New Worlds: The Multi-Purpose Castle

Feb. 13th, 2026 09:04 am
swan_tower: (Default)
[personal profile] swan_tower
Castles are a stereotypical feature of the fantasy genre, but for good reason: they're a ubiquitous feature of nearly every non-nomadic society well into the gunpowder era, until artillery finally got powerful enough that "build a better wall" stopped being a useful method of defense.

But castles, like walls, sometimes get simplified and misunderstood. So let's take a look at the many purposes they once served.

(Before we do, though, a note on terminology: strictly speaking, "castle" refers only a category of European fortified residence between the 9th and 16th centuries or thereabouts. I'm using the term far more generically, in a way that would probably make a military historian's teeth hurt. There's a whole spectrum of fortification, from single small buildings to entire cities, whose elements also vary according to time and place and purpose, and probably "fortress" would be a better blanket term for me to use here. But because "castle" is the common word in the genre, I'm going to continue referring to my topic that way. You can assume I mean a fortified building or complex thereof, but not an entire settlement -- though some of my points will apply to the latter, too.)

Most obviously, castles are defensive fortifications. What a wall does for the territory behind it, a castle does for everything within its bounds -- extending, in the more complex examples, to multiple layers of walls and gates that can provide fallback positions as necessary. This means that often (though not always; see below) the land outside is cleared, access is restricted, regular patrols go out if danger is anticipated, and so forth.

This defensive function is more concentrated, though, because a castle is frequently also a depot. If you're going to store anything valuable, you want it behind strong walls, whether that's food stores, military equipment, or money. Or, for that matter, people! Prisoners will have to stay put; nobles or other figures of importance are free to wander, but when trouble threatens, they have somewhere (relatively) safe to retreat. This can become a trap if the enemy lays siege to the place, but when you can't flee, holing up is the next best choice.

That category of valuables also includes records. Fortified sites are built not just for war, but for administration; given how much "government" has historically amounted to "the forcible extraction of resources by an elite minority," it's not surprising that defensive locations have often doubled as the places from which the business of government was carried out. Deeds of property, taxation accounts, military plans, historical annals, maps -- those latter are incredibly valuable resources for anybody wanting to move through or control the area. Someone who knows their castle is about to fall might well try to screw over the victor by burning records, along with any remaining food stores.

It's not all about hiding behind walls, though. As with a border fortification, a castle serves as a point from which military force can sally out. Even though these sites occupy very small footprints, they matter in warfare because if you don't capture them -- or at least box them in with a besieging detachment -- before moving on, they'll be free to attack you from behind, raid your supply train, and otherwise cause you problems. Sometimes that's a risk worth taking! In particular, if you can move fast enough and hit hard enough, you might pass a minor castle to focus your attention on a more significant one, leaving the little places for mopping up later. (Or you won't have to mop up, because the fall of a key site makes everybody else capitulate.)

Castles are also economic centers. Not only do they organize the production and resource extraction of the surrounding area, but the people there generally have more money to spend, and their presence entails a demand for a lot of resources and some specialized services. As a consequence, a kind of financial gravity will draw business and trade toward them. Even when the key resources are somewhere other than the castle itself -- like a water-powered mill along a nearby stream -- they're very likely owned by the guy in the castle, making this still the regional locus for economic activity. If there's a local fair, be it weekly, monthly, or yearly, it may very well be held at the castle or nearby; regardless of location, the castle is likely to authorize and oversee it.

This economic aspect may lead to the creation of a castle town: a settlement (itself possibly walled) outside the walls, close enough for the inhabitants to easily reach the castle. In Japan, the proliferation of castle towns during the Sengoku period was a major driver in the early modern urbanization of the country, and I suspect the same was true in a number of European locales. Eventually you may wind up with that thing I said I wasn't discussing in this essay: an entire fortified settlement, with a castle attached on one side or plonked somewhere in the middle. It's not a good idea to let the buildings get too close to the walls -- remember that you want a clear field in which to see and assault attackers, and you don't want them setting fire to things right by your fortifications -- but the town can contribute to the idea of "defense in depth," where its wall adds another barrier between the enemy and the castle that is heart of their goal.

You'll note that I've said very little about the specific design of these places. That's because there is an ocean of specialized terminology here, and which words you need are going to depend heavily on the specifics of context. How castles get built depends on everything from the money available, to the size and organization of the force expected to attack it, to the weapons being used: nobody is going to build a star fort to defend against guys with bows and arrows, because you'd be expending massive amounts of resources and effort that only become necessary once cannons enter the field. Moats (wet or dry), Gallic walls, hoardings, crenelations, machiolations, arrowslits, cheveaux de frise . . . those are all things to look into once you know more about the general environment of your fictional war.

But back to the castles as a whole. Most of the time, they "fall" only in the sense that they fall into the hands of the attacker. A section of the wall may collapse due to being sapped from below and pounded above, but it's rare for the place to be entirely destroyed . . . in part because that's a lot of work, and in part because of all the uses listed above. Why get rid of an extremely expensive infrastructure investment, when you could take advantage of it instead? Wholesale destruction is most likely to happen when someone has achieved full enough control of the countryside that he's ready to start kneecapping the ability of his underlings to resist that control.

Or, alternatively, when somebody shows up with cannon and pounds the place into rubble. Functional castles in even the broadest sense of the word finally died out in the twentieth century, when no wall could really withstand artillery and pretty soon we had airplanes to fly over them anyway. But at any technological point prior to that -- and in the absence of magic both capable of circumventing fortifications, and widespread enough for that to be a problem defenders have to worry about -- you're likely to see these kinds of defensive structures, in one form or another.

Patreon banner saying "This post is brought to you by my imaginative backers at Patreon. To join their ranks, click here!"

(originally posted at Swan Tower: https://is.gd/NzFCtO)
[syndicated profile] moviessubreddit_feed

Posted by /u/LiteraryBoner

Poll

If you've seen the film, please rate it at this poll

If you haven't seen the film but would like to see the result of the poll click here

Rankings

Click here to see the rankings of 2025 films

Click here to see the rankings for every poll done


The Moment (2026)

Summary Charli XCX stars as a heightened version of herself in this satirical mockumentary exploring pop stardom, artistic reinvention, and the machinery behind a global tour. As she prepares for the most ambitious era of her career, creative clashes, media spectacle, and personal doubt collide—forcing her to confront what authenticity really means in a brand-driven industry.

Director Aidan Zamiri

Writers Aidan Zamiri, Bertie Brandes (Story by Charli XCX)

Cast

  • Charli XCX as herself
  • Rosanna Arquette
  • Kate Berlant
  • Jamie Demetriou
  • Hailey Benton Gates
  • Isaac Powell
  • Alexander Skarsgård
  • Rish Shah
  • Kylie Jenner as herself
  • Rachel Sennott as herself

Rotten Tomatoes: 64%

Metacritic: 52

VOD / Release Theatrical release

Trailer

Official Trailer


submitted by /u/LiteraryBoner
[link] [comments]

Round 35: Icon Crossing

Feb. 12th, 2026 09:37 pm
impala_chick: (Default)
[personal profile] impala_chick posting in [community profile] retro_icontest
All five of these are from Heated Rivalry. This was very challenging but also very fun! Thanks for randomizing my pairs [personal profile] tinny.

TEXT-yellow.jpeg purple-sametxt.jpeg hand-text4.jpeg

Icon table under here + alts + urls )
[syndicated profile] moviessubreddit_feed

Posted by /u/LiteraryBoner

As an ongoing project /r/movies will be posting Throwback Discussion threads weekly for the movies that came out this same weekend 25 years ago. As a reminder, Official Discussion threads are for discussing the movie and not for meta sub discussion.


Saving Silverman (2001)

Summary Lifelong friends Darren and J.D. believe their buddy Wayne is making the worst mistake of his life by proposing to his domineering new girlfriend. Convinced she’s destroying his happiness—and their friendship—they hatch an increasingly absurd scheme to reunite Wayne with his high school sweetheart. Their misguided intervention spirals into chaos involving kidnapping, mistaken identities, and plenty of slapstick fallout.

Director Dennis Dugan

Writer Hank Chilton

Cast

  • Jason Biggs as Darren Silverman
  • Steve Zahn as J.D. McNugent
  • Jack Black as Wayne Lefessier
  • Amanda Peet as Judith Fessbeggler
  • Amanda Detmer as Sandy Perkus
  • R. Lee Ermey as Coach Norton

Rotten Tomatoes: 19%

Metacritic: 22

VOD / Release Available on digital and home media

Trailer

Official Trailer


submitted by /u/LiteraryBoner
[link] [comments]
[syndicated profile] moviessubreddit_feed

Posted by /u/LiteraryBoner

Poll

If you've seen the film, please rate it at this poll

If you haven't seen the film but would like to see the result of the poll click here

Rankings

Click here to see the rankings of 2025 films

Click here to see the rankings for every poll done


Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die

Summary Set in a near-future dominated by immersive gaming culture and corporate influence, a group of elite players find themselves pulled into a high-stakes competition where the boundaries between virtual combat and real-world consequences begin to collapse. As alliances fracture and secrets surface, survival depends on more than skill—it requires trust in a system designed to betray them.

Director Gore Verbinski

Writer Gore Verbinski

Cast

  • Sam Rockwell
  • Michael Pena
  • Zazie Beats
  • Haley Lu Richardson
  • Juno Temple

Rotten Tomatoes: 86%

Metacritic: 64

VOD / Release Theatrical release

Trailer Official Trailer


submitted by /u/LiteraryBoner
[link] [comments]
[syndicated profile] moviessubreddit_feed

Posted by /u/LiteraryBoner

Poll

If you've seen the film, please rate it at this poll

If you haven't seen the film but would like to see the result of the poll click here

Rankings

Click here to see the rankings of 2025 films

Click here to see the rankings for every poll done


Wuthering Heights

Summary A sweeping adaptation of Emily Brontë’s novel, the film chronicles the destructive and all-consuming bond between Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw. Set against the bleak Yorkshire moors, their love—shaped by class, obsession, and betrayal—ripples across generations with tragic consequences.

Director Emerald Fennell

Writer Emerald Fennell (based on the novel by Emily Brontë)

Cast

  • Margot Robbie as Catherine Earnshaw
  • Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff
  • Hong Chau as Nelly
  • Alison Oliver as Isabella
  • Shazad Latif as Edgar
  • Martin Clunes as Mr. Earnshaw

Rotten Tomatoes: 64%

Metacritic: 54

VOD / Release Theatrical release

Trailer

Trailer


submitted by /u/LiteraryBoner
[link] [comments]

Thursday Recs

Feb. 12th, 2026 08:48 pm
soc_puppet: Dreamsheep, its wool patterned after the Queer Pride flag: An off-white background, with two downward-pointing chevrons in lilac and violet; the Dreamwidth logo echoes these colors. (Queer Pride)
[personal profile] soc_puppet posting in [community profile] queerly_beloved
Thursday is here with recs for you!

This Thursday, I'm recommending everyone do a quick brush-up on the recent community rules update, especially since I'm adding a teensy bit more today: Dreamwidth Admin privileges do not allow me to edit post content, only to add or remove tags, change age restriction settings, or delete entries entirely. So starting now, if I notice that your entry has needs a cut, I'll do my very best to get ahold of you ASAP to fix things, but if you don't respond or find a way to contact me in 48 hours, even to say "I'm sorry, I don't have proper computer access at the moment!", I'll have to delete the entry. This is not something I want to do; I'd much rather just change the access level to Private (where presumably only the poster and the community admin can see it), but that doesn't seem to be an option at the moment. I plan to ask about that when I get a moment, but in the mean time, those are the options.

Please let me know if you have any thoughts on this, or any of the new rules! I'm open to input on anything community members think needs adjusting.


On a lighter note: Do you have a rec for this week? Just reply to this post with something queer or queer-adjacent (such as, soap made by a queer person that isn't necessarily queer themed) that you'd, well, recommend. Self-recs are welcome, as are recs for fandom-related content!

Or have you tried something that's been recced here? Do you have your own report to share about it? I'd love to hear about it!

round 35 - picnicnic

Feb. 12th, 2026 10:42 pm
picnicnic: mira ready to kill demons (mira make it hurt)
[personal profile] picnicnic posting in [community profile] retro_icontest
A lot has happened lately, so I was only able to make one icon. A shame, as I loved the challenge!

ICON 1ICON
2
NEW
ICON

(no subject)

Feb. 12th, 2026 06:19 pm
gremdark: An older print of a lady in a flowing dress with long red hair. She looks thoughtfully into the distance as paper spills from her hands (Wistful redhead)
[personal profile] gremdark
In twenty minutes, I'm signing on to an interview prep webinar for the alternative teaching certification program I'm pursuing. Hopefully it'll give me good things to work towards ahead of my interview next week.

I keep reading up on what program alumni say its major cons are. Luckily all of them so far seem to be the obvious pitfalls of getting your certification in one summer instead of over a few years of university and student teaching. I badly want to get a proper degree long-term, but, well, I can't afford to take on more student debt at present, and with my fiance's job on the rocks due to his bosses' ongoing divorce, we could really use a second, more stable salary in this household. I hope that my previous experiences will help with the lesson planning side, and the more substitute teaching I do, the more practice I'll get with classroom management. If I actually get in to the program, I'll have a mentor during my first few years. That ought to help.

In the meantime, I'm reading a lot of library books about classroom management and related disciplines. If anyone has any beloved parenting or teaching books with useful perspectives on establishing routines and setting meaningful consequences, I'd appreciate recs!

Trashsplosion!

Feb. 12th, 2026 05:45 pm
gremdark: Tamaki from Ouran High School Host Club, sobbing in a fancy suit. (sobbing Tamaki)
[personal profile] gremdark
What did this week need more of? Who said, "Giant messes that aren't your fault that no one else is going to clean up?"

Scene: the height of medium-city rush hour. We live at a fairly busy intersection just off the highway, so cars are whizzing by. A truck pulls up to pick up the recycling for the first time since the big ice storm at the end of January. Three or four weeks' worth of accumulated recycling.

Suddenly we hear an enormous crash, punctuated by the distinctive sound of breaking glass.

Near as I could tell from my peek out the window, something went wrong with the mechanical arm that lifts the cans up to be dumped into the truck. Our can was stuck halfway up for a bit, and the poor driver had to trigger some kind of manual release to get it out. He scooped up 75% of the fallen debris by hand, then moved on down the street, where a similar issue happened with our neighbor's can. Luckily, the driver was able to release it before more than a few pieces of cardboard spilled out. At that point, he seemed to give up on finishing out the rest of the route, and I can't blame him. Rush hour traffic was making everything about the scenario worse. The truck sped off, leaving our recycling cans and a massive heap of trash in the middle of the street.

During the ice storm, my fiance got really into collage. For the last few weeks, he's been bringing home all kinds of bits and pieces from work and generating lots and lots of teeny tiny paper scraps. Those scraps were all over the street now, mixed in with flattened soda cans and jagged bits of broken glass. We threw on pants and went out with a broom and dustpan to make the situation slightly less miserable.

The road in front of our house still looks like Oscar the Grouch threw a temper tantrum, but at least the glass, metal, and plastic is swept up. We got as much of the paper as we could, and I'm telling myself it's better than nothing. Sobbing, wailing, shrieking, etc.

At least our roommate is picking up pizza for dinner, so I don't have to think about cooking when I get out of my webinar.

第五年第三十三天

Feb. 13th, 2026 08:12 am
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi posting in [community profile] guardian_learning
部首
手 part 19
括, to include; 拯, to aid; 拳, fist pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=64

语法
3.3 Question words in non-questions
https://www.digmandarin.com/hsk-3-grammar

词汇
粗, thick/coarse/rough; 粗心, careless (pinyin in tags)
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/

Guardian:
你为了拯救那些孩子留在了地下拳场, you stayed in the underground boxing ring to save those kids
我什么都没看见, I didn't see anything
我就是一粗人, I'm not a cultured man

Me:
这个保险包括所有的伤病。
我不管谁吃了最后的小蛋糕。

Profile

mithen: (Default)
mithen

June 2023

S M T W T F S
    123
4 5678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags