Wednesday, November 23, 2011

And its the end...

So its the last and final blog.  Not quite certain why I'm still writing this though.  Since obviously the mid-night hour has passed and any sort of efforts made henceforth will be null and void.  Pointless; literally.  This exercise has just further ingrained a fact that I've known for a while, that I'd be absolute rubbish in an online course.  Due dates outside of a class room completely elude me.  I think its the lack of a physical location requirement that really throws me off.  It makes it so easy for due dates to just sneakily pass on by.  I tend to get wrapped up in some project (admittedly not always school projects) and not realize the time until its time for bed.  Anywho...  Enough of the blathering and onto the artsy stuff.

For this blog's grouping of chapters, it was a little more difficult to pick out a piece to really delve into and take a long hard look at.  This probably had a lot to do with my own disliking of the bible and religion in general.  Luckily, there was a diamond in the rough!  Once again, I decided to go with a bit of architecture (can't go wrong with architecture!).  A CASTLE!  No, not the hit ABC comedy-drama series featuring the exploits of Kate Beckett and Richard Castle solving the mysteries of the NYPD, one episode at a time.  But a real life, made out of stone, knights in shining armor kind of castle.


Who as a child, growing up, wasn't absolutely enthralled by the idea of a castle?  Or enamored by the tales of the brave and gleaming knights riding out of their keep to fight off evil and protect the innocent.  Sure the stories may be fantastical fiction, but the castles aren't.  The castles are very much real.  I have always loved castles.  The HUGE stone structures, MASSIVE sprawling walls, and all the tiny little details that made each one unique and (mostly) livable.  Above is Dover Castle (if only it was actually in OUR Dover).  THE largest castle currently in England.


This castle in particular is quite astounding.  I love how its built upon a tiered hill, with each of its defensive walls topping a steep rise.  Not only does this make the structure quite the fortified position, but also quite the site to behold.  Even with multiple thick and high walls surrounding the Dover Castle, from the side you'd still be able to see each ascending wall with the keep atop the pinnacle.  With water along one wall and the high vantage point, I'm sure the view from the top of the castle is quite the astonishing sight.

The keep itself is built very much like most structures of its time.  Its a tall structure intending to keep out attackers and provide a good perch for lookouts of danger.  Along the tops of the wall appears another common element, the crenelations.  This was not only a defensive barrier against arrows and other projectiles, but also a form of decoration to break up the monotony of the wall tops.

The walls about the keep are also interesting.  I like that the walls have such an organic shape to them, despite having obviously been built by man.  They snake along and down and around the natural contours of the land.  The vibrancy of the whole area also just adds such a level of beauty to it.  The bright green grass and vines climbing the walls just adds a splash of color to what would have been just the bleak browns and grays of stone.

Overall, I think the Dover Castle is a magnificent piece of masonry and engineering.  Not only is it a beautiful structure but it also served a purpose.  Its quite rare that you see something that's built to be strong and tough and impenetrable that's also so pleasing to look upon.  This is definitely someplace that I'd love to visit some day.  -FIN

4 comments:

  1. So sad this is actually your last post. You always bring a different element to the image about which you are commenting. I love how you point out its organic shape - something that I had not thought about. The arial view would be quite different than the one from the ground. Inside, most of this castles were oppressive and cold feeling (likely because of the stone). A fortress like this would have been filled with people and animals and their sewage, making it a very smelly and loud place. It is nice that we can visit as tourists and see it as pristine - perhaps as the architect had envisioned it.

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  2. I really enjoy how the layout of the castle is organic, while the buildings are more geometrical. As you said before, it would be cool to have this Castle in "our Dover." Can you imagine how much fun it would be to be in that castle? We would find all kinds of things and places to play hid and seek. I just dont want to end up in the ditch...I mean "moat."

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  3. I liked the layout of the castle as well. It's very interesting and quite unique. I also love the landscape surrounding it, which obviously was changed by man to support the building. The landscape itself could almost be considered a work of art.

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  4. I would love to visit this place, how it's built makes for an interesting entrance, I'd kind of like to pull a James Bond, and climb up the cliff, even though apparently that part is heavily guarded.

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