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A Castle Crossword for Helen

Across
The sloping base of a wall, which made the wall more stable and ensured that objects dropped from the top of the walls would bounce towards an enemy.
This document relieved the town's residents from paying some taxes, and allowed them to elect a mayor and hold a weekly market.
This building was supported by short, smooth stone columns to keep dampness and mice away from the sacks of grain inside of it.
King Edward decided that building these throughout Wales would be the best way to keep Wales conquered.
A temporary wooden framework made of logs lashed together that builders stood on as the walls grew higher.
He drove two oxen, Clarisse and Genevieve.
The imaginary man whom, in this story, Edward appoints lord of Aberwyvern.
The wall surrounding the open area in the center of the castle.
This was planned as a series of independent sections.
These temporary wooden balconies were erected along the tops of walls when an attack was expected.
This was a heavy tree trunk tipped with iron used to bash in a town's fortifications.
They built the walls and used levels, plumb bobs, and plumb lines to make sure the walls were straight.
These provided all of the light for the castle's rooms during the daytime.
These men used augers, frame saws, braces, and bits.
The group of soldiers stationed by King Edward in Aberwyvern to fight the Welsh if they attacked.
A heavy timber grille that could be lowered to block the entrance to the gatehouse.
Down
This important member of the castle staff was responsible for taking care of the weapons.
What the castle was eventually used for in Aberwyvern when peace prevailed in Wales.
The king of England who tried to conquer Scotland and Wales
These large arched timbers held up the roof of the great hall.
This shed housed Lord Kevin's hunting birds.
This was the only stone building in the town.
This wall, twenty feet high and eight feet thick, was the outermost defensive wall of the castle.
The first arrivals to the new town chose the lots that were closest to this important feature.
These men dug a tunnel under the walls to undermine the walls and make them collapse.
The combination of reeds, sticks, and mud that filled in the space between timbers for half-timber houses.
These provided housing for the most important residents of the castle, and, in the event of an attack, could be sealed off and defended independently.
These men split stones with pickaxes and moved them with crowbars.
Holes above the entryway of a gatehouse through which objects could be dropped on an unwanted visitor.
The most vulnerable parts of the castle, and therefore the most carefully planned parts of the castle.
A flat timber platform fastened to an axle that provided the only way over the castle moat to the outer gatehouse.
This tank collected rainwater, which was then piped to the castle's kitchen.
These higher parts of the crenelations contained arrow loops to allow defenders to shoot at enemies while being protected.