As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Rui Alexandre Frias Vilaça Couto
Data de Publicação: 2009
Tipo de documento: Dissertação
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: https://hdl.handle.net/10216/149267
Resumo: The oldest known reference to a castle is that of a hill, in Villa Negrelus, Guimarães, in 870, which "does not just correspond to a relation of topographic dependence (which many times it does not even exist), but above all to a dependency of an administrative and military nature"94, dominating a settlement that spread through the agricultural valleys and, therefore, impossible to fortify.95 "It is This is how the castle appears: a structure erected on top of a hill, seeking to extract the maximum benefit from of the land's topography (f|11), whose space was delimited by a wall, in which a small military garrison and where the population could gather in case of threat"96 The term castle began to be used in the mid-10th century to designate military enclosures. more complex and more apt to defend. The description given to us by Mário Barroca about the remains of the old castle of the civitates of Anégia, indicates its reduced dimensions, about 24 by 30 meters, and its implantation, on a secondary spur to the main hill where once a castro.97 These structures would be, therefore, very simple, to which, belatedly, they could be one or more fences were added, most likely already battled and with battlements, or alterations were made a little more elaborate, transforming them into alcáçovas. The aforementioned author characterizes, in this way, these pre-Romanesque castle structures: "In most cases, the defensive works were brief, including the cutting of stone, the displacement of earth to create unevenness, and the construction of walls, for sometimes on a slope and only covered with stone on the outer face. In some rarer cases, the works also involved the creation of ditches. The building apparatus for these castles is incipient: they were built in dry stone (or mamposteria), with poorly prepared and large stones, without mortar use. These castles of refuge, erected between granite boulders, with architecture not elaborated, not knowing most of the solutions of medieval military architecture (...), gone multiplying steadily over the course of the century. X but, above all, throughout the Century. XI, when they reach exceed three hundred in all of Northwest Portugal."98. Simultaneously with the castles of the civitas and In addition to other rocky constructions, there are other fortified constructions of greater architectural value, built on the initiative of the Count, such as the aforementioned castle of Guimarães, built to defend the Monastery of Our Lady, between 950 and 957
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spelling As formas de expansão da casa-torre medievalArtesArtsThe oldest known reference to a castle is that of a hill, in Villa Negrelus, Guimarães, in 870, which "does not just correspond to a relation of topographic dependence (which many times it does not even exist), but above all to a dependency of an administrative and military nature"94, dominating a settlement that spread through the agricultural valleys and, therefore, impossible to fortify.95 "It is This is how the castle appears: a structure erected on top of a hill, seeking to extract the maximum benefit from of the land's topography (f|11), whose space was delimited by a wall, in which a small military garrison and where the population could gather in case of threat"96 The term castle began to be used in the mid-10th century to designate military enclosures. more complex and more apt to defend. The description given to us by Mário Barroca about the remains of the old castle of the civitates of Anégia, indicates its reduced dimensions, about 24 by 30 meters, and its implantation, on a secondary spur to the main hill where once a castro.97 These structures would be, therefore, very simple, to which, belatedly, they could be one or more fences were added, most likely already battled and with battlements, or alterations were made a little more elaborate, transforming them into alcáçovas. The aforementioned author characterizes, in this way, these pre-Romanesque castle structures: "In most cases, the defensive works were brief, including the cutting of stone, the displacement of earth to create unevenness, and the construction of walls, for sometimes on a slope and only covered with stone on the outer face. In some rarer cases, the works also involved the creation of ditches. The building apparatus for these castles is incipient: they were built in dry stone (or mamposteria), with poorly prepared and large stones, without mortar use. These castles of refuge, erected between granite boulders, with architecture not elaborated, not knowing most of the solutions of medieval military architecture (...), gone multiplying steadily over the course of the century. X but, above all, throughout the Century. XI, when they reach exceed three hundred in all of Northwest Portugal."98. Simultaneously with the castles of the civitas and In addition to other rocky constructions, there are other fortified constructions of greater architectural value, built on the initiative of the Count, such as the aforementioned castle of Guimarães, built to defend the Monastery of Our Lady, between 950 and 9572009-12-162009-12-16T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/masterThesisapplication/pdfhttps://hdl.handle.net/10216/149267porRui Alexandre Frias Vilaça Coutoinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2023-11-29T12:26:31Zoai:repositorio-aberto.up.pt:10216/149267Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-19T23:20:24.234585Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval
title As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval
spellingShingle As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval
Rui Alexandre Frias Vilaça Couto
Artes
Arts
title_short As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval
title_full As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval
title_fullStr As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval
title_full_unstemmed As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval
title_sort As formas de expansão da casa-torre medieval
author Rui Alexandre Frias Vilaça Couto
author_facet Rui Alexandre Frias Vilaça Couto
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Rui Alexandre Frias Vilaça Couto
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Artes
Arts
topic Artes
Arts
description The oldest known reference to a castle is that of a hill, in Villa Negrelus, Guimarães, in 870, which "does not just correspond to a relation of topographic dependence (which many times it does not even exist), but above all to a dependency of an administrative and military nature"94, dominating a settlement that spread through the agricultural valleys and, therefore, impossible to fortify.95 "It is This is how the castle appears: a structure erected on top of a hill, seeking to extract the maximum benefit from of the land's topography (f|11), whose space was delimited by a wall, in which a small military garrison and where the population could gather in case of threat"96 The term castle began to be used in the mid-10th century to designate military enclosures. more complex and more apt to defend. The description given to us by Mário Barroca about the remains of the old castle of the civitates of Anégia, indicates its reduced dimensions, about 24 by 30 meters, and its implantation, on a secondary spur to the main hill where once a castro.97 These structures would be, therefore, very simple, to which, belatedly, they could be one or more fences were added, most likely already battled and with battlements, or alterations were made a little more elaborate, transforming them into alcáçovas. The aforementioned author characterizes, in this way, these pre-Romanesque castle structures: "In most cases, the defensive works were brief, including the cutting of stone, the displacement of earth to create unevenness, and the construction of walls, for sometimes on a slope and only covered with stone on the outer face. In some rarer cases, the works also involved the creation of ditches. The building apparatus for these castles is incipient: they were built in dry stone (or mamposteria), with poorly prepared and large stones, without mortar use. These castles of refuge, erected between granite boulders, with architecture not elaborated, not knowing most of the solutions of medieval military architecture (...), gone multiplying steadily over the course of the century. X but, above all, throughout the Century. XI, when they reach exceed three hundred in all of Northwest Portugal."98. Simultaneously with the castles of the civitas and In addition to other rocky constructions, there are other fortified constructions of greater architectural value, built on the initiative of the Count, such as the aforementioned castle of Guimarães, built to defend the Monastery of Our Lady, between 950 and 957
publishDate 2009
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2009-12-16
2009-12-16T00:00:00Z
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