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Kublanova
is 75% done
Так уважно слухаю, наче збираюсь буквам замок і готувати його оборону
— May 04, 2026 06:57AM
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Kublanova
is 32% done
Я канєшна на початку заснула, бо відвикла від ног фіку, але потім переслухала і це прям харашо. Все ще: ЖІНКАМ НЕ МІСЦЕ В СЕРЕДНЬОВІЧЧІ
— May 02, 2026 06:54AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 224 of 272
Finished with the book itself, now all that's left is the glossary and geographical guides.
— Mar 17, 2026 05:56AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 223 of 272
"[Castles] provided grim quarters for generations of prisoners, many political. Enlightenment and prison reform at length did away this inglorious role, and some castles, especially those situated in capitals and large towns, gained a more respectable one in conversion to government archives, record centers, and bureaus."
— Mar 17, 2026 05:53AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 222 of 272
"To the military obsolescence of the castle was added a domestic obsolescence. The desire for more comfortable and elegant living quarters, which had already modified the castle in the Middle Ages, by the seventeenth century had created a taste for purely residential palaces for the nobility." This is something that is more implied than talked about in school history books.
— Mar 17, 2026 05:48AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 219 of 272
I mean, both the War of the Roses in England and the Civil War in England were both civil wars.
— Mar 16, 2026 10:41AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 218 of 272
"The decline in military importance of the castle, apparent in the fourteenth century and rapidly accelerated in the fifteenth, is associated, like that of the armored knight, with the introduction of gunpowder. In the closing stage of the Hundred Years' War (1446-53), the old strongholds of western France that had withstood so many sieges fell with astonishing speed to the ponderous iron bombards..."
— Mar 16, 2026 10:39AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 218 of 272
The last chapter is "The Decline of the Castle." I'll be finished by the end of the day.
— Mar 16, 2026 10:35AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 215 of 272
"Lammas (August 1) was the end of the harvest. Lammas — from the Anglo-Saxon hlaf-mass ("loaf mas")— was a feast of first fruits, a day when bread was made from new wheat blessed in church." I wonder if this inspired Tolkien to write lamlas (lemlas?), elvish bread?
— Mar 16, 2026 10:34AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 215 of 272
"In June, Midsummer...boys collected bones and rubbish and burned them, and carried brands about the fields, to drive away the dragons that were believed to be abroad poisoning the wells. A wheel was set afire and rolled down the hills, to signify that the sun had reached its highest point and was turning back." I love the dragon detail.
— Mar 16, 2026 10:31AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 215 of 272
Imagine if modern day continued some of these festivities. "Bringing in the May" sometimes meant a couple spending a night in the forest. "Rogation Days" or "Gangdays" were days where sometimes small boys were ducked in brooks and ponds and their buttocks bumped against trees and rocks to help them memorize the village boundaries.
— Mar 16, 2026 07:56AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 206 of 272
Never heard of a vetch before. Apparently it's some sort of bean.
— Mar 11, 2026 12:13PM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 198 of 272
"A third penetration by means of a special ingress, such as a mine, a disguised well, or a latrine, as in the case of Richard the Lionhearted's Château Gaillard in 1204." I think I just recently saw an Instagram skit based off of this. Either that or I spoke about it previously and imagined it, which I think I did when they were discussing the layout of a castle and spoke of the latrine chutes.
— Mar 11, 2026 12:12PM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 196 of 272
Oof, got some crossbow/longbow debate going on here. Seems to me that the authors favor the crossbow despite its slower rate of fire, weight, and strength needed for the draw string. Longbows continued to be more favorable with faster rate of fire, lighter weight comparatively, and less strength needed. They do point out that longbows were favorable in open battles, while crossbows were used in castles.
— Mar 11, 2026 08:14AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 192 of 272
I'm not sure where they got their source for the "fire-bearing arrows." All historians I've seen analyzing Hollywood depictions of castle sieges and battles have said that fire arrows were a work of fiction, or at the very least were not at all as good as Hollywood made them out to be. Certain arrows were designed as an open, iron basket container that could be stuff with flammable material.
— Mar 11, 2026 08:08AM
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Samuel Peterson
is on page 184 of 272
"A custom of English nobles that may date to the thirteenth century, that of hanging their heraldic banners outside inns where they were staying, led to the inn sign of later times." Really? I did not know that! That's cool!
— Mar 10, 2026 09:25AM
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