Flock Watchtower
A crowd watchtower (also a crowd watch tower , échauguette , pepper box , high watchtower or listening house ) is a small bay tower on a bastion top, wall or building corner, which has a round or polygonal floor plan. It usually stands on a console and is protruding. Its upper end is either a roof or a crenellated platform.
description
Crowd watchtowers were first built on medieval castles in the 12th century and were also in use on fortresses until the 16th century . In the Gothic period they appeared in large numbers on so-called five - button towers . Later, crowd watch towers were only used as a decorative element in secular buildings . Originally they were used as observation points for guards and therefore always have viewing openings in the masonry. In addition, there are often fortification elements such as loopholes and machicolations , while the towers often form the corner of a battlement .
Eugène Viollet-le-Duc suspected in his Dictionnaire raisonné de l'architecture française du XIe au XVe siècle that the early crowd watch towers - just like the Hurden of that time - were made entirely of wood and the first stone examples were very simple corner towers with a round or square plan that were placed on corners of defensive walls or defensive towers .
Examples
Wall
Crowd watchtower of the fortress Pyrmont
Flock watchtower at Fort de Savoie in Colmars
Bartizan Gardjola in Senglea in Malta
tower
The five ridge tower with crowd watch towers at its corners
The Eschenheim Tower
The Martinstor
The Belfry Peace Palace , The Hague , Netherlands
See also
literature
- Michael Losse : Scharwachttower. In: Horst Wolfgang Böhme , Reinhard Friedrich, Barbara Schock-Werner (Hrsg.): Dictionary of castles, palaces and fortresses . Philipp Reclam, Stuttgart 2004, ISBN 3-15-010547-1 , p. 225, doi: 10.11588 / arthistoricum.535 .
- Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc: Dictionnaire raisonné de l'architecture franc̜aise du XIe au XVIe siècle . Band6nbsp; 5. Paris 1861, pp. 114-143 ( online ).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ A b Annie Gay: Châteaux et demeures du Jura . Editions Cabedita, Yens [ua] 1998, ISBN 2-88295-234-1 , p. 14.
- ^ E. Viollet-le-Duc: Dictionnaire raisonné de l'architecture franc̜aise du XIe au XVIe siècle . Vol. 5, p. 115.