Malmö, Sweden
13th century
Vaxholm, Sweden
1760-1803
Linköping, Sweden
c. 1120
Stockholm, Sweden
1906
Haninge, Sweden
13th century
Ystad, Sweden
ca. 1200
Gothenburg, Sweden
1856-1859
Eksjö, Sweden
1887-1889
Askersund, Sweden
1664-1670
Gothenburg, Sweden
1914
Stockholm, Sweden
1672-1688
Lund, Sweden
1160s
Karlskrona, Sweden
1720-1744
Sigtuna, Sweden
1230-1255
Nyköping, Sweden
13th century
Karlskrona, Sweden
1697-1709
Örebro, Sweden
Late 1200s
Växjö, Sweden
ca. 1120
Halmstad, Sweden
c. 1432
Gamla Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden
ca. 1164
Château de Niort is a medieval castle in the French town of Niort. It consists of two square towers, linked by a 15th-century building and dominates the Sèvre Niortaise valley.
The two donjons are the only remaining part of the castle. The castle was started by Henry II Plantagenet in the 12th century and completed by Richard the Lionheart. It was defended by a rectangular curtain wall and was damaged during the Wars of Religion. In the 18th century, the castle served as a prison.
The present keeps were the central point of a massive fortress. The southern keep is 28m tall, reinforced with turrets. The northern tower is slightly shorter at 23m. Both are flanked with circular turrets at the corners as well as semicircular buttresses. Each of the towers has a spiral staircase serving the upper floors. The Romanesque architecture is of a high quality with the dressed stones closely jointed.