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Princely Ambition - Ideology, castle-building and landscape in Gwynedd, 1194-1283 (Paperback)
Loot Price: R486
Discovery Miles 4 860
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Princely Ambition - Ideology, castle-building and landscape in Gwynedd, 1194-1283 (Paperback)
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Loot Price R486
Discovery Miles 4 860
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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While the Edwardian castles of Conwy, Beaumaris, Harlech and
Caernarfon are rightly hailed as outstanding examples of castle
architecture, the castles of the native Welsh princes are far more
enigmatic. Where some dominate their surroundings as completely as
any castle of Edward I, others are concealed in the depths of
forests, or tucked away in the corners of valleys, their
relationship with the landscape of which they are a part far more
difficult to discern than their English counterparts. This
ground-breaking book seeks to analyse the castle-building
activities of the native princes of Wales in the thirteenth
century. Whereas early castles were built to delimit territory and
as an expression of Llywelyn I ab Iorwerth’s will to power
following his violent assumption of the throne of Gwynedd in the
1190s, by the time of his grandson Llywelyn II ap Gruffudd’s
later reign in the 1260s and 1270s, the castles’ prestige value
had been superseded in importance by an understanding of the need
to make the polity he created - the Principality of Wales -
defensible. Employing a probing analysis of the topographical
settings and defensive dispositions of almost a dozen native Welsh
masonry castles, Craig Owen Jones interrogates the long-held theory
that the native princes’ approach to castle-building in medieval
Wales was characterised by ignorance of basic architectural
principles, disregard for the castle’s relationship to the
landscape, and whimsy, in order to arrive at a new understanding of
the castles’ significance in Welsh society. Previous
interpretations argue that the native Welsh castles were created as
part of a single defensive policy, but close inspection of the
documentary and architectural evidence reveals that this policy
varied considerably from prince to prince, and even within a
prince’s reign. Taking advantage of recent ground-breaking
archaeological investigations at several important castle sites,
Jones offers a timely corrective to perceptions of these castles as
poorly sited and weakly defended: theories of construction and
siting appropriate to Anglo-Norman castles are not applicable to
the native Welsh example without some major revisions. Princely
Ambition also advances a timeline that synthesises various strands
of evidence to arrive at a chronology of native Welsh
castle-building. This exciting new account fills a crucial gap in
scholarship on Wales’ built heritage prior to the Edwardian
conquest and establishes a nuanced understanding of important
military sites in the context of native Welsh politics.
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