The Medieval Warfare museum
A unique museum in the heart of a fortified castle
The castle itself houses the Medieval Warfare museum. The museum’s collection includes more than 250 weapons and pieces of old armour. Swords, crossbows, staff weapons, chain mail and a ribaudequin are exhibited in the seigneurial lodgings of the fortress.
Furnishings from the 14th and 15th centuries complete the collections.
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NEW ACQUISITIONS 2025
Bourguignotte
Date: circa 1575
Weight: 972 g
Origin: Germany
Dimensions: 30 cm high
An emblematic helmet from the second half of the 16th century, it is recognizable by its prominent crest, short pointed visor, and movable perforated cheekpieces for hearing.
Against a gilded and blackened acid-etched background, intertwined plant motifs are displayed, punctuated by fantastical dragons and musical instruments. These ornaments, blending warrior power and court culture, suggest a prestigious production.
Powder Flask
Date: late 16th – early 17th centuries
Weight: 616 g
Origin: France or Italy
Dimensions: 25,5 cm high
This remarkable wooden powder flask, reinforced with gilded metal borders decorated with fleur-de-lis, was used to measure the black powder required to load early firearms.
Its trapezoidal shape, covered in burgundy silk velvet, its attachment cords, and their period trimmings demonstrate rich ornamental craftsmanship and an unexpected refinement on the battlefield.
Veuglaire
Date: circa 1450
Weight: 120 kg
Origin: France
Dimensions: 217 cm long
Mobility and rapid reloading: this cannon with an interchangeable powder box marked a turning point in the decisive advances in artillery on the battlefields of the late Middle Ages.
Probably used during the French victory at Castillon (1453)—which traditionally marks the end of the Hundred Years’ War—it was found in the bed of the Dordogne River, half a millennium later, still retaining remnants of black powder and fragments of wood from its original gun carriage.
Discover the collection through a selection of some of the museum’s pieces
Armour
Individual weapons
Powder artillery
Siege engines
Castelnaud Castle presents exceptional, life-size reconstitutions of siege engines from the Middle Ages. All the artillery, whether traction powered or with counterweights, was made out of wood and few have survived to the present day. The only printed sources that allow for their reconstitution are account books, miniatures, collections of drawings and treatises by military engineers from the 13th and 14th centuries such as Villard de Honnecourt and Konrad Kyeser. Medieval iconography was meticulously studied to allow for the recreation of full-size machines.