But homes today don't normally feature ramparts, drawbridges, moats and six-foot thick stone walls to keep out unwanted visitors. |
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From there, the eye glances to the craggy ramparts of Edinburgh Castle, perched in the distance. |
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Earlier excavations revealed stone ramparts, a palisade and waterlogged remains in the ditches, including what looks like a wheel and a ladder. |
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The wall is part of the castle fortifications and if the weather is warm enough to use the terrace you can hear the piper on the ramparts. |
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Inside the layout was rectilinear, with small single-room square houses lining the ramparts and a series of straight streets. |
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Still, I have to wonder about the raucous calls we hear for storming ramparts in far-off places. |
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The castle had recently been rebuilt with ramparts and counterscarps, and its capture cost the Spanish thousands of troops. |
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From Angouleme, a hilltop town crowned with medieval ramparts and dominated by a magnificent 12 th-century cathedral, the river is your guide. |
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The fort serves as a playground for the children, who hide in its ramparts and race along the walls. |
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From its ramparts and towers, they could see and control all movements from the coast to inland cities. |
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Hill-slope enclosures may have been occupied by livestock herders who used the gaps between the ramparts to corral animals. |
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Minqin also planted ramparts of rose willow, buckthorn and other deep-root trees in a 200-mile file along the desert fronts. |
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But when the ramparts went up they bricked up all the stations underneath them. |
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Remnants of the city's forum, basilica, temple, ramparts, oil mills and a huge triumphal arch are well preserved. |
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In the centre, the old town, or medina, is walled in by ramparts and gives it an historical and cultural dimension. |
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Then, like a magic trick, you see its massive ramparts and golden sandstone towers, exotic and beautiful. |
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In medieval Veliko Turnovo, royalty and high nobility lived in relative safety behind the massive ramparts of Tsarevets Hill. |
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About 3.9 billion years ago, one of these formed the great Imbrium Basin, or Mare Imbrium, and its mountain ramparts. |
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Excavations between 1963 and 1965 demonstrated that the ramparts were composed of chalk rubble with timber revetments. |
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The entrance through the outer ramparts was joined to the inner gateway by an ingeniously defended approach. |
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This area is in the north of the old town, just before the ramparts, and not far from the railway station. |
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Towards the western end of the ramparts there is an obvious break where a path leads through rocky portals to gain a grassy bealach. |
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Semicircular solid bastions were spaced at regular intervals along the ramparts. |
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Soon after, the gateway, entrance passage, and parts of the ramparts were attacked and heavily burnt. |
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Its great stone ramparts had a probable total circuit of a third of a mile and were surrounded by a 14-acre estate which included six orchards. |
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It was a tall, grand old building of stone and steel, with ornate windows and gargoyles leering down at her from the ramparts. |
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Edward II's lover, Piers Gaveston, is said to haunt the ramparts of Scarborough Castle, luring unwitting victims to their death over the walls. |
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With the tributes of war and taxes, he erected tall and strong turrets at every corner of his city and strengthened the ramparts of Abeluma. |
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At exactly midday, the cannon is fired and a frisson of excitement runs through the small crowd of tourists gathered on the ramparts. |
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And framing the curving arches and flowing ramparts and parapets was the incredibly rich wood of the giant trees. |
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Ashe came up to the ramparts of the castle often to reflect on events and occurrences, and generally to get away from everyone else. |
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Here Fort Mackinac was built on the high bluff with stone ramparts and three blockhouses that remain today in a state park. |
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These towers, called La Guaita, La Cesta, and Il Montale, are still linked by ramparts and walls constructed from the local sandstone. |
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This narrow headland was defended as a cliff castle with three stone ramparts across its neck. |
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Vestiges of the city's forum, basilica, temple, ramparts, bastions and oil mills are also well preserved. |
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Take the track to the left of the castle ramparts, rounding small sewage works on its left. |
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In a siege, the ramparts of the castle were often bombarded by large projectiles from catapults. |
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On 21 May, having sapped up to the glacis of the city ramparts, which heavy bombardment had almost made untenable, Versaillais troops entered the city. |
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The road running westwards through the ramparts led to Chelmsford. |
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In the middle of Hue, however, was a virtually impregnable fortress known as the Citadel, with towers, ramparts, moats, concrete walls, and bunkers. |
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Walk From the north end of the High Street, go left to the bay below the ramparts of the ruined castle, the site of which has been a stronghold since Roman times. |
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The majority of the hillforts of Southern France are defended by walls or ramparts and ditches encircling hilltops which overlook important commercial or military routes. |
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Most commoners tried to get as close to the protective ramparts as possible, building houses that clung to the steep sides of the Yantra gorges like molluscs on a rock. |
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Neon lights decorated official buildings and literally hundreds of oil-lit earthen lamps covered balconies and ramparts, stairs and yards of homes. |
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A switchback ramp scales a battered wall of rough granite blocks and you wonder if defenders will appear on the ramparts above and drive you off with rocks. |
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The vast space enclosed by the ramparts have allowed the occupants to farm the area, with lynchets spreading across the camp and encroaching on the flint mines to the west. |
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But the predictable rush to the partisan ramparts leads to situational ethics rather than constructive action. |
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From behind the grass covered ramparts above, mortars and heavy guns on the surrounding terreplein would provide heavy bombardment against the enemy. |
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The massive ramparts of the Citadel overlook the whole city. |
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Against this sulfurous backdrop, Democrats and Republicans alike feel compelled to man the ramparts for their core constituencies. |
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The roofs have collapsed, the ruined towers, the high gate unbarred, frost in the mortar, the ramparts gaping, rent, fallen, gnawed through by age. |
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But Gloag is understood to be furious that the pylons and their crackling, high-voltage cables will be unmissable from the ancient ramparts of the castle. |
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We would set aside all other agendas and disputes as secondary, and go to the ramparts until the threat was repelled. |
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The Rev. Pat Robertson and Rush Limbaugh rushed to the ramparts immediately. |
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I walk among palm-fringed paths, through old ramparts and walls. |
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There are no signs of the additional ramparts reported by William Hals in about 1730, and the site is now surrounded by housing with allotments. |
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The moated ramparts, the embattled towers, and the trophied halls, are magnificent and venerable, but useless. |
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In the east, the 1st Rifle Brigade and parties of the QVR on the outer ramparts and the Marck and Calais canals repulsed a determined attack. |
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They have the only walls set on high ramparts and they retain all their principal gateways. |
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These were all living behind ramparts of rivers and woods and therefore inaccessible to attack. |
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The French garrison of Fort Nieulay, outside the western ramparts surrendered after a bombardment. |
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There are traces of earthen ramparts on the landward side, and remains of a structure which may have been a guard's cell. |
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The Sigiriya rock fortress is surrounded by an extensive network of ramparts and moats. |
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While the concept of ditches, ramparts, and stone walls as defensive measures is ancient, raising a motte is a medieval innovation. |
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These bases were prepared in advance, often by capturing an estate and augmenting its defences with surrounding ditches, ramparts and palisades. |
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But when the chamade was beat, and the corporal helped my uncle up it, and followed with the colours in his hand, to fix them upon the ramparts. |
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Voters grabbed their pitchforks Tuesday night and came over the ramparts. |
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There, on the ramparts of the forts, stood Nicholas Koorn, armed to the teeth, flourishing a brass-hilted sword. |
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It went now between long straight ramparts of hills that showed enormous and dark against a sky cleared to twilight by the unrisen moon. |
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The thick ramparts, rising into the sky, are crowned by merlons, and have three gateways with bastions on either side. |
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A ditch was dug around the settlement and it was fortified with earth ramparts. |
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The archers on the ramparts, naturally, saw them plain, as did the towermaster in the 'murder hole' above the gate. |
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A castle with earthen ramparts, a motte, and timber defences and buildings could have been constructed by an unskilled workforce. |
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The limits of the city as marked by the ramparts built in 1592 are now marked by the Garden Ring. |
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Increasingly, there seems a sense of embattlement among them, as they put up the ramparts against a UK Government they have convinced themselves is on an anti-Welsh crusade. |
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The construction of modern ramparts around Berwick in the sixteenth century rendered the castle obsolete and its later history is one of steady decline. |
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It was a system of ramparts, camps, watchtowers and burgi in the Julian Alps that was to protect the mountain passes into Italy, especially the Via Gemina, from invaders. |
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