Castlemap is a free interactive map of 2,400 of the world's greatest castles, fortresses and palaces across 131 countries. Pan and zoom the night map above, click any point for a photo and quick facts, or open a landmark's page for its full story and exact location. From medieval strongholds and hilltop citadels to grand royal palaces, it is the most complete castle map online.
Find castles and fortresses in the countries that have the most:
Browse all 131 countries on the map →
See all 2,400 castles & fortresses →
Castlemap is built entirely from open data: facts, founding dates and coordinates from Wikidata, photographs from Wikimedia Commons, stories from Wikipedia, and the night basemap from OpenFreeMap and Natural Earth. Rather than plotting every fortification on Earth, the atlas curates the 2,400 most significant castles, fortresses and palaces — each verified to have a real photo, an English Wikipedia article and exact coordinates — balanced across 131 countries so the map stays explorable.
Missing a castle you know? The map refreshes from Wikidata, so the best way to add one is to improve its Wikidata entry: exact coordinates, a Commons photo and an English Wikipedia article make it eligible for the next refresh. Edits to the commons improve every atlas built on them — not just this one.
Castlemap is a free interactive map of 2,400 of the world's great castles, fortresses and palaces across 131 countries. Every landmark is plotted on the map and has its own page with a photo, founding century, story and coordinates.
2,400 landmarks in total — 1,226 castles, 365 fortresses, 712 palaces and 97 ruins — across 131 countries.
In the Castlemap atlas, France has the most with 181, followed by Italy, Germany, England, Japan. You can browse castles in any of 131 countries.
Yes — Castlemap is completely free and needs no account. Open the map and start exploring the world's castles right away.
Castle facts and coordinates come from Wikidata, photos from Wikimedia Commons, and the basemap from OpenFreeMap and Natural Earth — all open data.
Castlemap is curated rather than exhaustive. Europe alone has tens of thousands of castle sites — many towns and hilltops have one — so the atlas maps the 2,400 most significant worldwide: those with a documented story, a real photo and exact coordinates, balanced across countries so the map stays explorable.
Yes — through open data. Castlemap refreshes from Wikidata, so to get a castle added, improve its Wikidata entry with exact coordinates, a Wikimedia Commons photo and an English Wikipedia article. Well-documented castles become eligible for the next data refresh, and your edit improves every map built on open data.
More atlases: TrainRouter · Sunshine Atlas · Beachmap