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The first one is Caerlaverock Castle, Scotland’s only triangular fortress. A moated stronghold shaped like a shield, built around the 1270s by the Maxwell family. Its twin towers, water‑filled ditch, and wild marshland setting make it feel half‑ruin, half‑warrior. Few castles look this fierce and this beautiful at the...

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The Castle of Rocca Calascio in central Italy is older than most modern nation states. Construction began in the 10th century. That makes this castle older than the Inca Empire. Older than the Aztec Empire. Older than the United States, Italy itself, Germany, and France. It was already three centuries old when Marco Polo set out for China. It was already four centuries old when Columbus sailed for the Americas. And it is the highest fortress in the Apennines... It sits 1,460 meters above sea level on a windswept ridge of the Gran Sasso massif. Built exclusively for military purposes, it began as a single watchtower, raised at the highest point of a lookout system that controlled the surrounding territory. From its summit, fire and torch signals could be relayed to other castles across the surrounding mountains, a slow optical telegraph stretched across the Abruzzo. In the 13th century, a walled courtyard was added, with four cylindrical towers at the corners and a taller keep at the center. The lower half of the castle was built with massive blocks of white limestone, the upper half with smaller stones. Up close, you can see the seam where the centuries change. In November 1461, an earthquake struck the region of L'Aquila and tore through the fortress. The town below was rebuilt. The castle was not. Its inhabitants drifted away across the next four hundred years... What survives is the silhouette. Four white towers and a keep, alone on a ridge above the clouds, visible for miles in every direction. It is so cinematic that Hollywood filmed Ladyhawke there in 1985, The Name of the Rose in 1986, and The American in 2010. But you do not need a film to feel it. You climb the path from the village. The wind picks up. The towers come into view. You stand in front of stones that were laid before half of the world's countries existed, on a peak so high that the world below disappears. And for a moment, you understand why human beings have always built things on mountaintops... If you enjoyed this, I write a weekly newsletter for over 50,000 readers who love rediscovering history through the beauty of the past. You can join us here: Don't miss tomorrow's article.

James Lucas

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