890 --> 00:17:09,180 And finally, a gatehouse and guard room, 319 00:17:09,180 --> 00:17:11,230 solidly built at the entrance. 320 00:17:11,230 --> 00:17:16,050 The show castle and model for all others is in Paris. 321 00:17:16,050 --> 00:17:17,640 The Louvre, which wasn't 322 00:17:17,640 --> 00:17:21,847 the French king's residence, that was the Palais de la Cite. 323 00:17:21,847 --> 00:17:25,200 The Louvre was built in the 1190s. 324 00:17:25,200 --> 00:17:30,200 And it's the ultimate castle that introduces a new model 325 00:17:30,281 --> 00:17:33,060 which will be called the Philippine Castle 326 00:17:33,060 --> 00:17:35,533 in reference to constructions by Philip II, 327 00:17:36,705 --> 00:17:38,420 and which is the result of a great deal 328 00:17:38,420 --> 00:17:40,823 of thought around a standard plan. 329 00:17:43,190 --> 00:17:45,760 The Louvre occupied the southwest corner 330 00:17:45,760 --> 00:17:47,710 of the current square courtyard. 331 00:17:47,710 --> 00:17:50,360 After 12 years of work, the great tower, 332 00:17:50,360 --> 00:17:52,260 the keep, is completed. 333 00:17:52,260 --> 00:17:56,030 31 meters tall, it is surrounded by a circular moat 334 00:17:56,030 --> 00:17:59,435 around 7.5 meters in width and depth. 335 00:17:59,435 --> 00:18:02,640 The fortress walls, forming a square measuring 336 00:18:02,640 --> 00:18:07,622 78 by 72 meters, are reinforced by 10 towers. 337 00:18:07,622 --> 00:18:11,749 A ditch filled with water completes the defenses. 338 00:18:11,749 --> 00:18:14,130 The main door is to the south, 339 00:18:14,130 --> 00:18:16,453 while a smaller door faces the city. 340 00:18:17,690 --> 00:18:19,880 The west wall is reinforced, 341 00:18:19,880 --> 00:18:22,190 being more vulnerable to attack. 342 00:18:22,190 --> 00:18:24,410 Against the west and south walls, 343 00:18:24,410 --> 00:18:27,260 two buildings house the soldiers, animals, 344 00:18:27,260 --> 00:18:31,000 and equipment necessary to withstand a siege. 345 00:18:31,000 --> 00:18:33,533 The other two walls are simply crenelated. 346 00:18:35,273 --> 00:18:39,363 A deep well and a cistern provide the water supply. 347 00:18:42,540 --> 00:18:45,390 Castles built to Philip II's plan 348 00:18:45,390 --> 00:18:48,940 employed concepts that have existed since ancient times. 349 00:18:48,940 --> 00:18:52,920 That's to say, quadrangular plans, segments of walls 350 00:18:52,920 --> 00:18:56,180 built fairly high, and crowned with walkways 351 00:18:56,180 --> 00:19:01,180 and regularly flanked, so protected by defensive towers, 352 00:19:01,220 --> 00:19:05,190 the whole thing being surrounded and isolated by ditches. 353 00:19:05,190 --> 00:19:08,910 That's an old idea, but one that's evolving. 354 00:19:08,910 --> 00:19:11,530 Because we now have towers with increasing numbers 355 00:19:11,530 --> 00:19:16,040 of active defense elements, that's to say arrow loops. 356 00:19:16,040 --> 00:19:17,670 These standards, typical 357 00:19:17,670 --> 00:19:21,100 of Philip II's architecture, can be found in Dourdan, 358 00:19:21,100 --> 00:19:23,080 in Essonne, the most accomplished 359 00:19:23,080 --> 00:19:26,153 and best-preserved fortress of its kind. 360 00:19:27,980 --> 00:19:30,320 Curtain walls with battlements, 361 00:19:30,320 --> 00:19:32,860 walkways running around the walls. 362 00:19:32,860 --> 00:19:36,060 A door equipped with a portcullis and other iron 363 00:19:36,060 --> 00:19:38,990 and wood grilles, a solidly built gatehouse 364 00:19:38,990 --> 00:19:41,208 defending the main entrance. 365 00:19:41,208 --> 00:19:44,093 Arrow slits in the towers and walls. 366 00:19:44,995 --> 00:19:47,830 Towers at the corners of the ramparts, 367 00:19:47,830 --> 00:19:50,670 and a keep that gradually supplants the massive 368 00:19:50,670 --> 00:19:54,890 square towers and then disappears in the 13th century, 369 00:19:54,890 --> 00:19:57,410 the lord willingly moving into a building 370 00:19:57,410 --> 00:19:58,733 in the inner courtyard. 371 00:20:02,800 --> 00:20:06,240 Although this standardization of castle architecture lasts 372 00:20:06,240 --> 00:20:09,630 nearly two centuries, it comes up against the development 373 00:20:09,630 --> 00:20:13,580 of devastating catapults and then artillery. 374 00:20:13,580 --> 00:20:16,430 The architecture will have to adapt once again 375 00:20:16,430 --> 00:20:19,350 and adopt even more defensive forms. 376 00:20:19,350 --> 00:20:22,800 By that time, the towers standardized by the king 377 00:20:22,800 --> 00:20:25,663 will feature in all new fortifications. 378 00:20:26,872 --> 00:20:29,622 (dramatic music) 379 00:20:34,740 --> 00:20:37,180 During the 12th century, following the model 380 00:20:37,180 --> 00:20:40,460 initiated by Philip II, medieval architectures 381 00:20:40,460 --> 00:20:43,840 would favor round, rather than square, towers, 382 00:20:43,840 --> 00:20:46,560 because the siege engine projectiles brought back 383 00:20:46,560 --> 00:20:50,563 by the crusaders ricochet more easily off their surfaces. 384 00:20:54,160 --> 00:20:56,630 The Crusades, and more generally, 385 00:20:56,630 --> 00:21:00,222 exchanges with the East, had a considerable influence 386 00:21:00,222 --> 00:21:03,180 on the construction of castles at the end 387 00:21:03,180 --> 00:21:06,233 of the 12th and the beginning of the 13th century. 388 00:21:07,331 --> 00:21:11,478 Because military engineers were vying with each other 389 00:21:11,478 --> 00:21:16,080 to find new techniques for attack and for defense. 390 00:21:16,080 --> 00:21:20,003 They went back to the large Greco-Roman siege engines, 391 00:21:22,390 --> 00:21:26,728 such as the giant crossbow and trebuchets. 392 00:21:26,728 --> 00:21:29,070 So, counterweight devices. 393 00:21:29,070 --> 00:21:31,180 Capable of firing blocks of stone 394 00:21:31,180 --> 00:21:35,140 weighing over 100 kilos against castle walls and towers, 395 00:21:35,140 --> 00:21:38,170 this impressive siege engine was still let down 396 00:21:38,170 --> 00:21:41,943 by its lack of maneuverability and slow rate of fire. 397 00:21:42,800 --> 00:21:44,790 The trebuchet is also an example 398 00:21:44,790 --> 00:21:47,773 of medieval biological warfare. 399 00:21:47,773 --> 00:21:51,230 While the defenders dropped foul waste and excrement 400 00:21:51,230 --> 00:21:53,653 onto the attackers from the wooden hoardings, 401 00:21:55,010 --> 00:21:58,210 trebuchets were used to project animal entrails 402 00:21:58,210 --> 00:22:02,282 and infected corpses into the besieged castle 403 00:22:02,282 --> 00:22:05,133 in the hope of contaminating its garrison. 404 00:22:12,730 --> 00:22:16,550 Whatever their size, counterweight, or firing system, 405 00:22:16,550 --> 00:22:18,690 these machines required a large number 406 00:22:18,690 --> 00:22:20,734 of men to operate them. 407 00:22:20,734 --> 00:22:23,930 They also required the knowledge to make them, 408 00:22:23,930 --> 00:22:26,890 and above all, the money to buy them. 409 00:22:26,890 --> 00:22:29,550 The largest siege engines were therefore beyond 410 00:22:29,550 --> 00:22:32,500 the reach of lesser lords, often impoverished 411 00:22:32,500 --> 00:22:35,053 upon their return from various crusades. 412 00:22:36,465 --> 00:22:39,963 So, there's an effort to attack the castles, 413 00:22:40,800 --> 00:22:44,319 the strongholds, and in return, of course, 414 00:22:44,319 --> 00:22:45,973 an effort to defend them. 415 00:22:47,176 --> 00:22:49,700 The walls are made thicker. 416 00:22:49,700 --> 00:22:52,170 New defenses are created. 417 00:22:52,170 --> 00:22:54,313 Walkways with machicolations. 418 00:22:55,590 --> 00:22:59,170 Systems to drop projectiles on the attackers' heads, 419 00:22:59,170 --> 00:23:02,773 which are found in some 12th-century castles in the West, 420 00:23:04,210 --> 00:23:07,860 such as Chateau-Gaillard, but that we only see developing 421 00:23:07,860 --> 00:23:10,240 at the end of the 14th century. 422 00:23:10,240 --> 00:23:12,420 Chateau-Gaillard, in Normandy, 423 00:23:12,420 --> 00:23:14,850 considered impregnable, was the pride 424 00:23:14,850 --> 00:23:16,470 of Richard the Lionheart. 425 00:23:16,470 --> 00:23:18,450 The English king accomplished the feat 426 00:23:18,450 --> 00:23:20,920 of having it built in only two years. 427 00:23:20,920 --> 00:23:22,500 It was the last obstacle, 428 00:23:22,500 --> 00:23:26,420 destined to stop Philip II in his advance upon Eure. 429 00:23:26,420 --> 00:23:30,500 It is only after a very long siege in the spring of 1204 430 00:23:30,500 --> 00:23:32,670 that he manages to capture it, 431 00:23:32,670 --> 00:23:36,450 because Chateau-Gaillard is equipped from very early on 432 00:23:36,450 --> 00:23:39,493 with the most effective form of active defenses. 433 00:23:40,850 --> 00:23:42,770 It has to resist attack. 434 00:23:42,770 --> 00:23:44,990 So replacing the wooden hoardings 435 00:23:44,990 --> 00:23:47,860 with stone machicolations in Chateau-Gaillard 436 00:23:47,860 --> 00:23:50,992 was a very novel thing to do in the West. 437 00:23:50,992 --> 00:23:54,150 There were stone machicolations on arches 438 00:23:54,150 --> 00:23:58,340 at the top of the tower, and the walls were thicker. 439 00:23:58,340 --> 00:24:01,395 The walls of Chateau-Gaillard are very thick. 440 00:24:01,395 --> 00:24:05,319 There's great mechanical resistance to ballistic impact. 441 00:24:05,319 --> 00:24:08,470 The spur was there in case of ballistic fire 442 00:24:08,470 --> 00:24:11,630 to deflect projectiles and stop them from landing, 443 00:24:11,630 --> 00:24:15,370 while the scalloped edge is also to repel ballistic fire 444 00:24:15,370 --> 00:24:17,840 to make the projectiles ricochet off 445 00:24:17,840 --> 00:24:19,830 and minimize the impact. 446 00:24:19,830 --> 00:24:23,480 The thicker walls and the shape are a real solution. 447 00:24:23,480 --> 00:24:25,590 In the 12th and 13th centuries, 448 00:24:25,590 --> 00:24:28,280 simple entrenchment is no longer enough. 449 00:24:28,280 --> 00:24:32,303 With the architecture of Philip II, defense becomes active. 450 00:24:34,480 --> 00:24:38,045 The castle can now protect all of the lands surrounding it. 451 00:24:38,045 --> 00:24:41,580 Because men posted on its wall walks or hiding 452 00:24:41,580 --> 00:24:45,350 in its guard house can actively defend the building 453 00:24:45,350 --> 00:24:49,394 thanks to new defensive mechanisms in the towers and walls 454 00:24:49,394 --> 00:24:53,230 and their ability to move along the curtain walls. 455 00:24:53,230 --> 00:24:55,770 Advances in the art of construction have made 456 00:24:55,770 --> 00:24:59,853 the fortifications even stronger and harder to approach. 457 00:25:01,150 --> 00:25:04,040 During the 13th century, the wooden hoardings, 458 00:25:04,040 --> 00:25:07,650 vulnerable to fire, gradually disappear to be replaced 459 00:25:07,650 --> 00:25:11,600 by cobalt constructions, brattices, small rectangular 460 00:25:11,600 --> 00:25:15,180 structures with openings, and machicolations, 461 00:25:15,180 --> 00:25:18,730 stone galleries running along the tops of the walls. 462 00:25:18,730 --> 00:25:20,710 To better protect the outer wall, 463 00:25:20,710 --> 00:25:22,640 from the middle of the 12th century, 464 00:25:22,640 --> 00:25:25,791 the towers are used as firing positions. 465 00:25:25,791 --> 00:25:27,300 The key element 466 00:25:27,300 --> 00:25:30,100 of active defense is the archer tower. 467 00:25:30,100 --> 00:25:32,860 In a semicircular tower, you make arrow loops 468 00:25:32,860 --> 00:25:35,820 on the sides and front, but on the floor above, 469 00:25:35,820 --> 00:25:37,690 they're in a different place. 470 00:25:37,690 --> 00:25:39,840 That way, all the firing angles 471 00:25:39,840 --> 00:25:42,210 are covered, leaving no blind spots. 472 00:25:42,210 --> 00:25:45,050 Because staggering the arrow loops at different levels 473 00:25:45,050 --> 00:25:48,390 in a fan shape allows the archer to defend 474 00:25:48,390 --> 00:25:52,131 almost every angle actively from the tower. 475 00:25:52,131 --> 00:25:56,770 This is really implemented from the late 12th century. 476 00:25:56,770 --> 00:25:59,963 And Philip II will do this systematically. 477 00:26:01,723 --> 00:26:04,070 Progress is such that fortresses 478 00:26:04,070 --> 00:26:08,558 can now be built on plains, on flat, open ground. 479 00:26:08,558 --> 00:26:11,080 The architecture of Philip II 480 00:26:11,080 --> 00:26:14,370 will influence English rulers for several centuries. 481 00:26:14,370 --> 00:26:17,020 Dover Castle, on the English coast, 482 00:26:17,020 --> 00:26:20,430 defends the port closest to France. 483 00:26:20,430 --> 00:26:23,350 Henry Plantagenet made it considerably larger 484 00:26:23,350 --> 00:26:28,350 between 1179 and 1188 by adding a splendid palace keep. 485 00:26:29,414 --> 00:26:33,599 In southeast England, Bodiam Castle, built in 1385 486 00:26:33,599 --> 00:26:36,290 in the middle of the 100 Years' War, 487 00:26:36,290 --> 00:26:39,030 is an archetypal French fortress. 488 00:26:39,030 --> 00:26:42,323 It's built on a square base, but doesn't have a keep. 489 00:26:43,856 --> 00:26:46,773 (mysterious music) 490 00:26:52,000 --> 00:26:55,410 Additions, improvements, or real creations, 491 00:26:55,410 --> 00:26:58,130 the principles of the fortification of architecture 492 00:26:58,130 --> 00:27:02,550 initiated by Philip II evolved further with his successors, 493 00:27:02,550 --> 00:27:06,390 his son, Louis VIII, and his grandson, Louis IX, 494 00:27:06,390 --> 00:27:10,078 who ceaselessly expand the royal domain. 495 00:27:10,078 --> 00:27:12,986 Louis IX, or Saint Louis, 496 00:27:12,986 --> 00:27:16,320 who had to fight especially in the south of France 497 00:27:16,320 --> 00:27:18,630 against the count of Toulouse, 498 00:27:18,630 --> 00:27:21,173 had castles, strongholds built. 499 00:27:22,022 --> 00:27:24,478 These eventually became places 500 00:27:24,478 --> 00:27:27,373 from which to exercise royal power. 501 00:27:28,820 --> 00:27:31,750 In 1248, the Treaty of Corbeil 502 00:27:31,750 --> 00:27:35,223 fixed the border between France and Aragon. 503 00:27:35,223 --> 00:27:38,418 A few years earlier, several fortresses perched 504 00:27:38,418 --> 00:27:41,210 at the top of impressive cliffs had been bought 505 00:27:41,210 --> 00:27:44,720 by Louis IX to mark the kingdom's new borders. 506 00:27:44,720 --> 00:27:47,490 Their names were Aguilar, Queribus, 507 00:27:47,490 --> 00:27:50,810 Peyrepertuse, and Puilaurens. 508 00:27:50,810 --> 00:27:53,010 Among these vertiginous citadels, 509 00:27:53,010 --> 00:27:56,183 Peyrepertuse in the Aude is the most impressive. 510 00:27:57,243 --> 00:28:01,470 The fortress, dating from the late 13th century, runs along 511 00:28:01,470 --> 00:28:06,470 a 300-meter ridge and stands 500 meters above the valley. 512 00:28:06,590 --> 00:28:08,970 The complex is in three parts, 513 00:28:08,970 --> 00:28:12,860 two castles and a vast central esplanade. 514 00:28:12,860 --> 00:28:17,370 The old keep includes a dwelling and a Romanesque church, 515 00:28:17,370 --> 00:28:21,480 while a second fortress, erected further up in 1242, 516 00:28:21,480 --> 00:28:24,670 allows total autonomy in case of siege. 517 00:28:24,670 --> 00:28:27,010 Although impressive, these citadels 518 00:28:27,010 --> 00:28:29,750 only have very small garrisons. 519 00:28:29,750 --> 00:28:32,620 This is particularly the case with Puilaurens. 520 00:28:32,620 --> 00:28:36,160 Perched on its limestone spur, the fortress is defended 521 00:28:36,160 --> 00:28:39,113 by 20 infantrymen and a pack of dogs. 522 00:28:40,030 --> 00:28:43,624 What could so few men have done in case of invasion? 523 00:28:43,624 --> 00:28:45,410 Would they only have had time 524 00:28:45,410 --> 00:28:47,990 to go down into the valley they overlooked? 525 00:28:47,990 --> 00:28:52,330 In fact, these vertiginous citadels aren't just fortresses. 526 00:28:52,330 --> 00:28:54,870 They're mainly political construction, 527 00:28:54,870 --> 00:28:57,611 weapons in a psychological war. 528 00:28:57,611 --> 00:29:00,650 They symbolize the war of the Capetian kings 529 00:29:00,650 --> 00:29:03,473 to make their mark on the kingdom they govern. 530 00:29:04,570 --> 00:29:07,570 The Albigensian Crusade is an opportunity 531 00:29:07,570 --> 00:29:11,110 for Capetian power to establish a strong foothold 532 00:29:11,110 --> 00:29:14,069 in territories far from the royal seat. 533 00:29:14,069 --> 00:29:16,470 It's true that these castles, 534 00:29:16,470 --> 00:29:20,600 known as border castles because they're coveted territories, 535 00:29:20,600 --> 00:29:24,184 are very often the synthesis of old fortifications, 536 00:29:24,184 --> 00:29:27,030 old places of power, which are taken, 537 00:29:27,030 --> 00:29:29,720 retaken, and strengthened by various people. 538 00:29:29,720 --> 00:29:32,020 Carcassonne is the prime example. 539 00:29:32,020 --> 00:29:34,930 It dates back to the late Roman Empire. 540 00:29:34,930 --> 00:29:38,080 On top of this infrastructure is a double wall built 541 00:29:38,080 --> 00:29:41,750 to Philip II's standards with new forms, for example 542 00:29:41,750 --> 00:29:45,778 the use of bossage, stones given a rough, rustic appearance. 543 00:29:45,778 --> 00:29:49,270 The towers are a little bit bigger, but it's built 544 00:29:49,270 --> 00:29:53,520 on Philip's model with circular towers and arrow loops. 545 00:29:53,520 --> 00:29:55,970 And it has to be very beautiful, 546 00:29:55,970 --> 00:29:58,840 so therefore very expensive. 547 00:29:58,840 --> 00:30:02,020 But what counts is that the beauty and the final form 548 00:30:02,020 --> 00:30:04,840 of the architecture are proof of the power, 549 00:30:04,840 --> 00:30:08,363 the authority of the Capetian king over these areas. 550 00:30:10,170 --> 00:30:11,670 Carcassonne Castle, 551 00:30:11,670 --> 00:30:13,770 bristling with nine towers, 552 00:30:13,770 --> 00:30:16,000 is an architectural gem. 553 00:30:16,000 --> 00:30:19,620 The city's fortifications are a monumental complex, 554 00:30:19,620 --> 00:30:22,560 with three kilometers of ramparts interspersed 555 00:30:22,560 --> 00:30:26,746 with 40 towers equipped with two large doors. 556 00:30:26,746 --> 00:30:29,497 This huge acropolis towers 50 meters 557 00:30:29,497 --> 00:30:32,490 above the right bank of the River Aude. 558 00:30:32,490 --> 00:30:35,190 The loveliest fortified city in Europe, 559 00:30:35,190 --> 00:30:39,680 Carcassonne has two walls crowned by a wall walk. 560 00:30:39,680 --> 00:30:43,470 The first inner wall sits on the ancient foundations. 561 00:30:43,470 --> 00:30:46,803 The second is protected by 14 towers. 562 00:30:49,063 --> 00:30:52,310 It's a considerable financial investment, 563 00:30:52,310 --> 00:30:54,470 because it's built in dressed stone 564 00:30:54,470 --> 00:30:56,999 and designed for active defense. 565 00:30:56,999 --> 00:31:00,194 There are archer towers, immense towers 566 00:31:00,194 --> 00:31:03,433 with arrow loops up to two to three meters long. 567 00:31:05,150 --> 00:31:08,370 We know very well that arrow loops don't actually need 568 00:31:08,370 --> 00:31:11,754 to be two to three meters long to be more effective. 569 00:31:11,754 --> 00:31:14,860 So there's an ostentatious element. 570 00:31:14,860 --> 00:31:18,680 And also an element of demonstrating royal authority 571 00:31:18,680 --> 00:31:20,610 through these constructions, 572 00:31:20,610 --> 00:31:23,783 which are also obviously strong constructions. 573 00:31:25,220 --> 00:31:27,700 The criteria for choosing the site of a castle 574 00:31:27,700 --> 00:31:32,051 was strategic, political, and also environmental. 575 00:31:32,051 --> 00:31:36,520 The site had to be close to a quarry and a forest, 576 00:31:36,520 --> 00:31:39,143 which had to provide the materials for the site. 577 00:31:41,580 --> 00:31:45,540 After the forest has been cleared, the land is surveyed. 578 00:31:45,540 --> 00:31:48,049 Using a rope with 13 knots divided 579 00:31:48,049 --> 00:31:50,430 into 50 centimeters cubits, 580 00:31:50,430 --> 00:31:53,480 the master mason marks out the future building. 581 00:31:53,480 --> 00:31:56,070 Stakes are planted at the center of the towers, 582 00:31:56,070 --> 00:31:58,890 then connected by ropes, determining the lines 583 00:31:58,890 --> 00:32:01,123 on which the curtain walls will stand. 584 00:32:03,460 --> 00:32:05,910 The building work is done by specialists 585 00:32:05,910 --> 00:32:08,510 with specific functions and skills. 586 00:32:08,510 --> 00:32:11,390 Stonecutters, masons, carpenters, 587 00:32:11,390 --> 00:32:14,530 and blacksmiths, divided into guilds. 588 00:32:14,530 --> 00:32:16,850 The cost of this work is high. 589 00:32:16,850 --> 00:32:19,950 The amount of dressed stone used to build a castle 590 00:32:19,950 --> 00:32:24,110 will therefore depend on the budget allocated by the lord. 591 00:32:24,110 --> 00:32:26,260 The size of the castle depends 592 00:32:26,260 --> 00:32:29,990 on the wealth of the person building it, the land he has, 593 00:32:29,990 --> 00:32:33,090 the revenues he can collect, and above all, 594 00:32:33,090 --> 00:32:36,580 the peasants he can make work on the site. 595 00:32:36,580 --> 00:32:39,677 The Middle Ages is an era of builders. 596 00:32:39,677 --> 00:32:43,699 It's a time when a lot of wealth, a lot of capital, 597 00:32:43,699 --> 00:32:47,948 went into building cathedrals and into building castles. 598 00:32:47,948 --> 00:32:51,199 It may have been detrimental to living standards. 599 00:32:51,199 --> 00:32:53,880 It may have been detrimental to the quality 600 00:32:53,880 --> 00:32:56,581 of people's health and education. 601 00:32:56,581 --> 00:33:00,641 But it left us with extraordinary monuments 602 00:33:00,641 --> 00:33:05,033 that are important to our identity and what we are today. 603 00:33:07,744 --> 00:33:10,400 It takes eight to 12 years 604 00:33:10,400 --> 00:33:13,400 to build the castles of the early 13th century. 605 00:33:13,400 --> 00:33:16,640 During the whole process, the masons will keep watch over 606 00:33:16,640 --> 00:33:20,130 the quality of the assembly and the accuracy of the angles. 607 00:33:20,130 --> 00:33:23,100 They use hoisting gear, such as treadwheels, 608 00:33:23,100 --> 00:33:26,233 some of which can lift a weight of 600 kilograms. 609 00:33:28,540 --> 00:33:31,230 Rib vaulting, beams interlocking 610 00:33:31,230 --> 00:33:34,040 thanks to mortise and tenon joints, 611 00:33:34,040 --> 00:33:37,240 dressed stone windows, each element of a castle 612 00:33:37,240 --> 00:33:39,980 shows incredible craftsmanship. 613 00:33:39,980 --> 00:33:43,050 The site is therefore colossal, a conjunction 614 00:33:43,050 --> 00:33:46,803 of several skills coordinated by the master mason. 615 00:33:48,090 --> 00:33:50,510 We often wonder about the architects, 616 00:33:50,510 --> 00:33:51,810 especially when we're impressed 617 00:33:51,810 --> 00:33:54,337 by the quality of the buildings. 618 00:33:54,337 --> 00:33:57,940 There are cross-ribbed vaults and an elaborate idea 619 00:33:57,940 --> 00:34:00,526 of construction that echoes that of churches. 620 00:34:00,526 --> 00:34:02,288 Of course there are architects, 621 00:34:02,288 --> 00:34:03,943 but we don't have their names. 622 00:34:05,100 --> 00:34:07,250 Unfortunately, apart from a rare few, 623 00:34:07,250 --> 00:34:08,833 they're mostly unknown. 624 00:34:11,260 --> 00:34:13,310 Although the medieval architects' names 625 00:34:13,310 --> 00:34:17,550 have gone, their work, whose beauty and complexity remains 626 00:34:17,550 --> 00:34:21,423 uncontested today, has come down through the centuries. 627 00:34:25,783 --> 00:34:29,470 With the reign of Philip II and his successors, 628 00:34:29,470 --> 00:34:33,670 the kingdom enjoys a period of pacification and stability. 629 00:34:33,670 --> 00:34:37,780 But castles continue to spread over the royal territory. 630 00:34:37,780 --> 00:34:40,490 And although they still meet military standards, 631 00:34:40,490 --> 00:34:43,100 their residential function is growing. 632 00:34:43,100 --> 00:34:44,920 The quest for comfort becomes 633 00:34:44,920 --> 00:34:47,073 a major concern for their builders. 634 00:34:48,294 --> 00:34:51,700 The keep is eventually abandoned in favor 635 00:34:51,700 --> 00:34:55,460 of a specific building, a dwelling built in the courtyard, 636 00:34:55,460 --> 00:34:58,621 where the lord lives with his servants. 637 00:34:58,621 --> 00:35:02,180 Here we see the emergence of spaces that are 638 00:35:02,180 --> 00:35:04,533 much more suitable as a residence. 639 00:35:07,012 --> 00:35:09,450 And not just anyone's residence, 640 00:35:09,450 --> 00:35:12,950 but the person with the power and his inner circle. 641 00:35:12,950 --> 00:35:15,634 His extended family, his mesnie. 642 00:35:15,634 --> 00:35:17,620 Throughout the Middle Ages, 643 00:35:17,620 --> 00:35:21,010 we have what's called the trilogy, which appears 644 00:35:21,010 --> 00:35:23,763 from the Carolingian era in Latin texts. 645 00:35:24,925 --> 00:35:27,320 Aula, camera, capella. 646 00:35:27,320 --> 00:35:30,010 The reception room, the aula in Latin, 647 00:35:30,010 --> 00:35:33,060 the hall, is a large room on the first floor, 648 00:35:33,060 --> 00:35:36,130 on the noble floor where the lord has his throne. 649 00:35:36,130 --> 00:35:39,530 Where meals are eaten and banquets take place. 650 00:35:39,530 --> 00:35:41,790 It's a place for conviviality. 651 00:35:41,790 --> 00:35:45,528 The tables are set up on trestles and removed after meals. 652 00:35:45,528 --> 00:35:48,430 There's a part which is more private, 653 00:35:48,430 --> 00:35:52,370 the camera in Latin, the chamber. 654 00:35:52,370 --> 00:35:56,330 And then a third place, which is the chapel. 655 00:35:56,330 --> 00:35:59,030 The chapel is not only a place for prayer and worship, 656 00:35:59,030 --> 00:36:02,240 but it's also a cultural place where people write. 657 00:36:02,240 --> 00:36:04,420 Some books are kept there. 658 00:36:04,420 --> 00:36:06,610 The library is in the chapel. 659 00:36:06,610 --> 00:36:09,260 So the castle is a residence and also a place 660 00:36:09,260 --> 00:36:12,173 of culture, which we too often forget. 661 00:36:13,876 --> 00:36:16,240 Light is an element of comfort 662 00:36:16,240 --> 00:36:19,295 that is essential to the lord's daily life. 663 00:36:19,295 --> 00:36:23,339 But the first rudimentary castles have few openings. 664 00:36:23,339 --> 00:36:25,393 They're essentially arrow loops. 665 00:36:27,010 --> 00:36:30,440 In the 13th century, large arched gemel windows 666 00:36:30,440 --> 00:36:32,853 are common on the less vulnerable facades. 667 00:36:33,850 --> 00:36:36,330 There are dwellings in the courtyard, 668 00:36:36,330 --> 00:36:37,860 like the 12th century houses 669 00:36:37,860 --> 00:36:40,020 that we still see in some cities, 670 00:36:40,020 --> 00:36:44,000 with beautiful gemel windows, which are quite large. 671 00:36:44,000 --> 00:36:47,010 And people like to take advantage of the natural light, 672 00:36:47,010 --> 00:36:49,963 even if there were no big windows like we have today. 673 00:36:52,700 --> 00:36:55,490 From early on, there were stained glass windows 674 00:36:55,490 --> 00:36:58,480 as well as wooden shutters and oilcloth. 675 00:36:58,480 --> 00:36:59,900 And people also took advantage 676 00:36:59,900 --> 00:37:02,820 of the fireplace, torches, et cetera. 677 00:37:02,820 --> 00:37:05,140 Openings are made in large niches 678 00:37:05,140 --> 00:37:08,010 within the thickness of the walls, and provided 679 00:37:08,010 --> 00:37:12,243 on the two side walls with stone benches, window seats. 680 00:37:13,850 --> 00:37:16,240 Fireplaces are undoubtedly the elements 681 00:37:16,240 --> 00:37:18,230 of comfort that appear earliest. 682 00:37:18,230 --> 00:37:21,730 Relatively modest in the early 12th century fortresses, 683 00:37:21,730 --> 00:37:25,690 they become highly sophisticated in later constructions, 684 00:37:25,690 --> 00:37:29,170 the fireplace being synonymous with prestige. 685 00:37:29,170 --> 00:37:31,980 The hood is often decorated with ornaments, 686 00:37:31,980 --> 00:37:35,503 the lord's coat of arms, his motto, moldings, 687 00:37:35,503 --> 00:37:40,503 and richly carved decorations, sometimes painted and gilded. 688 00:37:41,530 --> 00:37:43,750 What is surprising is that we find 689 00:37:43,750 --> 00:37:46,550 in some rare texts, as in archeology, 690 00:37:46,550 --> 00:37:50,590 evidence of a certain luxury in castles very early on, 691 00:37:50,590 --> 00:37:52,690 particularly in everything concerning hygiene. 692 00:37:52,690 --> 00:37:56,612 There're examples in castles of private baths. 693 00:37:56,612 --> 00:37:59,590 There are always latrines in castles. 694 00:37:59,590 --> 00:38:02,670 Then there's the preparation of meals, kitchens, 695 00:38:02,670 --> 00:38:05,510 living spaces, so a whole organization 696 00:38:05,510 --> 00:38:08,450 and layout which becomes more complex. 697 00:38:08,450 --> 00:38:10,580 Water is a vital necessity, 698 00:38:10,580 --> 00:38:12,423 and one of the lord's concerns. 699 00:38:14,200 --> 00:38:16,290 Indispensable to everyday life, 700 00:38:16,290 --> 00:38:18,920 it is even more so in the event of a siege. 701 00:38:18,920 --> 00:38:20,893 The fortress must be autonomous. 702 00:38:21,840 --> 00:38:24,570 Perched on a rocky spur, it has systems 703 00:38:24,570 --> 00:38:27,070 where rainwater is stored after being filtered 704 00:38:27,070 --> 00:38:30,050 through a layer of pebbles and sand. 705 00:38:30,050 --> 00:38:33,340 On the plain, every good castle has a well, 706 00:38:33,340 --> 00:38:36,663 which is another element of ornamentation and prestige. 707 00:38:37,593 --> 00:38:40,670 The wealthiest lords' homes have a water supply 708 00:38:40,670 --> 00:38:44,020 in the kitchen or pipes bringing in springwater, 709 00:38:44,020 --> 00:38:46,053 sometimes from several kilometers. 710 00:38:47,646 --> 00:38:49,100 (driving music) 711 00:38:49,100 --> 00:38:51,140 Such is the case in Vincennes, 712 00:38:51,140 --> 00:38:53,300 the ultimate royal castle. 713 00:38:53,300 --> 00:38:56,050 The water is piped directly from springs 714 00:38:56,050 --> 00:39:00,290 on the heights of Montreuil, three kilometers to the north. 715 00:39:00,290 --> 00:39:03,320 Arriving under pressure thanks to the difference in level, 716 00:39:03,320 --> 00:39:06,000 the precious liquid is stored in a water tower 717 00:39:06,000 --> 00:39:08,050 before being distributed to the kitchens 718 00:39:08,050 --> 00:39:09,653 and baths of the fortress. 719 00:39:13,170 --> 00:39:15,870 The 50-meter keep, surrounded by a wall 720 00:39:15,870 --> 00:39:19,534 with a castellum consisting of twin towers and a moat, 721 00:39:19,534 --> 00:39:24,033 is surrounded by a vast outer wall, 1,200 meters long. 722 00:39:25,273 --> 00:39:29,110 Typical of early 15th-century military architecture, 723 00:39:29,110 --> 00:39:33,620 the moat is 11 meters deep and 25 meters wide. 724 00:39:33,620 --> 00:39:35,960 The walls are crowned with machicolations 725 00:39:35,960 --> 00:39:38,593 on a series of cornices overhanging the moat. 726 00:39:41,150 --> 00:39:45,160 Built during the 100 Years' War, from 1361, 727 00:39:45,160 --> 00:39:49,090 these fortifications are typical of the late Middle Ages, 728 00:39:49,090 --> 00:39:51,730 during which the conflict between the kingdoms of France 729 00:39:51,730 --> 00:39:53,470 and England went through several 730 00:39:53,470 --> 00:39:55,743 successive phases of high tension. 731 00:39:57,660 --> 00:40:00,070 During this interminable conflict, 732 00:40:00,070 --> 00:40:03,350 one invention would radically change the art of war 733 00:40:03,350 --> 00:40:06,543 and military architecture, gunpowder. 734 00:40:06,543 --> 00:40:09,228 (explosion rumbling) 735 00:40:09,228 --> 00:40:10,340 (dramatic music) 736 00:40:10,340 --> 00:40:13,980 At the end of the 14th century, numerous pieces of artillery 737 00:40:13,980 --> 00:40:18,026 appear on the battlefield and inside citadels. 738 00:40:18,026 --> 00:40:20,930 The spread of artillery does considerable 739 00:40:20,930 --> 00:40:25,053 damage to the curtain walls and the outer walls of castles. 740 00:40:26,610 --> 00:40:29,240 By firing stone cannonballs from a tube 741 00:40:29,240 --> 00:40:31,970 which are smaller than the balls from big catapults, 742 00:40:31,970 --> 00:40:34,610 you can breach a wall just as effectively. 743 00:40:34,610 --> 00:40:37,090 And the cannon is more transportable. 744 00:40:37,090 --> 00:40:39,254 So, the castle wall also has to adapt 745 00:40:39,254 --> 00:40:41,303 to the emerging cannons. 746 00:40:42,357 --> 00:40:45,130 At first, they just enlarge the arrow loops 747 00:40:45,130 --> 00:40:47,613 a bit and designed openings for cannons 748 00:40:47,613 --> 00:40:52,461 with embrasures and cannon ports and then gun ports. 749 00:40:52,461 --> 00:40:55,180 Then they gradually start to design towers 750 00:40:55,180 --> 00:40:57,980 in which cannons can be installed. 751 00:40:57,980 --> 00:41:00,220 If the first stone cannonballs aren't 752 00:41:00,220 --> 00:41:03,640 very effective at demolishing walls, the appearance 753 00:41:03,640 --> 00:41:07,670 of cast-iron balls in the mid 15th century changes things, 754 00:41:07,670 --> 00:41:10,663 because their destructive power is devastating. 755 00:41:11,550 --> 00:41:13,560 These are balls that breach walls. 756 00:41:13,560 --> 00:41:17,130 Instead of smashing on the walls, they smash the walls. 757 00:41:17,130 --> 00:41:19,280 The strongest, most powerful cannons 758 00:41:19,280 --> 00:41:21,797 force a change in castle architecture. 759 00:41:21,797 --> 00:41:24,491 Throughout the 15th century, the fortifications 760 00:41:24,491 --> 00:41:27,100 start to become much more resistant. 761 00:41:27,100 --> 00:41:29,060 The fortresses become more squat, 762 00:41:29,060 --> 00:41:32,200 with walls sometimes more than 10 meters thick 763 00:41:32,200 --> 00:41:35,470 to withstand the impact of the new artillery. 764 00:41:35,470 --> 00:41:37,940 Castles will now be built or adapted 765 00:41:37,940 --> 00:41:41,660 to withstand siege artillery that's increasingly powerful, 766 00:41:41,660 --> 00:41:44,670 increasingly maneuverable, using balls weighing 767 00:41:44,670 --> 00:41:48,170 up to 200 pounds, about 90 kilograms, 768 00:41:48,170 --> 00:41:51,810 and 42 centimeters in diameter, sometimes surrounded 769 00:41:51,810 --> 00:41:55,390 with an iron band or made entirely of cast iron. 770 00:41:55,390 --> 00:41:57,400 Adjusting the dosage of gunpowder 771 00:41:57,400 --> 00:41:59,250 makes the shots more consistent. 772 00:41:59,250 --> 00:42:02,110 From now on, the artillery can focus its fire 773 00:42:02,110 --> 00:42:04,636 on any point of the ramparts, and thus, 774 00:42:04,636 --> 00:42:06,160 (cannon rumbles) 775 00:42:06,160 --> 00:42:07,313 create breaches. 776 00:42:08,449 --> 00:42:10,240 That's really the end 777 00:42:10,240 --> 00:42:12,913 of medieval stone castles as we know them. 778 00:42:14,349 --> 00:42:16,730 At the end of the 15th century, 779 00:42:16,730 --> 00:42:18,443 no wall can withstand the cannons. 780 00:42:20,382 --> 00:42:23,132 (dramatic music) 781 00:42:26,334 --> 00:42:29,996 In new Occitanie, Bonaguil Castle, 782 00:42:29,996 --> 00:42:34,133 built between 1445 and 1482 by a megalomaniac lord 783 00:42:34,133 --> 00:42:37,040 on the site of a 13th century castle, 784 00:42:37,040 --> 00:42:38,960 will benefit from improvements made 785 00:42:38,960 --> 00:42:41,263 to resists the development of artillery. 786 00:42:42,890 --> 00:42:44,650 A massive outer wall called 787 00:42:44,650 --> 00:42:47,249 a barbican protects the entrance. 788 00:42:47,249 --> 00:42:51,750 And almond-shaped keep with a streamlined profile. 789 00:42:51,750 --> 00:42:55,350 More than 100 cannon ports in the walls, 790 00:42:55,350 --> 00:42:59,920 encircled by a boulevard, and protected by firing positions 791 00:42:59,920 --> 00:43:02,513 in the moats and the base of the ramparts. 792 00:43:06,310 --> 00:43:09,020 Castles adopting these architectural forms, 793 00:43:09,020 --> 00:43:12,030 adapted for the impact of artillery with these very big 794 00:43:12,030 --> 00:43:16,953 artillery towers, are the work of very great lords or kings. 795 00:43:16,953 --> 00:43:19,793 Faith in castles remained strong. 796 00:43:20,670 --> 00:43:23,050 But those built from they 15th century 797 00:43:23,050 --> 00:43:25,200 are very different from their predecessors. 798 00:43:26,605 --> 00:43:28,710 They're increasingly buried 799 00:43:28,710 --> 00:43:31,880 to stop artillery fire breaching their outer walls. 800 00:43:31,880 --> 00:43:34,469 The Fortress of Salses, at the foot 801 00:43:34,469 --> 00:43:38,003 of the Pyrenees-Orientales, is an example. 802 00:43:40,420 --> 00:43:43,130 Built at the end of the 15th century by order 803 00:43:43,130 --> 00:43:47,370 of the king of Spain, it defends the border with France. 804 00:43:47,370 --> 00:43:50,600 Its general design is highly innovative and heralds 805 00:43:50,600 --> 00:43:53,520 the modern fortifications of which Vousbons 806 00:43:53,520 --> 00:43:56,167 is one of the undisputed masters. 807 00:43:56,167 --> 00:43:58,543 Salses is an example of a caesura. 808 00:43:58,543 --> 00:44:00,440 It's the end of the castle. 809 00:44:00,440 --> 00:44:02,810 We can no longer speak of a medieval castle, 810 00:44:02,810 --> 00:44:05,120 even if it retains some of the features. 811 00:44:05,120 --> 00:44:06,720 It's already a citadel. 812 00:44:06,720 --> 00:44:08,730 It has big artillery towers, 813 00:44:08,730 --> 00:44:11,850 very thick walls, and is defended by cannons 814 00:44:11,850 --> 00:44:14,456 inside vaulted rooms which are bunkers 815 00:44:14,456 --> 00:44:17,670 with ventilation systems so that the gunners 816 00:44:17,670 --> 00:44:20,700 aren't poisoned by the fumes from their guns. 817 00:44:20,700 --> 00:44:22,080 It's very solid. 818 00:44:22,080 --> 00:44:23,730 We're evolving towards forms 819 00:44:23,730 --> 00:44:26,104 that are stockier, more resistant. 820 00:44:26,104 --> 00:44:27,980 The wall walk has also 821 00:44:27,980 --> 00:44:30,223 been designed to accommodate cannons. 822 00:44:31,070 --> 00:44:33,670 And the horseshoe-shaped towers are detached 823 00:44:33,670 --> 00:44:36,924 from the fortress, like advanced defense posts. 824 00:44:36,924 --> 00:44:41,128 The walls, widened at their base, are 14 meters thick 825 00:44:41,128 --> 00:44:44,030 and sunk into the moat in order to protect them 826 00:44:44,030 --> 00:44:47,320 from direct hits by attackers, with only the part needed 827 00:44:47,320 --> 00:44:51,010 by the artillery emerging from the sloping banks. 828 00:44:51,010 --> 00:44:53,330 The moats are protected by gun ports 829 00:44:53,330 --> 00:44:55,738 in the base of the curtain walls. 830 00:44:55,738 --> 00:44:57,380 In elevation, 831 00:44:57,380 --> 00:44:59,350 it's nothing like a medieval castle. 832 00:44:59,350 --> 00:45:01,670 There are no tall towers. 833 00:45:01,670 --> 00:45:03,780 The towers are buried. 834 00:45:03,780 --> 00:45:07,200 There are very thick walls against which the cannonballs 835 00:45:07,200 --> 00:45:10,755 will die rather than shatter the masonry. 836 00:45:10,755 --> 00:45:13,908 So we have buried fortifications, 837 00:45:13,908 --> 00:45:16,670 the beginning of what will be called 838 00:45:16,670 --> 00:45:20,083 bastion architecture, so earth constructions, 839 00:45:22,145 --> 00:45:24,623 a staggering of the defenses. 840 00:45:25,490 --> 00:45:27,790 There are several lines of defense. 841 00:45:27,790 --> 00:45:30,280 The cannons are pushed back a long way, 842 00:45:30,280 --> 00:45:32,130 but its architecture and function 843 00:45:32,130 --> 00:45:34,513 is no longer that of a medieval castle. 844 00:45:36,198 --> 00:45:38,050 The Fortress of Salses 845 00:45:38,050 --> 00:45:40,322 embodies the end of an era. 846 00:45:40,322 --> 00:45:43,150 Castles will disappear from the landscape 847 00:45:43,150 --> 00:45:45,959 of increasingly centralized nations. 848 00:45:45,959 --> 00:45:48,003 Their decline also symbolizes 849 00:45:48,003 --> 00:45:50,553 the death throes of the feudal system. 850 00:45:51,693 --> 00:45:55,550 The castle's demise is due to peace. 851 00:45:55,550 --> 00:45:58,000 Peace within the kingdom of France. 852 00:45:58,000 --> 00:46:02,300 Once the 100 Years' War is over in the 16th century, 853 00:46:02,300 --> 00:46:05,140 there are still religious wars, but there would be 854 00:46:05,140 --> 00:46:09,610 gradually less need for defended castles. 855 00:46:09,610 --> 00:46:12,714 So, the emergence of royalty, the birth 856 00:46:12,714 --> 00:46:17,690 of the feudal monarchy, gradually pacifies the territory. 857 00:46:17,690 --> 00:46:19,540 And the castles and their most 858 00:46:19,540 --> 00:46:21,923 military aspect die their death. 859 00:46:25,030 --> 00:46:26,430 Once more the doing 860 00:46:26,430 --> 00:46:28,627 of the prince who orders its construction, 861 00:46:28,627 --> 00:46:33,627 the castle is transformed into a palace, a royal residence, 862 00:46:33,740 --> 00:46:36,570 its architectural splendors symbolizing 863 00:46:36,570 --> 00:46:39,361 the prestige of its royal owner. 864 00:46:39,361 --> 00:46:43,150 Chambord, built under the supervision of Francis I, 865 00:46:43,150 --> 00:46:47,140 from 1519, is a perfect example. 866 00:46:47,140 --> 00:46:49,380 When you visit Chambord, 867 00:46:49,380 --> 00:46:51,920 what you're seeing is the ultimate castle. 868 00:46:51,920 --> 00:46:54,540 One of the greatest castles of the Renaissance. 869 00:46:54,540 --> 00:46:57,177 It's not a fortified medieval castle at all. 870 00:46:58,020 --> 00:47:00,610 It's a castle in its own right. 871 00:47:00,610 --> 00:47:03,210 Some defensive attributes have been kept, 872 00:47:03,210 --> 00:47:07,260 such as the keep, battlements, machicolations, 873 00:47:07,260 --> 00:47:11,333 but they become decorative, a symbol of political power. 874 00:47:12,750 --> 00:47:15,440 Yes, Chambord is a royal residence, 875 00:47:15,440 --> 00:47:17,640 like all the castles in the Loire. 876 00:47:17,640 --> 00:47:19,900 Superb castles to which the king 877 00:47:19,900 --> 00:47:22,780 also brings craftsmen from Italy. 878 00:47:22,780 --> 00:47:25,800 Leonardo da Vinci stayed in these castles 879 00:47:25,800 --> 00:47:30,040 at the request of the great lords and the French royalty. 880 00:47:30,040 --> 00:47:33,430 It's a completely different context. 881 00:47:33,430 --> 00:47:37,152 These are areas that are completely peaceful for centuries. 882 00:47:37,152 --> 00:47:39,220 At the same time, the kings 883 00:47:39,220 --> 00:47:42,120 continue to demolish the fortresses. 884 00:47:42,120 --> 00:47:46,250 Henry IV has several demolished to avoid, as he says, 885 00:47:46,250 --> 00:47:49,440 their being used by the enemies of royalty authority. 886 00:47:49,440 --> 00:47:51,150 This says it all. 887 00:47:51,150 --> 00:47:55,100 The castles and all-powerful lords are gone from their land. 888 00:47:55,100 --> 00:47:57,700 Much of the life of nobles will now take place 889 00:47:57,700 --> 00:48:00,253 close to their sovereign, at court. 890 00:48:01,940 --> 00:48:04,920 And Louis XIII, then Louis XIV, 891 00:48:04,920 --> 00:48:07,253 will continue their work of demolition. 892 00:48:08,520 --> 00:48:11,990 Louis XIII, Louis XIV, Richelieu, 893 00:48:11,990 --> 00:48:15,320 are all great destroyers of castles, because they want 894 00:48:15,320 --> 00:48:19,603 to end the religious wars and to restore monarchical order. 895 00:48:20,775 --> 00:48:23,938 There's a desire to bring down all these symbols 896 00:48:23,938 --> 00:48:28,340 which are also the symbols of a bygone time. 897 00:48:28,340 --> 00:48:30,020 Often, it was enough to dismantle 898 00:48:30,020 --> 00:48:32,383 the battlements, the symbols of defense. 899 00:48:34,140 --> 00:48:37,047 In other cases, the castles were completely demolished 900 00:48:37,047 --> 00:48:38,933 and the stones used elsewhere. 901 00:48:39,930 --> 00:48:42,580 During the revolution, all the symbols 902 00:48:42,580 --> 00:48:45,380 of seniorial authority are destroyed. 903 00:48:45,380 --> 00:48:48,400 The castles were abandoned, some were used as quarries, 904 00:48:48,400 --> 00:48:51,433 feeding the 19th-century fashion for romantic ruins. 905 00:48:53,205 --> 00:48:55,705 (light music) 906 00:49:03,973 --> 00:49:05,850 In the 19th century, 907 00:49:05,850 --> 00:49:09,400 the castle becomes mysterious or lugubrious. 908 00:49:09,400 --> 00:49:11,640 Under the pen of the Romantic writers, 909 00:49:11,640 --> 00:49:15,270 a whole fantasy develops around the moss-covered ruins 910 00:49:15,270 --> 00:49:18,601 overrun by vegetation, the vision of an idealized 911 00:49:18,601 --> 00:49:22,940 and fictional Middle Ages, the fairy tale castle projects 912 00:49:22,940 --> 00:49:27,047 its Gothic silhouette onto lithographs and paintings. 913 00:49:27,047 --> 00:49:29,370 In the 19th century, 914 00:49:29,370 --> 00:49:32,400 many scholars with an interest in history discover 915 00:49:32,400 --> 00:49:35,755 not only castles, but churches, their heritage, 916 00:49:35,755 --> 00:49:39,679 and have a very romantic and idealized view of them. 917 00:49:39,679 --> 00:49:43,858 The Middle Ages becomes fashionable in a cliche form, 918 00:49:43,858 --> 00:49:46,930 because some well-to-do families build themselves 919 00:49:46,930 --> 00:49:49,810 neo-Roman and then neo-Gothic castles. 920 00:49:49,810 --> 00:49:52,350 From 1837, the year in which 921 00:49:52,350 --> 00:49:55,740 the Historical Monument Commission was created in France, 922 00:49:55,740 --> 00:49:57,940 a conservation movement developed, 923 00:49:57,940 --> 00:50:01,457 castles restored in the national interest. 924 00:50:01,457 --> 00:50:05,290 Just like Pierrefonds in the Olse, which illustrates 925 00:50:05,290 --> 00:50:08,700 the poetic fervor of the romantic fashion. 926 00:50:08,700 --> 00:50:12,130 Dismantled by order of Louis XIII, it would be completely 927 00:50:12,130 --> 00:50:15,993 rebuilt by the architect Viollet-le-Duc from 1857. 928 00:50:18,181 --> 00:50:20,450 It's a royal construction 929 00:50:20,450 --> 00:50:23,450 that has marked the history of royal castle architecture. 930 00:50:23,450 --> 00:50:26,270 But at the same time, you have to look 931 00:50:26,270 --> 00:50:28,681 for the original castle and take into account 932 00:50:28,681 --> 00:50:32,810 the restorations, reconstructions of the 19th century, 933 00:50:32,810 --> 00:50:35,787 including its reinterpretation by Viollet-le-Duc. 934 00:50:36,700 --> 00:50:38,180 It has to be read in two ways. 935 00:50:38,180 --> 00:50:41,280 Viollet-le-Duc was a real genius. 936 00:50:41,280 --> 00:50:44,540 On the outside, he did a very faithful reconstruction 937 00:50:44,540 --> 00:50:47,724 of the superstructure and the top of the towers. 938 00:50:47,724 --> 00:50:51,649 And inside he showed a great deal of creative freedom. 939 00:50:51,649 --> 00:50:55,410 It's a perfect balance between a faithful reconstruction 940 00:50:55,410 --> 00:50:59,752 and a creation that's well researched by a cultivated man 941 00:50:59,752 --> 00:51:03,253 who was also an art and architecture historian. 942 00:51:04,230 --> 00:51:05,960 These imposing ruins, 943 00:51:05,960 --> 00:51:09,020 which became a tourist destination for the aristocracy, 944 00:51:09,020 --> 00:51:11,840 are restored by order of Napoleon III, 945 00:51:11,840 --> 00:51:14,750 who wants to turn it into an imperial residence. 946 00:51:14,750 --> 00:51:17,240 The architect Viollet-le-Duc will apply 947 00:51:17,240 --> 00:51:20,470 his fantasy vision of the Middle Ages to it. 948 00:51:20,470 --> 00:51:24,140 This building is a fusion of architectural styles, 949 00:51:24,140 --> 00:51:27,650 freely inspired by the medieval period. 950 00:51:27,650 --> 00:51:32,490 Double ramparts, watchtowers, arrow loops, 951 00:51:32,490 --> 00:51:35,600 covering the wall walk, the keep, and the castle's 952 00:51:35,600 --> 00:51:40,020 eight towers rub shoulders with strangely-shaped gargoyles, 953 00:51:40,020 --> 00:51:44,493 extravagant porticos, and labyrinthine corridors. 954 00:51:46,440 --> 00:51:48,410 It has a Gothic side 955 00:51:48,410 --> 00:51:50,400 in the savage sense of the term. 956 00:51:50,400 --> 00:51:52,750 It's very gory, very Dracula. 957 00:51:52,750 --> 00:51:55,550 It's part of our contemporary imagination, 958 00:51:55,550 --> 00:51:58,703 which comes from romanticism around castles. 959 00:51:59,690 --> 00:52:02,533 At the same time, Viollet-le-Duc 960 00:52:02,533 --> 00:52:05,820 and the great restorers of the 19th century 961 00:52:05,820 --> 00:52:08,890 had a very positive view of the middle ages. 962 00:52:08,890 --> 00:52:12,710 A bit like Chateau Bianc, it was our roots. 963 00:52:12,710 --> 00:52:14,840 It was a glorious period. 964 00:52:14,840 --> 00:52:18,830 A sense of honor, a sense of nation, the spirit of chivalry, 965 00:52:18,830 --> 00:52:21,660 all of this is part of the same fantasy. 966 00:52:21,660 --> 00:52:25,520 And there's this desire to rebuild the neo-Gothic churches, 967 00:52:25,520 --> 00:52:29,960 but also castles like Pierrefonds, which remind us 968 00:52:29,960 --> 00:52:33,860 that the Middle Ages is also an era of builders, 969 00:52:33,860 --> 00:52:36,550 which has probably produced the greatest constructions 970 00:52:36,550 --> 00:52:41,097 we've ever had in the West, at least since Roman times. 971 00:52:41,097 --> 00:52:43,150 There are 500 years 972 00:52:43,150 --> 00:52:46,700 of medieval architecture here, condensed into a building 973 00:52:46,700 --> 00:52:49,940 owing more to myth than historical reality. 974 00:52:49,940 --> 00:52:54,060 Pierrefonds is a neo-Gothic decor of a fairy tale. 975 00:52:54,060 --> 00:52:56,770 For half a millennium, sovereigns and lords 976 00:52:56,770 --> 00:52:59,930 have built fortresses whose beauty, complexity, 977 00:52:59,930 --> 00:53:03,478 and incredible longevity fascinate us still. 978 00:53:03,478 --> 00:53:05,570 They are witnesses of an era 979 00:53:05,570 --> 00:53:08,842 of technological progress and creativity. 980 00:53:08,842 --> 00:53:11,326 These buildings will remain forever 981 00:53:11,326 --> 00:53:13,880 the symbol of the Middle Ages. 982 00:53:13,880 --> 00:53:17,020 Their architectural majesty and the testimony 983 00:53:17,020 --> 00:53:20,320 they provide about an era still full of mystery 984 00:53:20,320 --> 00:53:23,322 still arouses the public's curiosity, 985 00:53:23,322 --> 00:53:27,892 proof that castles still fuel our imaginations. 986 00:53:27,892 --> 00:53:30,642 (dramatic music)