Fortunately the Normans only built in one corner and I have (somewhere) a map of what the coastline was like at the time. Also the wall on one side is mostly down so I can use that as the point of attack, which come to think of it was probably where it was.
There's the potential for a weak point. One year miapatrick and I spent some time at Butser Ancient Farm building part of a Roman villa from the same sort of flints. We were all lectured firmly on not just sloshing on the mortar and sticking the flints in anyhow. This was fresh in the mind when we visited Pevensey and found a stretch about six feet high built just the way we were told not to, and immediately above it a beautifully constructed stretch. "Guess at what point the centurion came along and saw what they were doing," miapatrick said.
The thing is, if there was a stretch like that at the fallen part, siege artillery could batter its way in.
The whole thing is a problem, though. Most "barbarians" were like the Frank who said "I have no quarrel with walls"; they just left fortified positions alone. The only one who did attack and take fortified positions was Attila, who is known to have used Roman military engineers.
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There's the potential for a weak point. One year miapatrick and I spent some time at Butser Ancient Farm building part of a Roman villa from the same sort of flints. We were all lectured firmly on not just sloshing on the mortar and sticking the flints in anyhow. This was fresh in the mind when we visited Pevensey and found a stretch about six feet high built just the way we were told not to, and immediately above it a beautifully constructed stretch. "Guess at what point the centurion came along and saw what they were doing," miapatrick said.
The thing is, if there was a stretch like that at the fallen part, siege artillery could batter its way in.
The whole thing is a problem, though. Most "barbarians" were like the Frank who said "I have no quarrel with walls"; they just left fortified positions alone. The only one who did attack and take fortified positions was Attila, who is known to have used Roman military engineers.