Posted April 08, 2015
Fire ON a wall would not do much, I agree. Fire UNDER a wall is a very different beast.
Digging a mineshaft under a wall, putting flamable stuff in the hole, then setting fire to it was the bane of medieval fortresses. It was not easy, and siege engineers had a dangerous job, but they were the quick-and-dirty way to destroy a castle, unless it was built on hard, rocky ground. (Which the Caer is not : It looks like it was built near a river, on an alluvial plain. The old dungeon itself, with its links to the maze, is rooted in the bedrock, but the younger external walls? Doubt it)
Gunpowder just scaled up the situation, rendering the classic medieval castles pretty much useless when it became widespread.
Digging a mineshaft under a wall, putting flamable stuff in the hole, then setting fire to it was the bane of medieval fortresses. It was not easy, and siege engineers had a dangerous job, but they were the quick-and-dirty way to destroy a castle, unless it was built on hard, rocky ground. (Which the Caer is not : It looks like it was built near a river, on an alluvial plain. The old dungeon itself, with its links to the maze, is rooted in the bedrock, but the younger external walls? Doubt it)
Gunpowder just scaled up the situation, rendering the classic medieval castles pretty much useless when it became widespread.