Ahillside castle is acastle built on the side of a hill above much of the surrounding terrain but below the summit itself. It is thus a type ofhill castle and emerged inEurope in the second half of the 11th century. As a result of the particular danger to the site from attacks on the castle from the rising ground above it, this weak point is usually strongly protected by ashield wall or aBergfried. Often a combination of these two passive defensive works were used.
The advantage of a hillside castle was that itswell was much less deep than that of ahilltop castle. The boring of the well was often the most expensive and time-consuming element in the overall construction of a castle. Often, however, its water supply was ensured with the additional help of donkeys aspack animals, entailing the construction of special donkey tracks.
There are numerous hillside castles in the GermanCentral Uplands, especially in stream and river valleys, for example on theMiddle Rhine. They were often built as customs posts (Zollburgen) and lay close to trading routes. In all they make up less than 1% of all medieval castles as categorised by topographic location, because they had enormous strategic disadvantages as a result of being dominated by higher ground on the uphill side.[1]
Whereas hilltop castles tend to have good inter-visibility with other castle sites, the restricted view of hillside castles such asEwloe Castle means they were used to monitor movement along particular transport routes.[2]
Examples of hillside castles includeKatz Castle inSankt Goarshausen,Ehrenfels Castle inRüdesheim and theRietburg nearRhodt in thePalatinate.