I’m in love with medieval times, with it’s  knights, princess, knighthood, fair speech, battles, and especially  with monumental castles. I have seen a lot of castles on the net, and  I’ve try to make a list of my own favorite castles. So, I’ve finally  came to my own top ten castles of the world. I’d like to hear your  comments, and your suggestions about castles; maybe there is a castle  that I’ve skip in my quest.
 
In 1515 Thomas Bohier, revenue collector for King Francis I, began the construction of the Chateau de Chenonceaux. Unfinished at the time of his death, construction of the chateau was completed by Bohier’s wife and son. In 1535, however, Francis I took the estate in payment of debts. King Henry II, son of Francis I, gave the chateaux to Diane de Poitiers, duchesse de Valentinois, who extended the structure by a bridge across the Cher. Catherine de Medicis, widow of Henry II, forced Diane de Poitiers to deed the chateaux to her. Catherine de Medicis constructed the gallery above the bridge and the stables known as the Batiment-des-Dames. The chateau became her favorite residence, and it was there that her son Francis II and Mary, Queen of Scots, were married in 1560.
  
Neuschwanstein Castle
Royal palace in the Bavarian Alps of Germany, the most famous of three royal palaces built for Louis II of Bavaria, sometimes referred to as Mad King Ludwig, who grew up nearby at Hohenschwangau Castle. And my favourite and most beautiful of all!PALACE OF VERSAILLES
The Palace of Versailles was the official residence of the Kings of France from 1682 until 1790. It was originally a hunting lodge, built in 1624, by Louis XIII. It was expanded by Louis XIV beginning in 1669. He used it as a little lodge as a secret refuge for his amorous trysts with the lovely Louise de la Valliere and built a fairy tale park around it. Jules Hardouin Mansart, the king’s principal architect, drew the plans to enlarge what was turning more and more into a palace from A Thousand and One Nights. The terrace that overlooked the gardens was removed to make way for the magnificent Hall of Mirrors, the Galarie de Glaces. It is here from which the king radiated his power and where the destiny of Europe was decided over a century. The French classical architecture was complemented by extensive gardens.CHENONCEAU
Chenonceaux, small agricultural community in the department of Indre-et-Loire in northwestern France,18 miles east of Tours. Located on the Cher River. Chenonceaux is best known as the site of the 16th-century Chateau de Chenonceaux, which is situated on the north bank of the river.In 1515 Thomas Bohier, revenue collector for King Francis I, began the construction of the Chateau de Chenonceaux. Unfinished at the time of his death, construction of the chateau was completed by Bohier’s wife and son. In 1535, however, Francis I took the estate in payment of debts. King Henry II, son of Francis I, gave the chateaux to Diane de Poitiers, duchesse de Valentinois, who extended the structure by a bridge across the Cher. Catherine de Medicis, widow of Henry II, forced Diane de Poitiers to deed the chateaux to her. Catherine de Medicis constructed the gallery above the bridge and the stables known as the Batiment-des-Dames. The chateau became her favorite residence, and it was there that her son Francis II and Mary, Queen of Scots, were married in 1560.
The Chateau of Chambord
Chambord, chateau, park, and village in the department of Loire-et-Cher in central France. The chateau of Chambord was a retreat for French kings, especially Louis XIV It was under his auspices that French dramatist Moliere’s Monsieur de Pourceaugnac and Le bourgeois Gentilhomme were first produced there.Linderhof
Ludwig II  built this secluded hunting lodge, it was known as the Kings Hut. Ludwig  decided that this will be a New Versailles. It was planned as a modest  villa  but had become a splendid Rococo palace in the ornate French  style.  Linderhof is the smallest of the three royal castles, and the  only one which was completely finished. (1878).
Tower of London
Castle  building was an essential part of the Norman Conquest; when Duke William  of Normandy invaded England  in 1066 his first action after landing was  to build a castle.After his coronation in Westminster Abbey on  Christmas Day 1066, William ordered the construction of a castle in  London for his triumphal entry. nitially the Tower had consisted of a  modest enclosure built into the south-east corner of the Roman City  walls, but by the late 1070s, with the initial completion of the White  Tower, it had become the most fearsome of all. Nothing had been seen  like it in England before. It was built by Norman masons and English  (Anglo-Saxon) labor drafted in from the countryside.  It was intended to  protect the river route from Danish attack, but also and more  importantly to dominate the City physically and visually.The White Tower  was protected to the east and south by the old Roman City walls (a full  height fragment can be seen just by Tower Hill underground station),  while the north and west sides were protected by ditches as much as 750m  (25ft) wide and 3.40m (lift) deep and an earthwork with a wooden wall  on top. It is important for us today to remember that the functions of  the Tower from the 1070s until the late 19th century were established by  its Norman founders. The Tower was never primarily intended to protect  London from external invasion, although, of course, it could have done  so if necessary. Nor was it ever intended to be the principal residence  of the kings and queens of England, though many did in fact spend  periods of time there. Its primary function was always to provide a base  for royal power in the City of London and a stronghold to which the  royal family could retreat in times of civil disorder.
Leeds, Kent
Leeds  Castle, acclaimed as the most romantic castle in England, is located  in  south-east England, built on two adjacent island in the river Len.Leeds  Castle was originally a manor of the Saxon royal family possibly as  early as the reign of Ethelbert IV ( 856-860). The first castle was an  earthwork enclosure whose wooden palisade was converted to stone and  provided with two towers along the perimeter. This is now vanished.  Traces of arches in a vault thought to be Norman were found at the  beginning of this century. Around 1119 Robert Crevecoeur started to  build a stone castle on the site, establishing his donjon where the  Gloriette now is. Stephen, Count of Blois, and his cousin the Empress  Matilda contested the crown of England. In 1139 Matilda invaded England  with the help of his brother Robert, Earl of Gloucester, who held Leeds  castle, but Kent was loyal to king Stephen and following a short siege  he took control of the castle.The castle came into the possession of  Edward I (1278) . He rebuilt much of the castle as it stood at the  beginning of his reign, and enlarged it, providing an outer stone  curtain round the edge of the larger island, with cylindrical  open-backed  flanking towers and a square-plan water-gate on the  south-east. The gatehouse at the south-west, a single tower pierced by  an arched passage was improved.Henry VIII, the most famous of all the  owners of Leeds Castles, expended large sums in enlarging and  beautifying the whole range of buildings. At the same time, he carefully  retained the defenses of the castle for he often had cause to fear  invasion from either France or the Spanish . The king entrusted the work  of alteration to his great friend Sir Henry Guidford.Leeds has been  constantly inhabited and rebuilt since then. Most of the castle today is  the result of the nineteenth-century reconstruction and addition.
Blois
Dominating  the Loire River, the royal castle of Blois is not only one of the most  prestigious Renaissance monuments in France but also a brilliant  illustration of the evolution of the French architecture from the Middle  ages to the 17th century.About the middle of the 10th century, the name  of Thibaud I is recorded Count of Blois, he was the founder of the  family who remained in power until 1230.  Blois became the most  important town in the region.  The first stone castle was built to  protect the town dates back to that period.  An independent bastion  surrounded the castle, and followed the line of the headland on which it  was erected. The numerous medieval remains still exists. The best  preserved medieval tower is situated on a terrace overlooking the  Loire.While the Franco-Anglo was (named the Hundred Years War) raged in  the real, an event took place that determined the future of the county  of Blois, the ancient fortress became a royal castle. At the end of the  14th. century, the county of Blois was sold to Prince Louis of Orleans,  son of the king of France Charles V.  He lived in the castle for 25  years attracting a small court of scholars and poets. His grandson,  Louis XII became king of France in 1498 and decided to move to Blois, in  this way, the small town became a royal town and the capital of the  Kingdom.Under Louis XII and Francis I the town of Blois grew  considerably. But after the disaster of Pavia in 1525, Francis I never  returned to Blois and his successors only paid short visits to the town.  According to French and Gothic tradition, the initials and emblems of  the owners of the place are sculptured in the stone: fleur de lis for  the king and ermine spots for the queen, Anne de Bretagne. The  equestrian statue of the king crowns the main entrance of the castle.  The emblem of the king, the salamander, is sculptured eleven times in  high relief on the Francis I facade.  The staircase, which was at the  center of the facade before Gaston d”Orleans began to modify the castle  is a masterpiece. When the Italianate straight flights of stairs  appeared in the Loire Valley after the Gothic period, the shape of the  spiral staircase in a protruding octagonal cage was considered rather  ordinary. The staircase, with its three floors of balconies looking on  to the Court of Honor, is perfectly suitable for the display of more and  more sumptuous ceremonies.
Nymphenburg
The   former summer residence of the rulers of Bavaria is located in the west  part of the city in the middle of one of Munich’s most beautiful parks.  Five generations of Wittelsbach rulers were involved in the construction  of this Baroque castle.
The building of Nymphenburg Castle began in the reign of the Elector Ferdinand Maria: overjoyed by the birth of his son and heir, Max Emanuel, he had the central section built for his wife in the style of an Italian villa (Agostino Barelli, 1664-74). In about 1700, Max Emanuel commissioned Enrico Zuccali and Antonio Viscardi to extend the castle by adding galleries and pavilions.The central section owes its present appearance to the efforts of Josef Effner, who in 1715, designed the pilasters, arched windows and busts that now grace the exterior. A few years later, the south section of the castle was added to serve as the court stables. As a counterpart, the orangerie was added to the north.Central section: Stone Hall (Steinerner Saal; 1755-57) with ceiling frescoes by J. B. and F Zimmermann (Homage to the Goddess Hora); the Rococo stucco work is based on designs by Cuvillies.
The building of Nymphenburg Castle began in the reign of the Elector Ferdinand Maria: overjoyed by the birth of his son and heir, Max Emanuel, he had the central section built for his wife in the style of an Italian villa (Agostino Barelli, 1664-74). In about 1700, Max Emanuel commissioned Enrico Zuccali and Antonio Viscardi to extend the castle by adding galleries and pavilions.The central section owes its present appearance to the efforts of Josef Effner, who in 1715, designed the pilasters, arched windows and busts that now grace the exterior. A few years later, the south section of the castle was added to serve as the court stables. As a counterpart, the orangerie was added to the north.Central section: Stone Hall (Steinerner Saal; 1755-57) with ceiling frescoes by J. B. and F Zimmermann (Homage to the Goddess Hora); the Rococo stucco work is based on designs by Cuvillies.
Mont St. Michael
Le  Mont-Saint-Michel, rocky, cone-shaped islet in  northwestern France, in  the Gulf of Saint-Malo, connected by a causeway with the mainland. The  islet, celebrated for its Benedictine abbey, has small houses and shops  on its lowest level. Above these stand the monastic buildings, many of  which date from the 13th century and are considered outstanding examples  of Gothic architecture. The entire islet is crowned by the abbey  church, about 73 m (about 240 ft) above sea level.The first chapel on  this site was founded in 708 by Aubert, Bishop of Avranches , after the  Archangel Michael has appeared to him in a dream. The Archangel Michel  appeared here in the year 708. The Abbey takes the name of Mont saint  Michel. The oratory, consecrated in 709 was served by a community of  canons. It apparently survived the Norman invasions, but the observance  of the rule became very relaxed. In 966 Richard I, Duke of Normandy,  established there the Benedictine monks from St. Wandrille Abbeyunder  the direction of Abbot Maynard, who began the reconstructions of the  church and other buildings. The church was burnt in 922 and rebuilt on a  larger scale by Abbot Hildebert II from 1023, at the time of the  monastic reforms in Normandy carried out by Richard II and William of  Volpiano. Mont Saint-Michel was built in a strong rock that measures 84  meters height. It is pure granite and is so hard that has resisted the  passage of time.Mont Saint Michel was built as a medieval castle.  It  has two large towers to defend the entrance to the castle. St. Michael  is a surety for freedom and thus this sanctuary also became a symbol of  the allied landing in Normandy during the Second World War.











 

 
 
 
 
 

















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