Device Forts

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The Device Forts are a series of artillery fortifications built in England by Henry VIII. After his divorce of Catherine of Aragon left England politically isolated, a treaty between France and Spain in 1538 aroused fears of invasion. Although the threat was short-lived, it stimulated the largest defence programme since Saxon times. Henry took a personal interest in the military engineering techniques of the time, and approved and amended the designs himself.

[edit] Examples

Some 30 works were started in 1539, but the key ones are forts at:

All of these survive except Sandown, Kent, lost to coastal erosion.

[edit] Design

They are generally in the form of a central round tower surrounded by a variety of concentric elements. Short and squat, with normally 3 tiers of long-distance offensive armament and a couple of tiers of defensive armament. The bays had wide splays for easy traverse of the guns, walls were thick and curved to deflect shot, and the medieval portcullises, murderholes and drawbridges were perpetuated.

Later ones in the chain, however, took into account more recent developments and were of a more angular form, with triangular bastions, as at Yarmouth.

[edit] See also

Device Forts
Kent and Sussex: Sandown Castle | Deal Castle | Walmer Castle | Sandgate Castle | Camber Castle
Solent: Southsea Castle | Hurst Castle | Calshot Castle | Yarmouth Castle
South West: Portland Castle | Pendennis Castle | St Mawes Castle