Do you ever see pictures of amazing Medieval creations in Minecraft? Do you want to know how to build things like that? It's easy to get started!
Part 1
Choosing Your Materials
1. If you are in creative mode, use as many blocks as you can. If you are in survival mode, you may not have as many choices, but you can still build a pretty cool Medieval building out of your average wood and cobblestone. Common blocks for medieval buildings include:
- Cobblestone
- Spruce planks/ logs
- Oak planks/ logs
- Spruce leaves
- Fences
- Redstone lamps (and a redstone power source)
- Carpet
- Stone
- Iron bars
- Hay bales
- Trap doors
- Stairs (jungle stairs and bricks stairs are good for roofs in the Conquest Resource Pack)
- Wool of any color
Part 2
Choosing Your Decoration Materials
1. Use carpet in your building. Carpet is easy to craft for survival mode, and it adds color to your house. The best colors of carpet for Medieval houses are:
- Dark green
- White
- Red
- Cyan
2. Add a fun design to your carpeting. Dig a hole in the ground where you want the carpet to be. Place signs in a pattern in the hole. Signs can be tilted and placed on angles, so get creative! Then place the carpet on top of the signs by sneaking and right-clicking on top of the sign. You now have a carpet with a fun design!
Part 3
Building Your House
1. Make the frame. Use cobblestone or similar, and darkish wood (logs) (the wood being diagonal one block out from your cobblestone rectangle unlike the current picture). Try to make the frame a irregular cuboid shape, like a large box with a smaller irregular cuboid on top.
2. Fill in the bottom layer of the frame with your desired block.
3. Add windows on the second layer, if you are going for more of a fancy or castle themed building, use stained glass. Remember, your avatar is 2 blocks high, so try to make most of the windows 1 blocks higher than the floor (unless you want massive feeling windows), so your avatar can see out of the windows. Windows can be made out of just about any transparent block. Stained/normal glass is common, or iron bars can be used if you want to make sure people take longer breaking in and so that you have that little bit more protection.
4. Continue to fill in the rest of the house with your desired block. Now, you should have a basic house with a few windows. Not medieval enough? Don't worry! The key parts of medieval building are the tiny details and decorations, which we will go over in a few minutes.
5. Add the roof. This may consist of stairs and slabs, but be careful! A wide house means a wide roof, but if you use stairs for every level of roof, then this will result in an awkward roof. This can be fixed by having only a few levels of stairs, and then slabs.
Part 4
Making the Exterior Details
1. Add some details. Start by adding doors and a walkway made of cobblestone. Start to furnish it with the following:
- Stairs on the corners (upside-down stairs can be placed near the roof or anywhere else on the building)
- Trapdoors placed on blank areas
- A simple redstone lamp (made using fence posts)
- Tiny indentations made with stairs (replace blocks in the wall with stairs facing outwards)
2. Add a small farm. Every Minecrafter needs a garden or a farm, right? Add a small farm with wheat and a few trees to give your house that "organic" feeling. Maybe even use some bone meal to grow some plants around your house. For even more of an old, medieval-like feeling of being a farmer, construct a mob farm!
3. Add a few horses. Most medieval knights have horses! Add a small fenced in area with a horse in armor and some hay bales, and maybe even a cauldron filled with water as a water source for the horse.
Part 5
Furnishing the Interior
1. Decide where each room will go. Some rooms to think about are listed below. Obviously, these are all optional. You might have not built a very large house, and that's okay! Just pick a few of these rooms:
- Basement (if you want to dig an extra hole)
- Kitchen
- Dining room
- Bedroom
- Living room
2. Use plenty of furnaces and chests in the kitchen. Add a sink made of a cauldron filled with water, and any other kitchen furnishings.
3. Make a wooden table for the dining room. Search Google for "Minecraft chairs" and you can find some cool chair ideas too.
4. Add a nightstand and some flowers in a pot next to your bed in the bedroom. The wall can be nicely decorated with a painting or two.
5. Skip a bathroom. The reason you don't want to make a bathroom is because back in the medieval days, people didn't have bathrooms, they had pots. You could put down a flower pot to try to capture that same feeling. Or you can still make a bathroom, if you want.
6. Make the hallways. You can try using stairs to create indentations in the floor, and carpet wherever it looks best.
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