Are the castles in Game of Thrones realistic?

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  • čas přidán 4. 09. 2016
  • The TV series Game of Thrones, based on George R R Martin's A Song a Ice and Fire, has some amazing medieval castles, but just how realistic are they?
    Shadiversity on Patreon: / shadiversity

Komentáře • 3,2K

  • @Cx10110100
    @Cx10110100 Před 5 lety +873

    Original saying was "Winter is coming, we need to finish our rooftops"
    It was partially forgotten over the years of summer

    • @Superknullisch
      @Superknullisch Před 4 lety +41

      Damn! this should be at the very top! (no pun intended ; )

    • @mat1pa
      @mat1pa Před 3 lety +15

      This deserves WAY more likes!!

    • @jshanker2005
      @jshanker2005 Před 3 lety +10

      A Russian is a master of anything winter and you've proven this.

    • @spacequeen8329
      @spacequeen8329 Před 3 lety +5

      Too late, we'll get to it next year.

  • @TheDrexxus
    @TheDrexxus Před 6 lety +2448

    I like how all the castles are built on sea cliffs or high up on mountains, nearly impervious to siege... Then there's winterfell chillin in the middle of a flat ass open field like "come at me bro"

    • @MMorgattto
      @MMorgattto Před 6 lety +628

      i think there's a passage in the book something along the lines of "we have the cold and snow as our first line of defense" and since the north is so vast invaders would probably me in a napoleon/hitler russia kind of situation

    • @ashbro3214
      @ashbro3214 Před 6 lety +406

      TheDrexxus invading north is like invading Russia..
      Your enemy is not the wall it's.. the cold and lack of supply

    • @caelvanir8557
      @caelvanir8557 Před 6 lety +543

      And unlike Russia, the North has a really natural border in the Neck. A nigh impassable swamp that is inhabited by fiercely loyal Northmen who fight like if the Vietcong had northern English accents.

    • @MMorgattto
      @MMorgattto Před 6 lety +80

      i really hope we get more of howland reed

    • @tommerker8063
      @tommerker8063 Před 6 lety +208

      also winterfell is build on hot springs, that run inside the walls to heat the castle.

  • @pandamonkey0321
    @pandamonkey0321 Před 5 lety +547

    One reason to build something like the Eyrie is just pure spite. Like:
    "You can't build a castle/palace up there! It's impossible!"
    "Friggin watch me, peasant."

    • @mystic-malevolence
      @mystic-malevolence Před 5 lety +62

      "They told me it was crazy to build a castle in a swamp..."

    • @CallicoJackracham
      @CallicoJackracham Před 4 lety +23

      ''But i build it all the same!''

    • @alansalas1880
      @alansalas1880 Před 4 lety +59

      Just like the Incas:
      Inca emperor: lets build our home here.
      Inca advisor: is a fricking mountain.
      Inca emperor: and it will look dope af.

    • @SeptimusNavyaHoran
      @SeptimusNavyaHoran Před 3 lety +3

      @@CallicoJackracham lmfaoaoaoao

    • @simonspacek3670
      @simonspacek3670 Před 3 lety +8

      I see like this:
      "Hey guys, look what I have! I call it Pike"
      "That is cool, but have you seen Dragonstone? That is what I call a fortress."
      "Yeah, it cannot be taken, but have you seen my Red keep? Do you know how many people had to work there, bring lots of stones and bust their asses? That is how you show off!"
      "I beg your pardon. If you want to show off I made my people build a huge dome over some damn cliff and it is high enough that I can toss people I do not like through a floor and they fall long enough to have two birthday parties on their way down!"
      "Oh... you won... well, winter is comming I have to go and store enough firewood in towers to support those bloody flat roofs. Bye."

  • @CountryMusicMann
    @CountryMusicMann Před 5 lety +580

    The characters actually reference sea erosion at Pyke, noting that its a dangerous place to live and that the castle won't exist forever, and in fact the castle was originally one structure built on a jutting promontory that gradually wore away until only stacks remained.

    • @ppscoopy
      @ppscoopy Před 4 lety +26

      You should try reading some legal monographs and / or baroque authors, this would feel like fresh breeze of simplicity in sea of secondary sentences.

    • @DinnerForkTongue
      @DinnerForkTongue Před 4 lety +12

      @Aryan Wadhawan
      Grammatically correct, though.

    • @ProfX501
      @ProfX501 Před 4 lety +3

      @Aryan Wadhawan Not really...

    • @Superknullisch
      @Superknullisch Před 4 lety

      ​@@ppscoopy Or just read one of my comments lol!!😅😅
      Sorry, couldn't help myself.. but is' quite true though!)
      No? oh-ookay.. I'll just show myself out then..

    • @ThePodVon
      @ThePodVon Před 4 lety +7

      @⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻ Nah... that is just a competent sentence - try Latin if you want to stagger through a sentence that can span PAGES! LOL

  • @paulozhan
    @paulozhan Před 7 lety +2084

    "And without inventing aircraft, there's really no way you could try and take on this structure"
    Aegon: ...

    • @HaoSci
      @HaoSci Před 6 lety +134

      From a historical perspective

    • @frankteng
      @frankteng Před 6 lety +70

      Paulo Alexandre DRAGONS, taking that young lord for a dragon ride.

    • @taliakellegg5978
      @taliakellegg5978 Před 6 lety +5

      Magic

    • @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874
      @strategicgamingwithaacorns2874 Před 6 lety +92

      It was actually Visenya who took the Eyrie. She offered the young boy-king at the time, Ronnel Arryn, a free ride on the dragon Vhagar in exchange for his mother, the Queen Regent of Mountain and Vale, bending the knee to Aegon.

    • @gammonator8913
      @gammonator8913 Před 6 lety

      John Whitesell Aegon owned the dragons

  • @billypondwhistle2570
    @billypondwhistle2570 Před 5 lety +359

    This is a fun look back when everyone was still excited for the future of GOT. Now everyone is worried, angry, and frustrated.

    • @nathansimpson2495
      @nathansimpson2495 Před 4 lety +2

      Just the nerds

    • @noteansylvan6051
      @noteansylvan6051 Před 4 lety +21

      And now that it's over. Disappointed

    • @jeanmichel5723
      @jeanmichel5723 Před 4 lety +13

      Back in 2016 GoT was already garbage

    • @jeanmichel5723
      @jeanmichel5723 Před 4 lety +1

      @Logan Dean if you liked the sixth season I don't really care how you see my opinions, you're just brainded

    • @MastaBlastaS99
      @MastaBlastaS99 Před 4 lety +10

      @Logan Dean How are you as a book reader not worried about the future of the series? The author is an obese 70 year old man who's considerably decreased the pace at which he releases his books, and who is also still working on various side projects.

  • @wynn4578
    @wynn4578 Před 5 lety +99

    If I looked at dragonstone as a historian, knowing it was built pre-gunpowder and knowing the seas are known for being unpredictable with huge storms that blow thru the area, my first thought would be the sharp angles are less for defense and more for softening the blow of the huge waves that crash into the side of the walls during big storms.

  • @philwilson4167
    @philwilson4167 Před 5 lety +213

    Ironically, Dragonstone is one of the most 'fantasy' castles in the books. The towers and great hall are carved in the shape of dragons, which seems very impractical and also serves no purpose defensively. The red keep is made to look far more grand in the show, in the books it's described as being smaller than winterfell

    • @pixelmaster98
      @pixelmaster98 Před 5 lety +28

      Dragonstone was built by the Targaryens. And if you have dragons, you don't need frigging defenses on an island fortress since you can just incinerate any approaching ships (the way Daenerys took out one of the slave masters' ships was overkill & to intimidate the others, since she wanted the ships for herself).

    • @filipferencak2717
      @filipferencak2717 Před 5 lety +36

      @@pixelmaster98 Just to illustrate this point, during Aegon the Conquerer's time, King's Landing didn't even have walls (for decades) because it was considered suicide to assault a city with three giant dragons.

    • @leahcollins6502
      @leahcollins6502 Před 3 lety +13

      Yeah, it was smaller than Winterfell, but Winterfell also spans "several acres," has a three-acre godswood, and at least two wards.

    • @RhodokTribesman
      @RhodokTribesman Před 2 lety +4

      @@leahcollins6502 And that's JUST the keep, forget the rest of King's landing, it is ridiculously huge

    • @taserrr
      @taserrr Před 2 lety +4

      The red keep is very recent, there was nothing in Kings Landing before the Targaryans arrived. Over time it brought trade and with it homes and wooden defenses which later got upgraded to stone. So King's landing only existed for 300 years and was just empty land before that.

  • @flintrocks
    @flintrocks Před 7 lety +757

    Winterfell is supposed to have 2 walls.... an outer wall 80 feet high, a moat, then an inner wall 100 feet high. My biggest complaint about the show version of Winterfell.

    • @OuterRimPride
      @OuterRimPride Před 7 lety +42

      The show shows both walls, but the lower wall actually only surrounds most of the city, not for example where Sansa and Theon jumped off.

    • @OuterRimPride
      @OuterRimPride Před 7 lety +17

      Which is also from the angle they show in this video.

    • @flintrocks
      @flintrocks Před 7 lety +13

      Scott Glennon
      Oh? I must have missed it =( In Battle of Bastards it definitely seemed like there was only one wall

    • @KyleClippers
      @KyleClippers Před 7 lety +6

      Yeah i think you are right to be honest. I guess the show didn't want to spend the extra cash.

    • @George-Hawthorne
      @George-Hawthorne Před 7 lety +4

      Well to be fair that second wall didn't really do much. And to be honest it seems impractical. If that outer wall fell to attack, the attackers now have a strong position from which to attack the inner wall.

  • @padalan2504
    @padalan2504 Před 7 lety +2366

    its called winterfell, because it fell when winter came :D

    • @Crowleas
      @Crowleas Před 7 lety +15

      it FELL. That was ready over there. You came so close and finally missed it :p

    • @padalan2504
      @padalan2504 Před 7 lety +8

      OH... I haven't noticed :(
      I haven't checked after I writed it. :P
      I will try to fix it. EDIT: there, fixed it.

    • @Crowleas
      @Crowleas Před 7 lety +27

      and now my comment seems tottaly useless :p God! Someone, puss me down the window! Not you Jamie. If you leave Cersei unpleased, someone beloved (come baaaaack, Margaeryyyy!!!) will probably pay..

    • @padalan2504
      @padalan2504 Před 7 lety +2

      MarsMeLow
      :D

    • @sarasamaletdin4574
      @sarasamaletdin4574 Před 7 lety +14

      More like it was probably build where the White Walkers originally were defeated.

  • @justinthompson6364
    @justinthompson6364 Před 6 lety +953

    *BUT WHAT ABOUT DRAGONS?!*

  • @astrinymris9953
    @astrinymris9953 Před 5 lety +222

    Maybe Dragonstone was designed to protect against attack by dragons? It was built before the Doom of Valyria, so attack by a rival family of Dragonlords was a real possibility.

    • @mikejohnstonbob935
      @mikejohnstonbob935 Před 4 lety +6

      I doubt angled walls are gunna stop dragon fire

    • @PeterGriffnger
      @PeterGriffnger Před 4 lety +29

      @@mikejohnstonbob935 it would. it would spreed the heat

    • @ls200076
      @ls200076 Před 3 lety

      @J K It would.

    • @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human
      @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human Před 3 lety +22

      If a dragon like Balerion turns up, doesn't really matter how your walls are built. If he wants in, he's coming in. If he wants you dead, you're getting dead.
      Harranhal was designed to be impregnable, and Balerion melted the walls and heated it to the point the people inside cooked like they were in an oven.
      Dragons like Dany's 3 wouldn't be able to do much damage, but Balerion and probably Sunfire too, would be able to wreck it.

    • @pustavrhjaka5935
      @pustavrhjaka5935 Před 3 lety +4

      Dragonstone was built by targeryens when they moved from valyria so it was not made to protect aginst dragons, and show version of dragonstone is not right because here is GRRM commenting on dragonstone czcams.com/video/7lMVQ4HPfKE/video.html

  • @The_Foxymew
    @The_Foxymew Před 7 lety +165

    From what I remember with Pyke is that it's one of the older castles in Westeros, and even some of the towers have crumbled because the sea stacks they were on got eroded too much and stuff.
    I think it was a better location back when, but they were too stuborn to change location and just kept building in the same, slowly eroding place.
    And knowing how incredibly stubborn those assholes are, I can see that.

    • @AlexisVolk97
      @AlexisVolk97 Před 7 lety +6

      Yeah It's probably that. But I was thinking that you don't really have to take the towers on the stacks, just cutting the conection to the mainland and leaving a few men to throw stuff from the captured castle is enough. There's very little they can do to retake the castles without the rope bridges and there is no way in the seven hells that they're getting food or water from outside.

    • @The_Foxymew
      @The_Foxymew Před 7 lety +3

      Alexis Volk I think it would be more useful in the sense they're buildings you can't get to before taking what's before, so you can have storage that's impenetrable and completely safe garrisons.

    • @AlexisVolk97
      @AlexisVolk97 Před 7 lety +6

      Foxymew But why even bother trying to capture them once you have captured the mainland one? Unless Batman or the assasins live in there nobody is going to be able to attack you or even escape alive. Jumping what looks like a few floors to a rabid and cold sea that is ready to smash you against sharp rocks is a certain death.
      You can rampage across the island and none of them will do anything besides suicide diving to meet the drowned god.
      I can't even imagine how they replace the shitty rope bridges while both sides cooperate.

    • @The_Foxymew
      @The_Foxymew Před 7 lety

      Alexis Volk I wasn't arguing about that. I meant in relation to the mainland castle. One that falls, as you say, it's done for. That's not really up for much debate.

    • @AlexisVolk97
      @AlexisVolk97 Před 7 lety +1

      Foxymew Oh, I missunderstood you I'm sorry. Too little sleep and too much coffee isn't too good for understanding.

  • @benselectionforcasting4172
    @benselectionforcasting4172 Před 7 lety +246

    The people who designed Dragonstone subscribed to the belief that no level of Overkill is enough.

    • @bullscott12
      @bullscott12 Před 5 lety +25

      The people who designed Dragonstone subscribed to the belief that the book version was too hard to make. Sigh.

    • @fozzylozzy1131
      @fozzylozzy1131 Před 5 lety +2

      That is the best subscription

    • @ismailfletcher5919
      @ismailfletcher5919 Před 4 lety +2

      The design of dragon stone is an attempt at strengthening it's walls. I mean dragons land on them. They needed all the support they can get

  • @LarryGarfieldCrell
    @LarryGarfieldCrell Před 6 lety +417

    Castle Pyke isn't as unrealistic as you think. It's actually a real castle in Ireland. I've driven past it and taken pictures. It's a ruin now, and yes part of it did fall into the sea at one point. But Pyke is actually a photograph of a real Irish castle with the broken down walls replaced with CGI.

    • @Wveth
      @Wveth Před 6 lety +94

      ...and the most important part, the big sea stacks, were also created with CGI. That's the only really unrealistic part, like he said, and of course that part isn't present at the real castle.

    • @ipercalisse579
      @ipercalisse579 Před 5 lety +5

      What's the name of this place?

    • @angelacofre8528
      @angelacofre8528 Před 5 lety +16

      @@ipercalisse579 Dunluce Castle

    • @armorfrogentertainment
      @armorfrogentertainment Před 5 lety +19

      The real Dunluce Castle isn't QUITE as precarious as Pyke.

    • @mommabears993
      @mommabears993 Před 4 lety +11

      @@armorfrogentertainment I looked it up- they even say on the site that it was used for pyke. CGI is a great thing lol

  • @liammccoy2208
    @liammccoy2208 Před 5 lety +34

    I dunno if it was in the book or the show, but someone mentioned that the reason the Pyke is so close to the sea, is because erosion has faded away what little the castle was built on. They mention that much of the castle had already been taken by the sea.

  • @Sephajinami
    @Sephajinami Před 7 lety +110

    As a writer I find these videos VERY helpful. I like people like you who go into details like this and it really helps me to better create my fantasy world. Plus it's Game of Thrones related. Keep it up!

    • @spardahellkin5814
      @spardahellkin5814 Před 7 lety +4

      i would love to have a read once you are done whats it about? and are you going to publish it?

    • @miskatonic6210
      @miskatonic6210 Před 7 lety +2

      Funny. Everyone able to hold a pen calls himself a writer nowerdays.

    • @Sephajinami
      @Sephajinami Před 7 lety +26

      Sirion Actually yes. Anyone who writes is a writer. Notice I didn't say AUTHOR, because I haven't published anything yet.

    • @Sephajinami
      @Sephajinami Před 7 lety +7

      sparda hellkin I have several stories actually, all unfinished. As for what they're about, they're a bit long and complex. I'm still figuring them out. For now for practice I'm going to get some short stories out to see how the public receives them. Until then the main stories aren't ready yet. And I would be glad to let you have a read :)

    • @Sephajinami
      @Sephajinami Před 7 lety +13

      Sirion Oh wait I've had poems published before. Guess I am an author. HEYOOOOO.

  • @Trazynn
    @Trazynn Před 7 lety +327

    Aegon I build the Red Keep in a time where Valyrians still wielded a lot of magic. So...
    "A wizard did it".

    • @MusikAlltid
      @MusikAlltid Před 7 lety +11

      I understood that reference.

    • @mrrodgers0
      @mrrodgers0 Před 7 lety +2

      And construction at Dragonstone began only a year or so after the Doom, when they had an even larger capacity for magic usage.

    • @magister343
      @magister343 Před 7 lety +15

      He built the Aegonfort out of wood and mud. He then ordered the crude structure replaced with a palace that later became the Red Keep, but Maegor the Cruel presided over actually building it.

    • @magister343
      @magister343 Před 7 lety +23

      Actually, Dragonstone was constructed about 200 years before the Doom.

    • @elmotuz
      @elmotuz Před 6 lety +3

      Aegon didn't build the Red Keep, his son Maegor did.
      And Dragonstone was build with help of that Valyrian magic, not Red Keep.

  • @masterexploder9668
    @masterexploder9668 Před 6 lety +102

    Winterfell has bad rep from Theon capturing it, but in reality it's nearly impossible to siege (2 walls and moat) or starve (hot springs and gardens. So I would say it's a tie between Winterfell and Storm's End, that castle is really strong as well. Harrenhall is way too big to maintain, big garrison = more food needed. Eyrie is like castle on Mt. Everest, impossible to attack but no point in sieging it, has to be abandoned during winter due to food shortages. Put few hundred men to block it and take over rest of Vale. Casterly Rock is worth mentioning, but it's properties were not properly explained in books so hard to say. Lannisport should be blockaded to stop food transport to the castle.
    Worth mentioning: Greywater Watch, floating in the swamps castle of Howland Reed. You will never get to it through Moat Cailin, swamps, poisonous animals and guerilla warfare of cranogman. Castle Black allowed a small force to defend many times.
    Underrated castles: Dragonstone - rocky island, maze-like castle with woven spells in walls. Token Baratheon force defended well against full Tyrell army with Redwyne fleet. The Twins - two castles linked through river by bridge. Needs two armies on both sides and even ships to block naval transport. Even when one castle gets captured, you can fall back to another. Uncontested for 600 years. Riverrun - needs three separate camps to even siege it and can house provisions for over 2 years. Can try fishing to sustain it's supplies.

    • @F14thunderhawk
      @F14thunderhawk Před 5 lety +9

      Storms End is ludicrous, and designed against nuclear war rather then dudes with sticks and rocks.

    • @811chelseafc
      @811chelseafc Před 5 lety +4

      Saif al-Islam well. In the books Winterfell has 2 walls and a moat.

  • @stoon0707
    @stoon0707 Před 6 lety +170

    I have no idea how or why this popped up on my suggested videos feed, but seriously... I'm having the absolute worst week (it's Tuesday) and was in such a rotten mood when I got home. But for some reason this video has helped chase those clouds away :) I suppose it may be that your joy and passion for castles is infectious! Good job, man. I rate this random castle video a solid two thumbs up.

    • @aspire4more
      @aspire4more Před 5 lety +3

      stoon0707 did your week end up getting any better?

    • @johnapple6646
      @johnapple6646 Před 5 lety +4

      @@aspire4more why are you asking him this 10 months later?

  • @kyle857
    @kyle857 Před 7 lety +364

    Pike is falling apart... It's mentioned in the books.

    • @Outland9000
      @Outland9000 Před 7 lety +53

      Yeah, it was originally built on a headland but over the years it now looks like this.

    • @CoreFreddy
      @CoreFreddy Před 7 lety +65

      Actually its Pyke

    • @kyle857
      @kyle857 Před 7 lety +35

      CoreFreddy I've read the books like three times each and I still can't manage to give a shit about the spelling of placenames.

    • @tmd63
      @tmd63 Před 6 lety +26

      Castle Pyke is stated as being 4 separate items, But I can see 5??? What about the small castle much lower at the extreme?

    • @googel0909
      @googel0909 Před 6 lety +31

      copied that for you what "ComocosonoEWL" wrote in an answer a little aboce:
      ComocosonoEWL Castle Pike: This was originally one huge castle on a cliff face. You can see in the design the much older castle parts are closer to the sea. As the cliff eroded and parts of the castle and cliff fell into the sea the castle was repaired, bridges were added and the Castle was expanded further inland. The small King's chamber at the end was built halfway down the collapsed cliff from rubble and is the newest and considered the most secure part of the entire settlement.

  • @cptant7610
    @cptant7610 Před 7 lety +367

    I would just capture the first castle of Pyke and ignore the rest. Lol, good luck getting out.
    Easiest castle to blockade in history.

    •  Před 6 lety +36

      Pyke looks pretty retarded and about to fall down to minor earthquake or sea water erosion.

    • @nursetobee.
      @nursetobee. Před 6 lety +70

      Komninos Maraslidis they mention in the world of westeros that pyke is slowly falling apart

    • @lucasistrom
      @lucasistrom Před 6 lety +69

      I was thinking that if I was defending I could burn the bridges and hide in the isolated towers, but your comment made me realize the flaws of that plan.

    • @b.sylphaen
      @b.sylphaen Před 6 lety +14

      Maybe you could fish from up there and survive on that for a while... The real problem would be drinking water, unless it rains almost every day.

    • @lukedaniels7750
      @lukedaniels7750 Před 6 lety +20

      Easiest castle to siege ever. They'll always run out of water sooner more than later.

  • @roflmaotzetung
    @roflmaotzetung Před 5 lety +26

    One small comment: star-like fortress designs were not introduced to endure under a cannon fire, but to ensure defenders' cannons would have wider firing angle, thus better functionality.
    The rest of video is great, thank you!

    • @Jack1994hoo
      @Jack1994hoo Před 4 lety +5

      Well, that really depends on what material the fortress is built of. If you see the St Mark Castle in St Augustine, the people who made it used a stone called coquina that was abundant in the area. Coquina is a very "spongy" and soft rock, its made not only of mineral but the remains of seashells and other stuff from the ocean, that gives it a sort of flexibility compared to other rocks and when the walls of coquina got impacted by the cannonballs, they didnt crack but rather the cannonballs sunk into them. You can go visit the castle and indeed the walls that face the ocean have holes in them from the cannon blasts. That made the ST Mark Castle a fortress nearly impossible to break into since they could fire at the enemy, but the fortress didnt suffer any damage from them.
      Its a very interesting place to visit and with a rich history, its a castle that was used as a military fortress for centuries.
      On a fun note, they have the remains of a cannon in there that exploded during a battle. during that battle the forces in the castle only lost 4 men, 3 of them were from that cannon exploding xD

  • @joefleming6755
    @joefleming6755 Před 4 lety +9

    I always thought that the large triangular extended parts of the walls in Dragonstone were dragon-sized and that if you wanted to you could place your dragons on them like super-siege craft and rein fire on invading forces.

  • @SeddieWeddie
    @SeddieWeddie Před 7 lety +92

    I swear they better show HighGarden and Casterly Rock at least once.

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive Před 7 lety +14

      Don't forget Storm's End!

    • @TheRhinehart86
      @TheRhinehart86 Před 7 lety

      Weren't Stannis' early scenes in season 2 set at Storm's End?

    • @BoxStudioExecutive
      @BoxStudioExecutive Před 7 lety +12

      TheRhinehart86 Stannis is at Dragonstone (which was shown), not Storm's End. I'm pretty sure Storm's End has not been shown in the series yet.

    • @gigabaidoshvili8984
      @gigabaidoshvili8984 Před 7 lety +2

      There is no Jon Connington, there is nothing happening in Stormlands in the show. I doubt we will ever see Storm's End but it will really be a sin if they don't show us Casterly Rock.

    • @dartholiver
      @dartholiver Před 7 lety +3

      If i remember right, then Renly's scenes in season two where outside of Storm's End. Makes sense that his giant army would camp outside the castle and not inside. (Im talking about the shores where Renly and Stannis met to discuss terms, and where Brienne fought to become Renly's Kings guard). They never actually showed the castle, but the cave in which Melissandre bore that shadow baby was a dungeon of Storms End (only Davos knew of this entry point, as he was a smuggler and supplied Stannis during Robert's rebellion with food, when Stannis was nearly starved out by Randyll Tarly's siege.) So yeah kind of a cock tease to show a dungeon but not the actual castle itself :D

  • @Gingergryphon
    @Gingergryphon Před 7 lety +606

    Winterfell was built over a hot springs and has hot spring water circulating through its walls. It's possible that they also have pipes in the rooves that melt the snow and keep it from piling up.

    • @briangriffin9793
      @briangriffin9793 Před 7 lety +90

      in the books we see that talked about...haven't seen it really addressed in the show...guess a couple points on Winterfell is...the outer walls are 80 feet high..which seems pretty high. And there is no mention of what type of roofs Winterfell has but rather everyone seems to want to winter there.

    • @qwertyqwerty-ek7dy
      @qwertyqwerty-ek7dy Před 7 lety +32

      Damn the walls must be cover in ice during the winter times cause of all that melted water.

    • @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human
      @Pro_Butcher_Amateur_Human Před 7 lety +78

      Ice could actually make the walls weaker - if there was any water or liquid between the stones of the wall, then it would expand as it froze, damaging the walls.

    • @gfarrell80
      @gfarrell80 Před 7 lety +42

      Yeah, for a lot of reasons, you generally don't want water in your walls. If you want your building to last you want to keep water OUT as much as possible. Especially if it has the potential to freeze and thaw.

    • @qwertyqwerty-ek7dy
      @qwertyqwerty-ek7dy Před 7 lety +8

      +gfarrell80 yep that water freezing and un freezing is really going to turn those walls into 💩 in a long run.

  • @julian5742
    @julian5742 Před 4 lety +17

    "but there are many things game of thrones gets wrong"
    *shows daario certainly not naharis*
    lol the shade

  • @Supadubya
    @Supadubya Před 6 lety +271

    Many of Winterfell's towers are described as ruined in the books, with collapsed roofs. So have you considered that maybe the roofs are flat because they're supposed to be collapsed? Also, the castle is built on hot springs that are used to heat the walls and towers- so sdnow accumulation might not actually be such a problem (and it may have been easier to heat a flat roof than a sloped one). As for the lack of crenellations on the walls- the book describes the castle as having an outer curtain wall with no ramparts, a most, and THEN an inner crennalated wall. And indeed many of the scenes in the TV show depict crenellations on the walls- implying that there really are at least two walls like in the book...

    • @lonewolf209
      @lonewolf209 Před 6 lety +35

      I was actually thinking along those lines. the flat roofs, with some kind of drainage piping and a way to heat them might actually be a pretty decent water collection system in winter.

    • @post-leftluddite
      @post-leftluddite Před 6 lety +24

      Winterfell is a huge castle complex spanning several acres, defended by two massive walls of grey granite with a wide moat between them. The outer wall is eighty feet high, while the inner is one hundred feet high, with a wide moat between them. There are guard turrets on the outer wall and more than thirty watch turrets on the crenelated inner walls.
      The great main gates have a gatehouse made of two huge crenelated bulwarks which flank the arched gate and a drawbridge that opens into the market square of the winter town.
      There is a narrow tunnel inside of the inner wall stretching halfway around the castle, allowing travel from the south gate all the way to the north gate without interruption.
      The Hunter's Gate is a gate located close to the kennels and the kitchens. It opens directly onto open fields and the wolfswood, so people can come and go without having to cross through the winter town. It is favored by hunting parties.
      The East Gate or east gate leads to the kingsroad The Kingsroad Gate may be another name for the same gate.
      The Battlements Gate is a small arched postern in the inner wall. It crosses the moat between the walls but does not have a passageway through the outer wall.

    • @Sam_on_YouTube
      @Sam_on_YouTube Před 6 lety +32

      It is worth noting that Winterfell is one of the structures built by Bran the Builder and is enfused with magic, like the 700 foot tall ice wall. You can bend the rules a little more when there is magic in the story. It just needs to be internally consistent within the world. In that world, where Winterfell has hot springs and is unusually warm. It is not unreasonable to presume a heating system for the roof too.

    • @eds1942
      @eds1942 Před 5 lety +6

      Sam I’m afraid that the legend of Bran the Builder’s accomplishments are a bit exaggerated. Even in the Books, it states that both the Wall and Winterfell were build (added to) over the course of centuries and millennia rather than the span of one man’s lifetime.

    • @pietrayday9915
      @pietrayday9915 Před 5 lety +5

      @@eds1942 - but then, those accomplishments are much like those of the Pyramids in that sense: the work of many hands and perhaps more than one lifetime, but still a testament to the vision, wealth, influence, and will of the man/men who ordered the first stones to be laid down, and saw a day when the buildings would be completed. (That said, the books deliberately leave it kind of ambiguous about whether Bran the Builder actually existed, whether he was only one person or a group or series of people attributed with that name, or whether he was a human at all in the same sense that most other people in the story can be thought of as "human", in a world full of undying wizards, frost-covered living dead, body-hoping skin-changers, and seers whose visions reach across the centuries and allow the seer's words to be heard by those he sees in the voices of the winds....

  • @osu45d
    @osu45d Před 7 lety +704

    I was about to disagree with you as I've been to a number of castles in England with flat roofs but then I looked up the Scottish ones I'd seen and yeah... They all have sloped roofs, except for the ones that are in ruins... Funny that.

    • @alexc7367
      @alexc7367 Před 6 lety +27

      how much snow do you think england gets?

    • @andre3328
      @andre3328 Před 6 lety +29

      They might have got a lot during the medieval period, the Themes froze over into the 1800s after all.

    • @wuxiagamescentral
      @wuxiagamescentral Před 6 lety +5

      The English were never good at land battles anyways they always relied on their navy to keep foreign nations off their land

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 Před 6 lety +23

      "Based on" and "Inspired by" mean two very different things in this instance.

    • @kingRukus39
      @kingRukus39 Před 6 lety +16

      The roofs were typically made of wood as well and have likely roted away

  • @Sluggy_96
    @Sluggy_96 Před 7 lety +44

    i understand the idea of weight for the snow in winterfell, but most of the alpine houses (even old and crappy ones) have low slope roofs in order to KEEP the snow on the roof, because _even if it may be a surprise for an australian_ it keeps the heat inside the building (like an igloo maybe..). Since the towers are wide and not so tall, i would say that it could even have been made on purpose

    • @davidjames4915
      @davidjames4915 Před 7 lety +5

      Same deal in Canada. We keep the snow on the roof all winter long.

    • @OriginalSoulbourne
      @OriginalSoulbourne Před 7 lety +3

      Yes, but that requires purpose build inner walls and smaller designs. The size of the towers means they're likely not directly built to add the extra support needed so it's just a wide flat roof stacking tons upon tons of snow on it until something gives. There's a max size a roof can be for that design to be effective, and the winterfell towers look slightly too big.

    • @davidjames4915
      @davidjames4915 Před 7 lety +4

      Snow doesn't weigh all that much - 100 kg/m³. So a 10 m² roof after a 1 m snowfall (which is a ridiculous amount) is only going to weigh one tonne. Both wood roofs and masonry walls are capable of taking quite a bit of weight.

    • @OriginalSoulbourne
      @OriginalSoulbourne Před 7 lety +7

      That's not neccesarilly accurate. Far north 1 meter snowfall, especially in deep winters, is far from odd. Alongside that if you just measure 1 meter straight then it'll be a lot more than just 1 meter of snowfall in there. The weight on top compresses down the snow below so by the time it reaches 1 meter it's shrunk. Alongside that not all snow is created equal, some is heavier than others, and some lighter.

    • @Spagghetii
      @Spagghetii Před 7 lety +8

      The winter is supposed to last years? so th buildup of snow could be extreme.

  • @Toffypot91
    @Toffypot91 Před 6 lety +4

    One thing to note is that since you have long periods of summer and winter you can really get building for a long time before having to huddle in winter. So you could arguably start and finish bigger projects having good supplies of foods, trade goods and material supplies without having the winter breakdowns of the real world.

  • @jjtamj261
    @jjtamj261 Před 5 lety +17

    In the books winterfell is heated by a sping underground that keeps the castle warm

    • @bearhall4919
      @bearhall4919 Před 5 lety

      Hot water in the walls... but no functional showers, sinks or toilet...

    • @neolexiousneolexian6079
      @neolexiousneolexian6079 Před 5 lety +2

      @Kirin Jindosh ...You know hot spring aren't usually that dangerous, right? Like, I'm pretty sure you can pay to go bathing in some of them as a tourist.
      Also, you know medieval knowledge of the world probably wouldn't have been able to tell you about the dangers of volcanoes even if it were relevant? It'd just be like "Hey, the ground here feels warm! Let's build a castle here!". (And then even if it was dangerous, you'd probably have centuries or millenia before it blew up.)
      Also, you know a lot of modern places are built on geologically active sites, right? Like, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Vancouver are all built right along fault lines with nasty histories of severe earthquakes? And all of Hawaii and Iceland are basically literally built on top of active volcanoes (and, in the case of the latter, with enough geothermal energy to heat and power all of Europe, kinda like Winterfell on steroids). And the entire nation of Japan is built on top of an earthquake and tsunami zone? And basically all of Florida (as well as numerous island nations) is built just a couple meters above the sea, and will literally disappear if the polar ice caps so much as sneeze over the next century? And most of the Netherlands is actually built *under* the sea, and is able to exist only because of a very complicated system of dykes? And like half of the United States of America is built within range of the Yellowstone Caldera/Supervolcano, which is supposed to blow up any time now (in geological terms), which will devastate all of those cities with concussive forces and smother them with volcanic ash?
      In the case of Winterfell, even if they did know about the dangers of volcanoes, it's probably still worth it for being able to weather any siege and survive any winter. You're a lot likelier to be killed in GoT by starvation next year or by an invading army next month than a volcano *maybe* erupting sometime this century.

    • @MrWizardjr9
      @MrWizardjr9 Před 5 lety

      @Kirin Jindosh i dont think all hot springs erupt that way most are just pools of water you are thinking of geysers

    • @akainudicksuckingassociati5188
      @akainudicksuckingassociati5188 Před 5 lety +1

      Kirin Jindosh it was built by the same guy that built a really fucking big ice wall magic did it mate

    • @wellshit9489
      @wellshit9489 Před 4 lety +1

      @@neolexiousneolexian6079 hot springs arent usually dangerous to anything else than your wallet ye

  • @srnigromante9214
    @srnigromante9214 Před 7 lety +155

    To me the Eerye looks a lot like a Bizantine Cathedral

    • @bcn1gh7h4wk
      @bcn1gh7h4wk Před 7 lety +11

      Age of Empires flashback, right there.

    • @sunder9363
      @sunder9363 Před 7 lety +28

      Byzantine*

    • @wierdalien1
      @wierdalien1 Před 7 lety +19

      +Sr Nigromante the hagia sofia

    • @Duke_of_Lorraine
      @Duke_of_Lorraine Před 7 lety +8

      yes, it looks like Hagia Sophia painted blue.

    • @Jacob-yg7lz
      @Jacob-yg7lz Před 7 lety +5

      Wouldn't it be considered an orthodox church?

  • @feldspar1000
    @feldspar1000 Před 7 lety +111

    14:16 So, dragons then.

    • @Saber2thFS
      @Saber2thFS Před 7 lety +49

      Yup, ever heard of a little place called "Harrenhal," boy?
      "And King Harren learned that thick walls and high towers are small use against dragons. For dragons fly"
      ~Old Nan

    • @theehhhnd5708
      @theehhhnd5708 Před 7 lety +4

      Aegon flew his dragon into the eeyrie and let the kid lord arryn ride it...

    • @Saber2thFS
      @Saber2thFS Před 7 lety

      CodeAtlas Well fuck...
      Where is that little tid-bit of lore? Is it in "The World of Ice and Fire"? Or just in some chapter of he series that I've forgotten?

    • @thomasalvarez6456
      @thomasalvarez6456 Před 7 lety +9

      Sorry but it was Visenya

    • @jorgeferdenav
      @jorgeferdenav Před 7 lety +10

      +CodeAtlas actually it was one of his sisters, but the concept is on spot. Anyone else would've had to set up a year long seige to starve them out. She just flew in, like wattup.

  • @mjf69
    @mjf69 Před 3 lety +2

    The red keep is definitely tall, but I think the main thing that tricks the eye is the fact the rock it's on changes massively in elevation. Most of the elements of the castle are the same measurement, but they are built on different levels/heights of stones

  • @Marmocet
    @Marmocet Před 5 lety +3

    There's a Norman castle about a mile from my house that was very little used because after it was built, it was realized that it sat below the crest of a hill just to its east that made it possible for archers or anyone with a trebuchet or other seige engine to rain missiles right down into its courtyard. It was quite an oopsie. The obvious solution would have been to build the castle about two hundred yards to the east. So castle screwups did indeed happen.

  • @mermanhellville
    @mermanhellville Před 6 lety +234

    Well, with the Pyke people putting so much faith in their Drowned God, I'd assume they just built that castle on those rocks trusting their deity would protect it. I know this video is from a purely practical+historical point of view, that's just a thought I had. And I think the books do mention that Pyke is in really poor shape, so there.

    • @OffensiveFarmer
      @OffensiveFarmer Před 5 lety +49

      Pyke was originally a fully formed castle, unstable ground lead to parts of the cliff collapsing and falling into the sea along with parts of the castle. A thing about the world of GoT is that the medieval period has lasted around 10,000 years, a lot of the castles were built thousands of years prior to the events of an ice and fire, winterfell and Storm's end are said to be at least 8,000 years old. Thats a lot of time for something to fuck up and destroy your castle.

    • @alveolate
      @alveolate Před 5 lety +15

      also, from what i understand, the "faith" in the drowned god is super fatalistic and many treat dying at sea as routine. so expecting such a capricious god to "protect" you seems kinda pointless.

    • @oscarquintero2209
      @oscarquintero2209 Před 5 lety +4

      I believe one of the towers collapsed during the siege, in the Rebellion.

    • @viniciuscavalcanti2458
      @viniciuscavalcanti2458 Před 5 lety +1

      Exactly, parts from pyke fell because of a siege when they rebel

    • @JimRFF
      @JimRFF Před 5 lety +2

      @@alveolate for some of them, dying at sea is kinda the goal xD ... what is dead may never die, and thus has no need of protection or fear

  • @DakkogiRauru23
    @DakkogiRauru23 Před 7 lety +38

    I don't want to be that guy but imagining Winterfel with high-pitched roofs now seems a much better aesthetic for the North, since it invokes an older Scandinavian or Gallic look.

    • @DakkogiRauru23
      @DakkogiRauru23 Před 7 lety

      I just don't want to nitpick is all.

    • @PwnEveryBody
      @PwnEveryBody Před 7 lety

      Scandinavian, sure. Not Gallic. Gallia was what is now France. Maybe you confused it with German or Gothic?

    • @DakkogiRauru23
      @DakkogiRauru23 Před 7 lety

      I really did mean Gallic only because Gallic and Scandinavian architecture are so similar. Nah, German or Gothic would be way too late for something as old as Winterfell.

    • @PwnEveryBody
      @PwnEveryBody Před 7 lety +2

      Dominique Hipolito
      Gallic architecture doesn't look one bit like Scandinavian architecture, aside from the tribal stuff (huts and palisades and stuff like that). By German or Gothic I mean the areas, Germany and Götaland (I was thinking maybe you confused Gallic with some other two-syllable G-word, and German and Gothic were the only two I could think of that feature pitched roofs). Gallic architecture doesn't feature pitched roofs like that of Scandinavia or Germany. Hell, there wasn't even any such thing as 'Gallic' architecture in the Middle Ages. Gallia had been annexed by the Romans long before, and as Rome fell, the Franks swooped in from the northeast and formed the kingdom of Francia. If anything you should be talking about Frankish architecture, but we both know that's pointless because Frankish architecture doesn't feature pitched roofs either.
      Anyway, TL;DR Gallic architecture is irrelevant, Frankish architecture doesn't feature pitched roofs. By German and Gothic I mean Germany and Götaland, respectively.

    • @DakkogiRauru23
      @DakkogiRauru23 Před 7 lety

      The thing is that Winterfell doesn't seem to be of Medieval origin. I'd say it would be something from the Classical period or older but with upgrades as the technology of the times advances. That's why I said Gallic. Another reason I mentioned Gallia is because (if I remember correctly) the First Men are Celts, under which culture falls the Gauls.
      And yes I am only atlking about the tribal stuff, especially the pitched roofs. Gallic roofs are pitched, just not as sharply as those farther North.
      So when I say Gallic, I really am talking about before the Medieval Era. Ancient Gaul and the ancient Celts.

  • @fkkkkkenig
    @fkkkkkenig Před 6 lety

    Just recently found your channel. Your insights to medieval architecture are impressive! I'll be tuning in regularly.

  • @dannabats
    @dannabats Před 5 lety +22

    Sadly the winter that they predicted was coming was only 4 days long

  • @EchoBinary
    @EchoBinary Před 7 lety +63

    One thing that strikes me is that (in the lore/world/history of GoT) these structures are very old, and were likely built, or begun in a time when "cannon" fire took the form of flying dragons and dragon fire, which can apparently melt castle stones such as at Harrenhal... It is possible that the stone and design of Dragonstone was to "split" any incoming dragon fire such that the heat was not always concentrated on one side of the structure, but would spread out the heat damage. Notice that Harrenhal does not have this design and is completely ruined by dragon attack.

    • @havareriksen3395
      @havareriksen3395 Před 6 lety +20

      Remember also that the valyrians fought amongst themselves, and their dragons fought with them.

    • @firstnamelastname7113
      @firstnamelastname7113 Před 5 lety +1

      Almost all of the castles were designed before dragons were on westeros

  • @Corelogik73
    @Corelogik73 Před 7 lety +18

    Winterfell is built on multiple hot springs and as a result, steam is pumped through the walls. Steam heat, combined with traditional fire in fireplaces, Winterfell will be fine.

  • @Revjiggs
    @Revjiggs Před 5 lety +4

    Something you’ve missed about winterfell is that it is build on a hot spring. This keeps the castle warm and is why it is so capable of surviving the winter

  • @coopboulton
    @coopboulton Před 6 lety +43

    We get a great shot of draganstone in the premier of season 7 I wish he would have done this after that episode

  • @Leo0718
    @Leo0718 Před 7 lety +18

    +Shadiversity Dragonstone was built by descendants of Valyria, after the conquest of Westeros. Familiar with their architectural traditions and owners of this world equivalent of cannon fire, the dragons. The Valyrian houses did fight with each other, and dragons were famously used in duels and wars against each other. So it makes sense that the people holding the gun would make sure to also wear the bulletproof vest.

  • @starpaladingames3372
    @starpaladingames3372 Před 7 lety +202

    Pyke is really weak for two reasons
    1. the three towers that are over the sea could in theory be destroyed using a sappers mine maybe
    2. if the first castle is taken it would be far too difficult for the defenders to retake it as all the attackers would have to do is destroy the bridge the defenders would be trapped starve to death then the attackers to build a temporary wooden bridge and pyke is taken
    anyone agree or disagree I'd like to hear what other people think 😊

    • @BruceLee-nj2zf
      @BruceLee-nj2zf Před 6 lety +1

      I was goin to say what I think but then I saw your name and yea u kno, bye.

    • @MeetDannyWilson
      @MeetDannyWilson Před 6 lety +33

      1. AFAIK the only explosive within the fictional world of GOT is "Wildfire", and is not very common. There could be other explosives, but in the world of GOT the use of explosives is somewhat rare.
      (In a world with explosives, it all depends on explosive power, placement of mines, … - so maybe possible, but it is not a forgone conclusion that one could simply blow up the Pykes)
      2. How does this compare to a "normal" castle? At a normal castle there usually is *only* a "first" castle. If the castle is taken, the castle is taken.
      Whereas in Pyke there is at least a chance that e.g. relief will come, or that the attacker has to withdraw because the troops are needed elsewhere. (And even the first castle seems to be better defendable than say Winterfell)
      Besides: Wasn't it rather the case in medieval times that sieges were the norm, and usually an siege was decided because the attacker had to retreat (e.g. because of relief), or because the defenders had to give up (due to dwindling food)? Would be interesting to know how often in historic times castles were taken by force, versus how often defenders had to give up due to a siege.

    • @havareriksen3395
      @havareriksen3395 Před 6 lety +43

      When Star Paladin Games wrote about mines, I don't think he was talking about using explosives. Rather, mines as in tunnels dug by people. Historically, what the sappers did was to dig tunnels from their own position until they got underneath the city walls. To prevent the tunnel, or mine, from collapsing, they would build scaffolding to keep the roof up as they dug further. Then, when they were under the walls, they would fill up the tunnel with flamable material: wood, textiles etc, and use as much oil or fat as they could get their hands on as accelerant for the fire. Often lots of pigs were slaughtered to get enough fat. There's even stories about besiegers setting fire to pigs and chasing them down the tunnels. So when the fire destroyed the timber scaffolding, the wall's foundation were seriously weakend and the wall collapsed. This usually worked like a charm, unless the defenders could stop the sappers. Defenders also dug tunnels, and when they met, fierce battles were fought underground. Anyhow, all this is not really very feasable at Pyke, since it's built on solid rock. Mines dug into the rock, though alot harder, still would not make the walls collapse since rock is that more rigid.
      As for the defenders being trapped. That may be so, but remember that the ironborn had a large fleet and unless an attacker could defeat their fleet, defenders could be supplied from the sea.

    • @MeetDannyWilson
      @MeetDannyWilson Před 6 lety +4

      Ah, OK, yeah, now I understand this better.
      But in that case, I would go out on a limb and say that undermining the three natural rock columns is next to impossible - unless magic is involved.
      And as to the fleet:
      Yeah, an effective naval blockade would involve a large fleet (but remember, currently we have two Ironborn factions warring with each other in Game Of Thrones - so this is an possibility).
      I guess having a large land force and breaching the "first" castle is the way to go.
      And once you have the first castle (and can easily supply it with materials over land), it should be possible to use siege engines to wreck havoc on the next castle, in case anybody decides to hold out there.

    • @havareriksen3395
      @havareriksen3395 Před 6 lety +17

      Don't forget that Pyke and the rest of the ironborn's realm are islands. You will need a fleet of ships first to get your army and siege engines to the island of Pyke. Then you'd need ships to re supply your army and put up a blockade against the ironborn. This was what happened during the Greyjoy rebellion. The Ironborn fleet was defeated by Stannis Baratheon's fleet, and the allies then broke Pyke's walls using siege ships. This is actually feasible, mirroring the siege of Tyre by Alexander the Great in 332 BC. Tyre was at the time situated on an island 1km off the coast, with city walls rising 46 meters above the sea. Well stocked and being able to get re supplied by sea, Alexander had no choice but to take the city by force. After the construction of a causeway and putting up huge siege towers failed due to the phoenician fleets counter attacks, Alexander got ships from Cyprus, Ionia, Byblos, Arwad and Sidon. With this fleet he managed to blockade both harbours of Tyre, and bring in ships with cranes, battering rams and catapults. These succeeded in breaching the city walls, and Tyre was conquered.

  • @kevinsullwold2388
    @kevinsullwold2388 Před 6 lety

    Great information, I love how nutty you get over the small details. Seriously I do, most people watching GoT would not think anything of any of this but I am fascinated with details.

  • @CocoaBeachLiving
    @CocoaBeachLiving Před 6 lety

    Love your passion for castles in general. I've also been rather passionate about medieval defensive structures. You're analysis of these structures seems right on. Thanks

  • @iandegiovani4703
    @iandegiovani4703 Před 7 lety +168

    Shad, Winterfell is built on top of Hot Thermal water Springs

    • @iandegiovani4703
      @iandegiovani4703 Před 7 lety +11

      its on the very begining of the First book :)

    • @josephteller9715
      @josephteller9715 Před 7 lety +60

      That won't stop the snow piling up at the top. Take a look at icelandic construction.

    • @hiarhu746
      @hiarhu746 Před 7 lety +22

      It was within the first minute of this video that he said he'd be looking at how they were shown in the show and not how they were described in the books. As far as I know in the show there has never been any mention of the hot springs. Of course now that winter has come it's likely someone will mention it but until someone does technically the hot springs don't exist in the show's version of Winterfell.

    • @iandegiovani4703
      @iandegiovani4703 Před 7 lety +4

      true. my bad

    • @hiarhu746
      @hiarhu746 Před 7 lety

      ***** Is it? Do you know the episode because I don't recall. I assume it would have been early in the show and it's been years since I watched those episodes. Now my curiosity is going to bother me until I know if I'm right or wrong.

  • @ErikBramsen
    @ErikBramsen Před 7 lety +47

    The Eyre is clearly inspired by late Roman/Byzantine architecture, that could be the Hagia Sophia right there.

    • @milosvasic12345
      @milosvasic12345 Před 5 lety +4

      Looks like the temple of saint Sava (Belgrade) to me :)

    • @TerLoki
      @TerLoki Před 4 lety +2

      Based on the color I'd say more the Blue Mosque, but yeah, DEFINITE Byzantine and Hagia Sofia vibes.

  • @EstrafaDC
    @EstrafaDC Před 6 lety

    Love this video. Very informative. Was curious if you'd update it now that we've seen Casterly Rock and Highgarden in the 3rd episode of the 7th season of Game of Thrones, I'd be curious about your updating to include you review of these structures.

  • @mandalorkayla8001
    @mandalorkayla8001 Před 5 lety +2

    The Red Keep also has Maegor's Holdfast inside, a part of the castle only accessible through one route(excluding secret tunnels) which is a drawbridge over a pit of spikes.

  • @Spagghetii
    @Spagghetii Před 7 lety +28

    The castle at pike may just be very old and as the original castle falls into the sea it keeps getting repaired and new structures added.

    • @PedrocasMS1
      @PedrocasMS1 Před 7 lety +1

      King Harren did everything to build a new one. Got burned.

    • @sarasamaletdin4574
      @sarasamaletdin4574 Před 7 lety

      Harren did not build this one.

    • @PedrocasMS1
      @PedrocasMS1 Před 7 lety +1

      Sara Samaletdin
      I know, I was talking about Harrenhal. ;)

  • @SuperJohn12354
    @SuperJohn12354 Před 7 lety +25

    winter fell roofs funnel the heated in winter which melts the snow and provides water for the castle

    • @SuperJohn12354
      @SuperJohn12354 Před 7 lety +5

      with the erie there have been structures in time where they carve the blocks out of the mountain and use them to build the castle, perhaps that is where they gained the building material from

    • @noddwyd
      @noddwyd Před 7 lety

      I thought it was related to that, yeah. The strangely advanced heating system that carried boiling hot spring water all throughout the castle and walls at all times. Which means all those walls are really thick. But making it all the way to those roofs? That's really surprising. I wonder if that's even remotely feasible.

    • @GodzThirdLeg
      @GodzThirdLeg Před 7 lety

      +SuperJohn12345
      With the Erie you also have to gamble that the enemy actually wants to take the castle. Which if you are trying to buy time for your allies, might not be the case. The biggest vulnerability of the erie are the pillars of rock it's built on, destroying one or two would probably bring the whole thing down.

    • @ravenwing199
      @ravenwing199 Před 7 lety +2

      They're Pillars of rock that can support Erie, they ain't gonna break in an easy way.

    • @GodzThirdLeg
      @GodzThirdLeg Před 7 lety +1

      Ravenwing19
      well no one said it was easy, but still faster than a long drawn out siege.

  • @TheFibrewire
    @TheFibrewire Před 5 lety

    Ty so much for these informations, now i really keep these tings in my mind when making a design concept for fantasy buildings :)

  • @RaithianZ
    @RaithianZ Před 5 lety

    I know this is an Old video But Im enjoying the content, I was just amused and Impressed to see the Castillo de San Marco show up when talking about Dragonstone. Its fun to see pieces of your own town and history show up in a random video heh.

  • @korona3103
    @korona3103 Před 7 lety +21

    Winterfell's roofs are domed so they're probably quite strong. The castle is also built over a natural hot spring and they pump hot water around the castle for heat. If snow buildup is a problem maybe they also pump it through the roof - like the heated roads in countries like Finland.

    • @AlexisVolk97
      @AlexisVolk97 Před 7 lety +12

      The plumbing needed for that would be quite impresive for a pre-industrial, feudal, agricultural-centered society that happens to be rather poor because it's hard to grow crops in the nort. Just a good roof would be cheaper,easier and mostly better. And take into consideration that the bloody thing it's an archeological artifact because it's one of the oldest standing buildings in westeros.

    • @korona3103
      @korona3103 Před 7 lety +1

      I think the idea is that they have a channel built into the walls, a liquid version of what the Romans had in their bath houses. Having architectural relics from a more advanced past seems to fit the general GoT theme. As for a roof being easier; to build, sure, but once the heat system is built it's very convenient for the residents. It means no need for big stockpiles of firewood so more space for food and other provisions.

    • @AlexisVolk97
      @AlexisVolk97 Před 7 lety +4

      ***** Yes,that's why it's meant to heat the walls so the winter is bearable inside Winterfell. Why waste hot water sending it around 5 floors upwards to heat the roof? and in the way the water that can't be over 100° Celcius would lose heat because that's what happens when the temperature in the ambient is colder than the liquid itself. You also need some sort of pump because of the amount you need to properly heat a whole roof, you aren't pumping with any kind of mechanical pump but maybe a manual one. The pluming can be either a soft metal one (very crude lead or copper) or more likely the stone itself, if in winter in what is likely an artic weather with around -30° Celcius, how do you expect the water to arrive hot enough to melt enough snow to compensate for the new snow that's falling (and that's hopping that the water itself doesn't freeze in the roof). An don't get me started on how the fuck you're supoused to fix a leak in stone plumbing or how the steam isn't really good for the masonery specially in summer with fungus,mold and lichen.

    • @korona3103
      @korona3103 Před 7 lety

      Haha I didn't mean to imply the whole of Finland has heated roads - that would be crazy! I'm just talking about this kind of thing which is totally awesome: heyhelsinki.files.wordpress.com/2015/01/img_91571.jpg?w=676&h=574

    • @barvdw
      @barvdw Před 7 lety

      I thought your neighbours had it. Didn't Kiruna in Swedish Lapland have heated roads?

  • @jackthmp
    @jackthmp Před 7 lety +33

    Starforts allow for no blockage of line of sight upon any wall surface, archers would have unrestricted fire upon anyone scaling or hiding under the wall.

    • @Descorath
      @Descorath Před 7 lety +22

      This.. I have never heard the design of a starfort to be to deflect cannon fire.
      It was always to have clear fire to any siege ladders or siege engines

    • @slimlacy2
      @slimlacy2 Před 6 lety +1

      I am not a historian, but even I have heard about star forts being stars to "catch" the cannonball in the middle, where they could "control" the amount of damage the fort takes.

    • @caseyhinkson9043
      @caseyhinkson9043 Před 6 lety +2

      The ability of the starfort to deflect cannon fire was due to the gentle slope of the walls (called a Glacis), not from the bastions. In fact, it was the development of cannon that rendered most medieval forts largely irrelevant; massive vertical walls just made great targets. Most Vaubanian fortifications were constructed of earth, often with stone facings. Earth is excellent at absorbing kinetic energy, which helped to keep the walls from shattering under fire (this is why modern militaries still use sandbags to fortify positions against small arms fire). I have also read that Japanese castles (at least the bases) were also exceptional at standing up to cannon fire because they were made of very similar sloping stone façades placed over an earthen core. The bastions on the Vauban forts were to eliminate line of fire dead zones and to allow for enfilading fire between the bastions. Although bastions may have not been part of historic medieval castles, this feature could still have been used this way, as Jack Thompson said.

    • @TheWampam
      @TheWampam Před 6 lety

      No, they would be pretty useless. The strenth of Bastions is that they:
      A) Could take Cannons on top while being able to withstand cannonfire since they are massive(only significant for early fortresses/castles)
      B)The have no dead zones when built right, with 90° angles between them like Vauban suggested to do.

    • @GigAnonymous
      @GigAnonymous Před 6 lety

      I heard the same thing about this design in various castles I visited in France, many of which were built centuries before Vauban came around. However, it is to be noted some late designs (or additions) WERE made in such a way they could absorb early canon fire. The first one that comes to mind is Bonaguil's castle. This castle is built on a hill and unassailable from all but one direction; and the walls there are curved inward. From a battlement perspective it makes little sense, but then you realize this wall is facing the only place on the hill an assailant could place artillery... and the keep is angled in a similar fashion...

  • @PictureHouseCinema
    @PictureHouseCinema Před 5 lety +1

    In regard to Castle Pike, in my county there are several castles of the same nature. On our one island of Stroma, Castle Mestag stands entirely on a sea stack. Mestag is on the west side of the island which sits in the Pentland Firth so the tides and sea suges on that side are very strong.Near Wick, Castle Girnigoe stands on an outcrop but also had a mint built on a sea stack that extended beyond the rocky shore. At Dunbeath the castle is on an outcrop that was with the river outflowing to the shore . Bucholie Castle (Caithness) is about 100ft up on a stack outcrop. The access to it is only 10ft wide but is split with one side being higher by about 8ft but to each side is a shear drop to the rocks below.

  • @mitjahorlemann2715
    @mitjahorlemann2715 Před 6 lety +1

    For a historical comparision to castle Pyke take a look at Altdahn Castle in the palatinate forest in Germany. In fact these are three separate castles (Altdahn, Grafendahn, Tanstein), but the looks, sitting close by on massive boulders of sand-stone is quite similar.

  • @joshklein987
    @joshklein987 Před 7 lety +37

    The eerie not sure on the exact spelling looks exactly like the Hagia Sofia on a rock

    • @theninjainblack1237
      @theninjainblack1237 Před 7 lety +1

      Eyrie

    • @deusvult1202
      @deusvult1202 Před 7 lety +9

      The eyrie in the show dissapointed me alot ...

    • @steinstemmer8963
      @steinstemmer8963 Před 7 lety +1

      well it does not look as described in the books :(
      but I don`t watch the series anyway... instead I read the story so :D
      (I saw it on pictures)

    • @joshklein987
      @joshklein987 Před 7 lety

      Gwynbleidd same I've only read the books, this was the first time I've actually looked at it.

    • @deusvult1202
      @deusvult1202 Před 7 lety +2

      +Edgy Bastage the book version is way more realistic and beautiful the show one doesnt even have the iconic 7 towers and weirwood moon door

  • @millitron3666
    @millitron3666 Před 7 lety +53

    About the practicality of the Eeyrie and Pike.
    What are they defending? I mean, the point of fortifications are to protect something. A city or strategically-important position usually. But there's nothing there, at either Pike or the Eeyrie. Any attacker can just ignore your amazing castle and go about their business conquering your land.
    Winterfell makes sense, there's a town there; same with the Red Keep and King's Landing. But Pike and Eeyrie are just gigantic boondoggles.

    • @einmuffin6063
      @einmuffin6063 Před 7 lety +20

      Both castles are defending the lords of the kingdoms, so they have a huge strategic value

    • @acvaticlifE
      @acvaticlifE Před 7 lety +38

      What use is the lord if he stays locked up in his amazing castle while you fuck up all of his land....What is his legitimacy then?

    • @Thraim.
      @Thraim. Před 7 lety +46

      Kings have been sitting behind castle walls while their lands are being ravaged quite regularly. Hell, sometimes it was their own army that did the ravaging when they needed the supplies.

    • @spidey7778
      @spidey7778 Před 7 lety +36

      The Eyrie was actually built as a sort of vacation home for the Arryns, they stay there during the summer. And during the winter they return to the Gates of the Moon the original seat of House Arryn, a bigger castle which they use during the winter.

    • @ravenwing199
      @ravenwing199 Před 7 lety +4

      Say they house 100-150 men. Say you pass 5-6 of these to take a town without besieging them. What do you do when a Massive army bush whacks you because you let them form up? That's why these castles exist.

  • @todabrilla
    @todabrilla Před 5 lety +1

    I recognize that real-life star fort example; it's the Castillo de San Marco in St. Augustine. It's a great fortification.

  • @Fourbix
    @Fourbix Před 4 lety +1

    I live in the Alps and yes flat roofs are always a problem. The best part is when it melt, just go straight down and freeze again in front of the door. Pure pleasure.

  • @derschmiddie
    @derschmiddie Před 7 lety +10

    I'd really like you to have a look at the different castles in the Witcher Series. You could have a detailed look at every one of them from every angle and really say something about the differences and realism between say Kaer Morhen, Crow's Perch, Wyzima Castle, Kaer Trolde in Skellige and the very different Palace in Touissant.

  • @Aragiss
    @Aragiss Před 7 lety +68

    The Eyrie looks a lot like Hagia Sophia.
    Edit: It looks even more like the Blue Mosque: s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/50/fc/83/50fc8314069da75ed75a3a5884f97616.jpg

    • @dimitrisalmyrantis8164
      @dimitrisalmyrantis8164 Před 7 lety +1

      True on both counts. Becaus both the Ayasofya and Blue Mosque are "Domed Basilicas", as is e.g. St. Peter's Basilica.

    • @chrisQ1000
      @chrisQ1000 Před 7 lety +1

      well, duh - the Blue Mosque was built as an Islamic copy of the Hagia Sophia

    • @Aragiss
      @Aragiss Před 7 lety +2

      The "duh" is unnecessary. I live in Istanbul and I already know about the history of its landmarks ;)

    • @chrisQ1000
      @chrisQ1000 Před 7 lety

      Aragiss Really? So when you know that the BM is a copy of the HS, then how is TE *more* like the BM than the HS?

    • @dimitrisalmyrantis8164
      @dimitrisalmyrantis8164 Před 7 lety +5

      chris1000 I'd agree with him: the Eyrie is more like the Blue Mosque because it is, well, Blue-ish. The shape and architecture are more alike. The Blue Mosque is a "copy" in the sense that it is patterned after it as an Ottoman counterpart, it's not an actual replica. By the same token, not all domed basilicas (I've seen quite a lot) look alike, despite being on the same model

  • @drbratinshankar5141
    @drbratinshankar5141 Před 5 lety

    Wow,I was looking 4 a channel like this.Great work.

  • @MrAskmannen
    @MrAskmannen Před 5 lety +7

    That feel when we are now done with GoT qnd we STILL haven't gotten to see Storm's End

  • @zecoregamer5288
    @zecoregamer5288 Před 7 lety +47

    Can you do a video on lord of the rings castles/cities

  • @crex-pd1vv
    @crex-pd1vv Před 7 lety +26

    I am not an expert but before I watch he video I want to guess one of the things that are wrong with the castles in GOT and it is that you cant see farming fields outside the walls, nothing, how is a city going to survive?

    • @albinhakansson1086
      @albinhakansson1086 Před 7 lety +11

      From the Riverlands or Highgarden

    • @Egilhelmson
      @Egilhelmson Před 7 lety +10

      Bagdad and Constantinople are on water, and get most of their food delivered that way. Also, both were near their food sources before 20th century build-out of suburbs; I would expect that Mikkelgard (if we're using old names of cities) had dairy and egg production farms within the walls, just as NYC had until after WWII.

    • @vendsoin
      @vendsoin Před 7 lety +2

      The same applies to Dragonstone, Pyke, Red Keep. The Chinese fortified capital of Changan had same trouble, so it kept switching between Luoyang with fields and Changan with forts for more than thousand years.

    • @Jharug87
      @Jharug87 Před 7 lety

      As i see it farming fields are just another part of the defense. Farmland are quite big flat fields and offers would be attackers very little if no cover at all.

    • @Gyropilot42
      @Gyropilot42 Před 7 lety +1

      Cover? In medieval times? Like Gears of War cover that you can wait for a arrow row pass so you can skip to the next wall? Ain't happening, bro. Shit is storming everywhere in walls range. You need a plan, not a straw roofed house cover if you want to siege a castle

  • @Garr3tth
    @Garr3tth Před 6 lety

    while you were mentioning Dragonstone i was thinking back to the Eirie and your coments about aircraft, and remembered that they used to have dragons and now do again. With having dragons also makes more sense to build closed off (Cathedral like) castles rather than courtyard style (motte and bailey) castles. ^^

  • @visionforgegaming6175
    @visionforgegaming6175 Před 5 lety

    Hi, Shad! I am coming to this vid a little late; only been a fan a short time. I wanted to offer you a slightly different perspective on the opening of your video. Regarding Winterfell specifically, it was mentioned in the show (as it was in the books) that the water from the hot springs actually flowed through the walls, which while being unrealistic when used as a model for real-world medieval architecture would make the roofs of Winterfell a lot less of a problem, as the warmth emitted by this process should be sufficient to keep snow accumulation, especially if one factors in the added heat from the interior fires that are likely to be burning. In fact, given the lack of snow accumulation as a threat, the flat roofs would present an enormous defensive benefit in times of battle; at the very least, every single roof could be used as a perch for a pack of archers, and depending on how sturdy said roofs were, one could even (with a little foresight) assemble war machines such as small catapults on them. Now since this was not a historically realistic feature, I don't disagree with your premise that Winterfell's historical realism suffered for this element, but I would argue that, within the context of the fantasy of Winterfell, this detail was not as inconsistent as you portrayed. As usual, awesome work, can't wait to watch more of your stuff!

  • @ARR0WMANC3R
    @ARR0WMANC3R Před 7 lety +19

    Congratulations on 20k subscribers! I've been subscribed since about #300! :D

    • @shadiversity
      @shadiversity  Před 7 lety +10

      Thanks mate, I'm over the moon about it, and thank you for sticking around!

    • @theirishshane2914
      @theirishshane2914 Před 7 lety +23

      Shad do a new video series called (Rate My Castle) Where people will send request of historical castles and you review the castle. For example you review it on defense, comfort, practicality, possible upgrades, weakness, strengths and how good the castle looks in terms of beauty. For your first episode could you review Bunratty Castle in Ireland ?

    • @ryanhatcher7098
      @ryanhatcher7098 Před 7 lety

      i read this message and decided to subscribe! wooooo i'm part of the group!

  • @salamut2202
    @salamut2202 Před 7 lety +6

    It may have been mentioned before but something to remember is that Dragonstone was not built by any Westerossi culture, the other examples were either Firstmen or Andal architecture, especially the latter. Dragonstone's distinctive aesthetic may be a result of it being of Valyrian architecture, the Valyrian Freehold being so very far advanced technologically advanced beyond any other culture introduced in the fore, including that of the Rhoynar, Andals and Firstmen of Westeros. Dragonstone may well be a starfort because developmentally, Valyria was likely developed well past medieval technology.

    • @DJ9hm
      @DJ9hm Před 7 lety +2

      thank you! was thinking the same thing. from what RR says in the books the description of Dragonstone: it has thousands of gargoyles and stone dragons the whole thing looked like a group of dragons on a black sea shore. so i don't know where this picture came from

  • @sam93931
    @sam93931 Před 5 lety +8

    star castles did exist in medieval era. Their purpose, one side of the wall couldn't be attack without getting hit in the back by the opposite side.

    • @flankspeed
      @flankspeed Před 5 lety +4

      Well, no. Star forts did exist, but well after the medieval period, and they were specifically created as a reaction against gunpowder weapons.

  • @user-cx5ni7me6l
    @user-cx5ni7me6l Před 4 lety +1

    Never watched the series or read the books but love this video!
    (Maybe i also would love the books and series, but never looked into it)
    Have a wonderful day
    Greetings :)

  • @claymenz5353
    @claymenz5353 Před 7 lety +216

    Dude, take a look at the architecture in the swiss alps for example and then look at some of the older german houses in the north of the country. what do we see? The roofs of the swiss houses (which have to deal with way more snow) are extremely flat and wide, but the construction is very solid. This is because the people in those regions want the snow to stay on the roof, because if it would come down, no one could leave the house because the masses of the snow would block the door from outside. same thing in winterfell: if the snow comes down the people who are in the tower would have to wait untill somebody gets the snow out of the way(: in the regions woth less snow, rain is a main problem and the people wanted it to stream down of the roof as fast as possible (forgot why). I learned this from an architect so i think its right(:

    • @PsylomeAlpha
      @PsylomeAlpha Před 7 lety +48

      also, the tops of those towers are high enough that winds would scour the snow away before it became a problem

    • @bowlchamps37
      @bowlchamps37 Před 6 lety +28

      The prime reason for a flat roof is safety so that nobody can get hurt from huge masses of snow suddenly falling down. It is also safer to get the snow off the roof if this was necessary.

    • @p1rgit
      @p1rgit Před 6 lety +48

      actually it's the other way around...flattish roof piles up snow up to certain amount and then, one day, it all comes down. when it has turned into ice frome pressure. or, if totally flat, it brakes roof. steep roof does NOT pile up so much snow, not more than coupla cm, it slides down continously and does no more harm than snow simply falling from sky. houses with steep gable roofs are typically built so that door is at gable side, so no snow whatsoever falls on doorstep. with round tower it's nor easy but as i said - with steep roof snow piling is not problem. they might want to put li'l extra roof jus covering the doorframe so's to save sweeping every dmn winter day from steps.

    • @YourNemesis23
      @YourNemesis23 Před 6 lety +20

      well yes but we live in modern times now and are able to build houses that can withstand large amounts of snow, if you look at older structures (not that old actually) in the alps, graubünden for example, they have all steep roofs and occasionally people need to climb the roofs and free them of snow if it's too much...

    • @BubbaGumNDB5
      @BubbaGumNDB5 Před 6 lety +1

      This is true well maybe if we ever see winterfell in full winter we can gauge if it's right or not by the snow amount

  • @moanguspickard249
    @moanguspickard249 Před 7 lety +4

    Dragonstone looks like Minas Morgul with lights turned off. :D

  • @Valefor_Bahamut
    @Valefor_Bahamut Před 3 lety

    I am a knew subscriber who actually found this channel in the reverse order of its purpose. I found and read your book before watching your channel let alone subscribing. I am posting this at the first and last Castle review videos in hopes that you might notice it. I was hoping you could discuss your thoughts on the castle construction, magical crafting, and medieval warfare involving magic which is presented in the Spellmonger series written by Terry Mancour (kindle unlimited). I really enjoy the series but I also freely admit to being completely ignorant of the proper ways things were done/made in medieval times (like leather armor vs gambeson and the size of axe heads). Therefore, I would really love and appreciate hearing the opinion of a leader in the field like yourself.

  • @heimdal4730
    @heimdal4730 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Fun fact of lore in asoiaf Bran the Builder (the first stark) who built both the wall and winterfell actually built winter atop a hot spring that’s water went throughout the walls of winterfell warming the entirety of the castle

  • @boringmanager9559
    @boringmanager9559 Před 7 lety +10

    I have a question about Pyke.
    Alright, it's really hard to assault the castle. But what about siege?
    If I had to kill everyone in a castle, I would take the first tower and just break the bridge. Eventually, everyone inside would starve to death. Am I missing something?

    • @ukguybrush
      @ukguybrush Před 6 lety +1

      Ropes and/or caves used to get food in and out from the sea? You'd need to blockade the sea as well, and the Greyjoys are the best seafarers.

    • @TheVergile
      @TheVergile Před 5 lety +1

      don't even bother with taking the first tower. just fortify your own position a bit farther off. Your only objective is to make sure no reinforcements and supplies can get int and people can't get out.

  • @LARPBeard
    @LARPBeard Před 7 lety +5

    I have to address your critic of Winterfell. unlike real world structures, the north comes under harsh winter, practically arctic conditions. and in that perspective, flat round towers make sense. flat roofs accumulate snow- and snow is an excellent insulator, preventing heat loss due to convection. round structures have the highest volume to exterior ratio, which also help in constraining heat loss to a minimum. flat top round towers are great for a castle that comes under arctic conditions once or twice in a a decade, but need to remain a functioning castle the rest of the time.

  • @namewastaken360
    @namewastaken360 Před 6 lety +1

    In the books Winterfell was built over thousands of years, so it has a number of different architectural styles. The Red Keep is only 300 years old and is much smaller than Winterfell. Pyke reminds me of Dunnottar Castle in Scotland which is built on a sea stack as well. I think the idea is that Pyke is very old and parts of the castle have probably already fallen into the sea. In the books the Eyrie is described as 5 towers stakes as tightly as arrows in a quiver, so nothing like those domed buildings. I guess Dragonstone and the Red keep were also built with Valyrian building techniques and with the use of dragonfire.

  • @MegaMackproductions
    @MegaMackproductions Před 7 lety +7

    thats why its called "winterfell" winter came, and it fell apart.... geez.

  • @Duenas411
    @Duenas411 Před 7 lety +6

    really loving the Castle videos

  • @lahirudinalankara1460
    @lahirudinalankara1460 Před 4 lety

    Shad. I really like your videos. You should compare castles in the books to the ones shown in the TV series. The differences are immense.

  • @neojack333
    @neojack333 Před 5 lety

    here in montreal flat roofs are everywhere, but there is a LOT of snow in winter. so it's not really a problem if the weight is taken into account in the engineering. also it can provide a clean water source wich is handy when they are zombies outside the walls

  • @Ounouh
    @Ounouh Před 7 lety +3

    Wut. "There's no cannons in Westeros" is a very true statement, but there are ships that lunge huge balls of fire and possibly rocks (with catapults) in the Battle of Meereen. The range is greatly exaggerated in the show, making to look they are using trebuchets, but sieges have been done without cannons just fine in history. Cannons made it more effective thus the need for better design, but it's not hard to imagine they would also come up with the same counter-projectile-design even without cannons if the danger of heavy catapults (or bigger siege machines) is a real risk.

  • @xandercorp6175
    @xandercorp6175 Před 7 lety +15

    Isn't "the Disney castle" (Cinderella Castle to be specific) an admitted derivative of the castles at Moszna, Segovia, Pierrefonds, and Neuschwanstein? Not medieval, of course, but each one very much a real castle.

    • @Spider2point0
      @Spider2point0 Před 6 lety +9

      Yes, it is! The thing to realize is that castles like Neuschwanstein were not built as defensive castles, they were built more as palaces; this is especially true for Neuschwanstein, which was constructed in the 1800s, well after the defensive castle had really ceased to be a major defensive construction. This is evident in the architecture; Neuschwanstein lacks an exterior wall from which defenders could stand and fend off an attack, apart from the gatehouse, which actually contains some decent defensive architectural elements, and even the gatehouse has windows at lower levels, which are a liability in the event of a siege or attack, as an attacking force could pretty easily smash through them to gain entry. Of course, this is because Neuschwanstein was built by Ludwig II to replicate a fantasy castle from one of Wagner's operas, as an homage to Wagner, of whom Ludwig II was a major patron and avid fan.

  • @gwenwalravens8030
    @gwenwalravens8030 Před 3 lety +1

    Castle Pike seems like a castle that has been destroyed 3 times already by erosion with a fourth coming 'soon'. The architecture changes as well as the 2nd from the left still has wooden defense structures while the first one has stone ones.

  • @EvolvedApe
    @EvolvedApe Před 5 lety

    that gothic style that sticks out is where the iron throne site. the large round window on the end, is the large star of the seven window above the throne.

  • @coopboulton
    @coopboulton Před 6 lety +7

    Maybe the star fort like design was to protect against Dragonfire

  • @tapioperala3010
    @tapioperala3010 Před 7 lety +3

    Flat roofs have been *really* popular here in Finland at one point, but you´re right; flat roof has never worked. Ever. It should never have been used.
    It is easy to make, but for example here in Finland, where "non-summer" (time, when it´s raining and the sun doesn't really shine and it's not really warm, or it's around 0 Celsius or below) last something like nine months, so I have no idea what kind of drug you'd need to take to make a house with a flat roof...
    Great video!

    • @SueMead
      @SueMead Před 7 lety +1

      It works for Winterfell because it is built over geo-thermal activity. This has been piped into the very walls of the structure and that would include the rooves. So, any snow that does fall immediately melts. Although, I would've expected to see spouting for drainage to take the never ending, melted snow water away from the structures. So, there's a bit of an oversight there although, I don't believe (could be wrong) they used spouting and drainage of this type in mediæval times.

    • @HerraTohtori
      @HerraTohtori Před 7 lety

      +Sue Mead
      Building drainage pipes out of metal would be spurious waste of resources, and if they were on the outside they would freeze and get blocked during winter anyways. Instead, they could either build drainage channels internally, where they would remain unfrozen - or the drainage could be directed to cisterns within the towers instead. It could be quite useful to have such a source of fresh water during the winter if, for example, the water from the hot springs isn't quite ideal for human consumption.

    • @kps_polis1357
      @kps_polis1357 Před 7 lety

      You don't need drainage pipes, you just need a collecting pool and a funnel shaped collector. If the roof was concave with an oculus in the center, the water could melt and be funneled through the oculus. From there a collecting pool could hold the water.
      Assuming enough heat is available.

  • @Thetruthiscosmic
    @Thetruthiscosmic Před 6 lety

    Please do a part 2 of this!!! There are more castles to be explored like Casterly Rock, Highgarden, Castle Black (which to me seems like the most realistic of all castles in GOT) and Riverrun.

  • @Cark7428
    @Cark7428 Před 5 lety

    If you look at the artwork for the castle that used to stand (demolished by Cromwell) where I used to live it looked huge, even bigger than dragonstone. Pontefract castle.

  • @anonymousanonymous4775
    @anonymousanonymous4775 Před 6 lety +8

    Do you think the rest of the castle will function without boys shoveling snow from all the surfaces? It's not hard to do on a flat roof. If you don't like heights tie a rope around you and connect it to something. It's not like anyone will attack with a middle age army when you do it anyway. They are also quite busy handling their existence in half a metre of snow. Flat roofs are common all over Scandinavia today. And guess what, a shovel and a boy solves all problems with snow they ever will bee facing. The next time you try to guess to what extent winter actually is a problem. Go to a Swedish, Finnish or Norwegian forum and ask around. Don't ask the Danish however. They don't really have winter there. :)

    • @dayannaalvarez3830
      @dayannaalvarez3830 Před 5 lety +2

      I don't think you can compare real winter with GoT winter which is so extreme and last for decades, because of that I don't think a boy with a shovel would be as effective there as in real life.

    • @CanadianCCP
      @CanadianCCP Před 5 lety

      @@dayannaalvarez3830 Its not like 500 feet of snow comes down in an hour, it would be perfectly easy to do through even the bad GOT winter.

  • @snicks34
    @snicks34 Před 7 lety +3

    Dragonstone is sort of a peculiar castle, even for GoT. The castle was built by Valerians, and their style reflected the kind of warfare they were used to fighting. In Old Valeria, warfare was dominated by dragons, who have a bad habit of slamming into the sides of castles and tearing the walls apart with their talons. They can also strafe along the battlements with their dragonfire, allowing an encroaching enemy to get into a position against the fortress walls where defenders on the battlements would be hard-pressed to fire upon them. The jutting, wedge shaped exterior of Dragonstone deals with both of these problems. Dragons would find it more difficult to find a good target for their kamikaze assaults, and the shape of the battlements both forces the attacking dragon to cover a much longer and difficult length of building with their fire, as well as allowing defenders to fire on enemies even if they're flush to the base of the castle.

  • @Commonlogicguy
    @Commonlogicguy Před 3 lety +1

    One aspect of the analysis I found is missing from this analysis is the cost and logistic of operating such castle. Honestly a lot of well defended castle in history are abandoned not because they were taken but because they are too expensive to operate. I imagine the castle of veil would be very expensive but good luck paying laborers to bring supplies up to that place. The cost would been enormous to supply such a place if there is a large population.

  • @inspirer4763
    @inspirer4763 Před 5 lety

    Hey Shad! Don't know if you read comments under old videos, but if you do - you may want to check out so called "Swallow´s Nest" in Crimea. It's much smaller than Grey joys castle, but the concept is very similar and unlike those monasteries you named it stands right next to the sea.

  • @st0ox
    @st0ox Před 7 lety +10

    i heard that theory (didn't read the books sry) that the castle is build upon Hot springs (geothermally heated groundwater) or a dragon who knows...but this could at least explain why snow on top of the towers could melt...

    • @RicardoFuertes1990
      @RicardoFuertes1990 Před 7 lety +5

      its explained in the show I think, coz I never read the books and I know winterfell is located in hot springs. Maybe one of the boltons said it. or maybe it was in the dvd extras

    • @daddyleon
      @daddyleon Před 7 lety

      Yes, there are hot springs in the Godswood (Ward/Bailey) for Winterfell.

    • @Loonaticx
      @Loonaticx Před 7 lety +2

      In fact, the hot spring water is piped through the walls of the castle. Helps to maintain a consistent temperature year round. Such an interesting concept

    • @daddyleon
      @daddyleon Před 7 lety

      LoonaticX Yes, in the books (the first I think) someone says some stones are hollow and form something like pipes for the hot spring water to go through.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 7 lety

      Anyway a good defensive tower has a flat roof. Pointed roofs are a major nuisance to defend. Where snow is just an extra for the defenses.