
Motte
Cultural Positioning
Authority Records (1)
Source Registry (1)
- Artsy (bulk)Tier 1 · Institutional85%
Why this artist matters now
A motte-and-bailey castle is a European fortification with a wooden or stone keep situated on a raised area of ground called a motte, accompanied by a walled courtyard, or bailey, surrounded by a protective ditch and palisade. Relatively easy to build with unskilled labour, but still militarily formidable, these castles were built across northern Europe from the 10th century onwards, spreading from Normandy and Anjou in France, into the Holy Roman Empire, as well as the Low Countries it controlled, in the 11th century, when these castles were popularized in the area that became the Netherlands. The Normans introduced the design into England and Wales. Motte-and-bailey castles were adopted in Scotland, Ireland, and Denmark in the 12th and 13th centuries. By the end of the 13th century, the design was largely superseded by alternative forms of fortification, but the earthworks remain a prominent feature in many countries.
Source: Artsy · Trust score: 85% · Updated 1mo ago
Taste overlap and adjacency
Artworks (11)
Artwork sources (3)
- Cleveland Museum of Art7 published7 img
- Art Institute Chicago3 published3 img
- Rijksmuseum1 published1 img
Per-Artwork Provenance Chains (top 8)
- 1828 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1828 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1822 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1817 · Rijksmuseum · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1828 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1828 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1828 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number
- 1810 · Cleveland · 1 provUrl Pattern Extraction 2026-05-27·accession_number




