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Defensive wall

A defensive wall is a fortification usually used to protect a city, town or other settlement from potential aggressors. The walls can range from simple palisades or earthworks to extensive military fortifications with towers, bastions and gates for access to the city.[1] From ancient to modern times, they were used to enclose settlements. Generally, these are referred to as city walls or town walls, although there were also walls, such as the Great Wall of China, Walls of Benin, Hadrian's Wall, Anastasian Wall, and the Atlantic Wall, which extended far beyond the borders of a city and were used to enclose regions or mark territorial boundaries. In mountainous terrain, defensive walls such as letzis were used in combination with castles to seal valleys from potential attack. Beyond their defensive utility, many walls also had important symbolic functions – representing the status and independence of the communities they embraced.

Existing ancient walls are almost always masonry structures, although brick and timber-built variants are also known. Depending on the topography of the area surrounding the city or the settlement the wall is intended to protect, elements of the terrain such as rivers or coastlines may be incorporated in order to make the wall more effective.

Walls may only be crossed by entering the appropriate city gate and are often supplemented with towers. The practice of building these massive walls, though having its origins in prehistory, was refined during the rise of city-states, and energetic wall-building continued into the medieval period and beyond in certain parts of Europe.

Simpler defensive walls of earth or stone, thrown up around hillforts, ringworks, early castles and the like, tend to be referred to as ramparts or banks.

History

 
9th century BC relief of an Assyrian attack on a walled town
 
The lakeside wall of the Yueyang Tower, Yuan dynasty
 
Medieval defensive walls and towers in Szprotawa, Poland, made of field stone and bog iron

Mesopotamia

From very early history to modern times, walls have been a near necessity for every city. Uruk in ancient Sumer (Mesopotamia) is one of the world's oldest known walled cities. Before that, the proto-city of Jericho in the West Bank had a wall surrounding it as early as the 8th millennium BC. The earliest known town wall in Europe is of Solnitsata, built in the 6th or 5th millennium BC.

The Assyrians deployed large labour forces to build new palaces, temples and defensive walls.[2]

Babylon was one of the most famous cities of the ancient world, especially as a result of the building program of Nebuchadnezzar, who expanded the walls and built the Ishtar Gate.

The Persians built defensive walls to protect their territories, notably the Derbent Wall and the Great Wall of Gorgan built on the either sides of the Caspian Sea against nomadic nations.

South Asia

Some settlements in the Indus Valley civilization were also fortified. By about 3500 BC, hundreds of small farming villages dotted the Indus floodplain. Many of these settlements had fortifications and planned streets. The stone and mud brick houses of Kot Diji were clustered behind massive stone flood dykes and defensive walls, for neighboring communities quarreled constantly about the control of prime agricultural land.[3] Mundigak (c. 2500 BC) in present-day south-east Afghanistan has defensive walls and square bastions of sun dried bricks.[4]

Southeast Asia

The concept of a city fully enclosed by walls was not fully developed in Southeast Asia until the arrival of Europeans. However, Burma serves an exception, as they had a longer tradition of fortified walled towns; towns in Burma had city walls by 1566. Besides that, Rangoon in 1755 had stockades made of teak logs on a ground rampart. The city was fortified with six city gates with each gate flanked by massive brick towers.[5][6]

In other areas of Southeast Asia, city walls spread in the 16th and 17th century along with the rapid growth of cities in this period as a need to defend against European naval attack. Ayutthaya built its walls in 1550 and Banten, Jepara, Tuban and Surabaya all had theirs by 1600; while Makassar had theirs by 1634. A sea wall was the main defense for Gelgel. For cities that did not have city walls, the least it would have had was a stockaded citadel. This wooden walled area housed the royal citadel or aristocratic compounds such as in Surakarta and Aceh.[6]

China

Large rammed earth walls were built in ancient China since the Shang Dynasty (c. 1600–1050 BC), as the capital at ancient Ao had enormous walls built in this fashion (see siege for more info). Although stone walls were built in China during the Warring States (481–221 BC), mass conversion to stone architecture did not begin in earnest until the Tang Dynasty (618–907  AD). Sections of the Great Wall had been built prior to the Qin Dynasty (221–207 BC) and subsequently connected and fortified during the Qin dynasty, although its present form was mostly an engineering feat and remodeling of the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644 AD). The large walls of Pingyao serve as one example. Likewise, the walls of the Forbidden City in Beijing were established in the early 15th century by the Yongle Emperor. According to Tonio Andrade, the immense thickness of Chinese city walls prevented larger cannons from being developed, since even industrial era artillery had trouble breaching Chinese walls.[7][8]

Europe

In ancient Greece, large stone walls had been built in Mycenaean Greece, such as the ancient site of Mycenae (famous for the huge stone blocks of its 'cyclopean' walls). In classical era Greece, the city of Athens built a long set of parallel stone walls called the Long Walls that reached their guarded seaport at Piraeus. Exceptions were few, but neither ancient Sparta nor ancient Rome had walls for a long time, choosing to rely on their militaries for defense instead. Initially, these fortifications were simple constructions of wood and earth, which were later replaced by mixed constructions of stones piled on top of each other without mortar.

The Romans later fortified their cities with massive, mortar-bound stone walls. Among these are the largely extant Aurelian Walls of Rome and the Theodosian Walls of Constantinople, together with partial remains elsewhere. These are mostly city gates, like the Porta Nigra in Trier or Newport Arch in Lincoln.

In Central Europe, the Celts built large fortified settlements which the Romans called oppida, whose walls seem partially influenced by those built in the Mediterranean. The fortifications were continuously expanded and improved.

Apart from these, the early Middle Ages also saw the creation of some towns built around castles. These cities were only rarely protected by simple stone walls and more usually by a combination of both walls and ditches. From the 12th century AD hundreds of settlements of all sizes were founded all across Europe, which very often obtained the right of fortification soon afterwards. Several medieval town walls have survived into the modern age, such as the walled towns of Austria, walls of Tallinn, or the town walls of York and Canterbury in England, as well as Nordlingen, Dinkelsbühl and Rothenburg ob der Tauber in Germany. In Spain, Avila and Tossa del Mar hosts surviving medieval walls while Lugo has an intact Roman wall.

The founding of urban centers was an important means of territorial expansion and many cities, especially in central and eastern Europe, were founded for this purpose during the period of Eastern settlement. These cities are easy to recognise due to their regular layout and large market spaces. The fortifications of these settlements were continuously improved to reflect the current level of military development.

Gunpowder era

Chinese city walls

 
Remains of a defensive wall of Prince Qin Mansion, a citadel within Xi'an
 
The Stone City is a wall in Nanjing dated to the Six Dynasties (220~589). Almost all of the original city is gone, but portions of the city wall remain. Not to be confused with the City Wall of Nanjing.

While gunpowder and cannons were invented in China, China never developed wall breaking artillery to the same extent as other parts of the world. Part of the reason is probably because Chinese walls were already highly resistant to artillery and discouraged increasing the size of cannons.[9] In the mid-twentieth century a European expert in fortification commented on their immensity: "in China … the principal towns are surrounded to the present day by walls so substantial, lofty, and formidable that the medieval fortifications of Europe are puny in comparison."[9] Chinese walls were thick. The eastern wall of Ancient Linzi, established in 859 BC, had a maximum thickness of 43 metres and an average thickness of 20-30 metres.[10] Ming prefectural and provincial capital walls were 10 to 20 metres (33 to 66 ft) thick at the base and 5 to 10 metres (16 to 33 ft) at the top.

In Europe the height of wall construction was reached under the Roman Empire, whose walls often reached 10 metres (33 ft) in height, the same as many Chinese city walls, but were only 1.5 to 2.5 metres (4 ft 11 in to 8 ft 2 in) thick. Rome's Servian Walls reached 3.6 and 4 metres (12 and 13 ft) in thickness and 6 to 10 metres (20 to 33 ft) in height. Other fortifications also reached these specifications across the empire, but all these paled in comparison to contemporary Chinese walls, which could reach a thickness of 20 metres (66 ft) at the base in extreme cases. Even the walls of Constantinople which have been described as "the most famous and complicated system of defence in the civilized world,"[11] could not match up to a major Chinese city wall.[12] Had both the outer and inner walls of Constantinople been combined they would have only reached roughly a bit more than a third the width of a major wall in China.[12] According to Philo the width of a wall had to be 4.5 metres (15 ft) thick to be able to withstand ancient (non-gunpowder) siege engines.[13] European walls of the 1200s and 1300s could reach the Roman equivalents but rarely exceeded them in length, width, and height, remaining around 2 metres (6 ft 7 in) thick. It is apt to note that when referring to a very thick wall in medieval Europe, what is usually meant is a wall of 2.5 metres (8 ft 2 in) in width, which would have been considered thin in a Chinese context.[14] There are some exceptions such as the Hillfort of Otzenhausen, a Celtic ringfort with a thickness of 40 metres (130 ft) in some parts, but Celtic fort-building practices died out in the early medieval period.[15] Andrade goes on to note that the walls of the marketplace of Chang'an were thicker than the walls of major European capitals.[14]

Aside from their immense size, Chinese walls were also structurally different from the ones built in medieval Europe. Whereas European walls were mostly constructed of stone interspersed with gravel or rubble filling and bonded by limestone mortar, Chinese walls had tamped earthen cores which absorbed the energy of artillery shots.[16] Walls were constructed using wooden frameworks which were filled with layers of earth tamped down to a highly compact state, and once that was completed the frameworks were removed for use in the next wall section. Starting from the Song dynasty these walls were improved with an outer layer of bricks or stone to prevent corrosion, and during the Ming, earthworks were interspersed with stone and rubble.[16] Most Chinese walls were also sloped rather than vertical to better deflect projectile energy.[17]

The defensive response to cannon in Europe was to build relatively low and thick walls of packed earth, which could both withstand the force of cannon balls and support their own, defensive cannon. Chinese wall-building practice was, by happenstance, extremely resistant to all forms of battering. This held true into the twentieth century, when even modern explosive shells had some difficulty in breaking through tamped earth walls.[7]

— Peter Lorge

The Chinese Wall Theory essentially rests on a cost benefit hypothesis, where the Ming recognized the highly resistant nature of their walls to structural damage, and could not imagine any affordable development of the guns available to them at the time to be capable of breaching said walls. Even as late as the 1490s a Florentine diplomat considered the French claim that "their artillery is capable of creating a breach in a wall of eight feet in thickness"[18] to be ridiculous and the French "braggarts by nature".[18] In fact twentieth century explosive shells had some difficulty creating a breach in tamped earthen walls.[7]

We fought our way to Nanking and joined in the attack on the enemy capital in December. It was our unit which stormed the Chunghua Gate. We attacked continuously for about a week, battering the brick and earth walls with artillery, but they never collapsed. The night of December 11, men in my unit breached the wall. The morning came with most of our unit still behind us, but we were beyond the wall. Behind the gate great heaps of sandbags were piled up. We 'cleared them away, removed the lock, and opened the gates, with a great creaking noise. We'd done it! We'd opened the fortress! All the enemy ran away, so we didn't take any fire. The residents too were gone. When we passed beyond the fortress wall we thought we had occupied this city.[19]

— Nohara Teishin, on the Japanese capture of Nanjing in 1937

Bastions and star forts

 
17th-century map of the city of Palmanova, Italy, an example of a Venetian star fort
 
Chinese angled bastion fort, 1638

As a response to gunpowder artillery, European fortifications began displaying architectural principles such as lower and thicker walls in the mid-1400s.[20] Cannon towers were built with artillery rooms where cannons could discharge fire from slits in the walls. However this proved problematic as the slow rate of fire, reverberating concussions, and noxious fumes produced greatly hindered defenders. Gun towers also limited the size and number of cannon placements because the rooms could only be built so big. Notable surviving artillery towers include a seven layer defensive structure built in 1480 at Fougères in Brittany, and a four layer tower built in 1479 at Querfurth in Saxony.[21]

The star fort, also known as the bastion fort, trace italienne, or renaissance fortress, was a style of fortification that became popular in Europe during the 16th century. The bastion and star fort was developed in Italy, where the Florentine engineer Giuliano da Sangallo (1445–1516) compiled a comprehensive defensive plan using the geometric bastion and full trace italienne that became widespread in Europe.[22]

The main distinguishing features of the star fort were its angle bastions, each placed to support their neighbor with lethal crossfire, covering all angles, making them extremely difficult to engage with and attack. Angle bastions consisted of two faces and two flanks. Artillery positions positioned at the flanks could fire parallel into the opposite bastion's line of fire, thus providing two lines of cover fire against an armed assault on the wall, and preventing mining parties from finding refuge. Meanwhile, artillery positioned on the bastion platform could fire frontally from the two faces, also providing overlapping fire with the opposite bastion.[23] Overlapping mutually supporting defensive fire was the greatest advantage enjoyed by the star fort. As a result, sieges lasted longer and became more difficult affairs. By the 1530s the bastion fort had become the dominant defensive structure in Italy.[24]

Outside Europe, the star fort became an "engine of European expansion,"[20] and acted as a force multiplier so that small European garrisons could hold out against numerically superior forces. Wherever star forts were erected the natives experienced great difficulty in uprooting European invaders.[20]

In China, Sun Yuanhua advocated for the construction of angled bastion forts in his Xifashenji so that their cannons could better support each other. The officials Han Yun and Han Lin noted that cannons on square forts could not support each side as well as bastion forts. Their efforts to construct bastion forts, and their results, were limited. Ma Weicheng built two bastion forts in his home county, which helped fend off a Qing incursion in 1638. By 1641, there were ten bastion forts in the county. Before bastion forts could spread any further, the Ming dynasty fell in 1644, and they were largely forgotten as the Qing dynasty was on the offensive most of the time and had no use for them.[25]

Decline

 
Multiple barbicans of Tongji Gate, Nanjing

In the wake of city growth and the ensuing change of defensive strategy, focusing more on the defense of forts around cities, many city walls were demolished. Also, the invention of gunpowder rendered walls less effective, as siege cannons could then be used to blast through walls, allowing armies to simply march through. Today, the presence of former city fortifications can often only be deduced from the presence of ditches, ring roads or parks.

Furthermore, some street names hint at the presence of fortifications in times past, for example when words such as "wall" or "glacis" occur.

In the 19th century, less emphasis was placed on preserving the fortifications for the sake of their architectural or historical value – on the one hand, complete fortifications were restored (Carcassonne), on the other hand many structures were demolished in an effort to modernize the cities. One exception to this is the "monument preservation" law by the Bavarian King Ludwig I of Bavaria, which led to the nearly complete preservation of many monuments such as the Rothenburg ob der Tauber, Nördlingen and Dinkelsbühl. The countless small fortified towns in the Franconia region were also preserved as a consequence of this edict.

Modern era

Walls and fortified wall structures were still built in the modern era. They did not, however, have the original purpose of being a structure able to resist a prolonged siege or bombardment. Modern examples of defensive walls include:

  • Berlin's city wall from the 1730s to the 1860s was partially made of wood. Its primary purpose was to enable the city to impose tolls on goods and, secondarily, also served to prevent the desertion of soldiers from the garrison in Berlin.
  • The Berlin Wall (1961 to 1989) did not exclusively serve the purpose of protection of an enclosed settlement. One of its purposes was to prevent the crossing of the Berlin border between the German Democratic Republic and the West German exclave of west-Berlin.
  • The Nicosia Wall along the Green Line divides North and South Cyprus.
  • In the 20th century and after, many enclaved Jewish settlements in Israeli occupied territory in the West Bank were and are surrounded by fortified walls
  • Mexico–United States barrier, a wall advocated by U.S. President Donald Trump for the Mexico–United States border to prevent illegal immigration, drug smuggling, human trafficking, and entry of potential terrorists[26]
  • Belfast, Northern Ireland by the "peace lines".
  • Gated communities are modern residential neighborhoods where access is controlled, often prohibiting through-travelers or non-residents via a wall and guards

Additionally, in some countries, different embassies may be grouped together in a single "embassy district", enclosed by a fortified complex with walls and towers – this usually occurs in regions where the embassies run a high risk of being target of attacks. An early example of such a compound was the Legation Quarter in Beijing in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Most of these modern city walls are made of steel and concrete. Vertical concrete plates are put together so as to allow the least space in between them, and are rooted firmly in the ground. The top of the wall is often protruding and beset with barbed wire in order to make climbing them more difficult. These walls are usually built in straight lines and covered by watchtowers at the corners. Double walls with an interstitial "zone of fire", as the former Berlin Wall had, are now rare.

In September 2014, Ukraine announced the construction of the "European Rampart" alongside its border with Russia to be able to successfully apply for a visa-free movement with the European Union.[27]

Composition

 
A model of a typical Chinese city wall

At its simplest, a defensive wall consists of a wall enclosure and its gates. For the most part, the top of the walls were accessible, with the outside of the walls having tall parapets with embrasures or merlons. North of the Alps, this passageway at the top of the walls occasionally had a roof.

In addition to this, many different enhancements were made over the course of the centuries:

  • City ditch: a ditch dug in front of the walls, occasionally filled with water to form a moat.
  • Gate tower: a tower built next to, or on top of the city gates to better defend the city gates.
  • Wall tower: a tower built on top of a segment of the wall, which usually extended outwards slightly, so as to be able to observe the exterior of the walls on either side. In addition to arrow slits, ballistae, catapults and cannons could be mounted on top for extra defence.
  • Pre-wall: wall built outside the wall proper, usually of lesser height – the space in between was usually further subdivided by additional walls.
  • Additional obstacles in front of the walls.

The defensive towers of west and south European fortifications in the Middle Ages were often very regularly and uniformly constructed (cf. Ávila, Provins), whereas Central European city walls tend to show a variety of different styles. In these cases the gate and wall towers often reach up to considerable heights, and gates equipped with two towers on either side are much rarer. Apart from having a purely military and defensive purpose, towers also played a representative and artistic role in the conception of a fortified complex. The architecture of the city thus competed with that of the castle of the noblemen and city walls were often a manifestation of the pride of a particular city.

Urban areas outside the city walls, so-called Vorstädte, were often enclosed by their own set of walls and integrated into the defense of the city. These areas were often inhabited by the poorer population and held the "noxious trades". In many cities, a new wall was built once the city had grown outside of the old wall. This can often still be seen in the layout of the city, for example in Nördlingen, and sometimes even a few of the old gate towers are preserved, such as the white tower in Nuremberg. Additional constructions prevented the circumvention of the city, through which many important trade routes passed, thus ensuring that tolls were paid when the caravans passed through the city gates, and that the local market was visited by the trade caravans. Furthermore, additional signaling and observation towers were frequently built outside the city, and were sometimes fortified in a castle-like fashion. The border of the area of influence of the city was often partially or fully defended by elaborate ditches, walls and hedges. The crossing points were usually guarded by gates or gate houses. These defenses were regularly checked by riders, who often also served as the gate keepers. Long stretches of these defenses can still be seen to this day, and even some gates are still intact. To further protect their territory, rich cities also established castles in their area of influence. An example of this practice is the Romanian Bran Castle, which was intended to protect nearby Kronstadt (today's Braşov).

The city walls were often connected to the fortifications of hill castles via additional walls. Thus the defenses were made up of city and castle fortifications taken together. Several examples of this are preserved, for example in Germany Hirschhorn on the Neckar, Königsberg and Pappenheim, Franken, Burghausen in Oberbayern and many more. A few castles were more directly incorporated into the defensive strategy of the city (e.g. Nuremberg, Zons, Carcassonne), or the cities were directly outside the castle as a sort of "pre-castle" (Coucy-le-Chateau, Conwy and others). Larger cities often had multiple stewards – for example Augsburg was divided into a Reichstadt and a clerical city. These different parts were often separated by their own fortifications.

Dimensions of famous city walls

Wall Max width (m) Minimum width (m) Max Height (m) Lowest Height (m) Length (km)
Aurelian Walls 3.5 16 8 19
Ávila 3 12 2.5
Baghdad 45 12 30 18 7
Beijing (inner) 20 12 15 24
Beijing (outer) 15 4.5 7 6 28
Carcassonne 3 8 6 3
Chang'an 16 12 12 26
Dubrovnik 6 1.5 25 1.9
Forbidden City 8.6 6.6 8
Harar 5 3.5
Itchan Kala 6 5 10 2
Jerusalem 2.5 12 4
Khanbaliq 10.6
Linzi 42 26
Luoyang 25 11 12
Marrakech 2 9 20
Nanjing 19.75 7 26 25.1
Nicaea 3.7 9 5
Pingyao 12 3 10 8 6
Seoul (Hanyang doseong)
Servian Wall 4 3.6 10 6 11
Suwon (Hwaseong) 5 3.5
Suzhou 11 5 7
Theodosian Walls (inner) 5.25 12 6
Theodosian Walls (outer) 2 9 8.5 6
Vatican 2.5 8 3
Xi'an 18 12 12 14
Xiangyang 10.8 7.3
Zhongdu 12 24

Gallery

Africa

Americas

Asia

China

Europe

Roman

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Caves, R. W. (2004). Encyclopedia of the City. Routledge. p. 756. ISBN 978-0415862875.
  2. ^ Banister Fletcher's A History of Architecture By Banister Fletcher, Sir, Dan Cruickshank. Published 1996 Architectural Press. Architecture. 1696 pages. ISBN 0-7506-2267-9. p. 20.
  3. ^ The Encyclopedia of World History: ancient, medieval, and modern, chronologically arranged By Peter N. Stearns, William Leonard Langer. Compiled by William L Langer. Published 2001 Houghton Mifflin Books. History / General History. ISBN 0-395-65237-5. p. 17.
  4. ^ Banister Fletcher's A History of Architecture By Banister Fletcher, Sir, Dan Cruickshank. Published 1996 Architectural Press. Architecture. 1696 pages. ISBN 0-7506-2267-9. p. 100.
  5. ^ Hla, U Kan (1978). "Traditional Town Planning in Burma". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 37 (2): 92, 97–98. doi:10.2307/989177. ISSN 0037-9808. JSTOR 989177.
  6. ^ a b Reid, Anthony (1993). "Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce, 1450–1680. Vol. 2: Expansion and Crisis". The Journal of Economic History. Yale University Press. 54 (4): 78, 84, 86–88. doi:10.1017/S0022050700015679. S2CID 154715462.
  7. ^ a b c Lorge 2008, p. 43.
  8. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 103.
  9. ^ a b Andrade 2016, p. 96.
  10. ^ Chang, Kwang-Chih; Xu, Pingfang; Lu, Liancheng; Pingfang, Xu; Wangping, Shao; Zhongpei, Zhang; Renxiang, Wang (January 2005). The Formation of Chinese Civilization: An Archaeological Perspective. ISBN 0300093829.
  11. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 92.
  12. ^ a b Andrade 2016, p. 97.
  13. ^ Purton 2009, p. 363.
  14. ^ a b Andrade 2016, p. 98.
  15. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 339.
  16. ^ a b Andrade 2016, p. 99.
  17. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 100.
  18. ^ a b Andrade 2016, p. 101.
  19. ^ Cook 2000, p. 32.
  20. ^ a b c Andrade 2016, p. 211.
  21. ^ Arnold 2001, p. 37.
  22. ^ Nolan 2006, p. 67.
  23. ^ Arnold 2001, p. 40.
  24. ^ Arnold 2001, p. 45.
  25. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 214.
  26. ^ Davis, Julie Hirschfeld (25 January 2017). "Trump Orders Mexican Border Wall to Be Built and Plans to Block Syrian Refugees". New York Times.
  27. ^ "Yatseniuk: Project Wall to allow Ukraine to get visa-free regime with EU". Interfax-Ukraine.
  28. ^ Seka Brkljača (1996). Urbano biće Bosne i Hercegovine (in Serbo-Croatian). Sarajevo: Međunarodni centar za mir, Institut za istoriju. p. 27. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
  29. ^ "The natural and architectural ensemble of Stolac". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 28 October 2021.

References

  • Andrade, Tonio (2016), The Gunpowder Age: China, Military Innovation, and the Rise of the West in World History, Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-13597-7.
  • Arnold, Thomas (2001), History of Warfare: The Renaissance at War
  • Cook, Haruko Taya (2000), Japan At War: An Oral History, Phoenix Press
  • Lorge, Peter A. (2008), The Asian Military Revolution: from Gunpowder to the Bomb, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-60954-8
  • Monika Porsche: Stadtmauer und Stadtentstehung – Untersuchungen zur frühen Stadtbefestigung im mittelalterlichen Deutschen Reich. - Hertingen, 2000. ISBN 3-930327-07-4.
  • Nolan, Cathal J. (2006), The Age of Wars of Religion, 1000–1650: an Encyclopedia of Global Warfare and Civilization, Vol 1, A-K, vol. 1, Westport & London: Greenwood Press, ISBN 978-0-313-33733-8
  • Purton, Peter (2009), A History of the Early Medieval Siege c. 450–1200, The Boydell Press
  • Purton, Peter (2010), A History of the Late Medieval Siege, 1200–1500, Boydell Press, ISBN 978-1-84383-449-6

External links

  • San Juan City Walls

defensive, wall, expression, used, association, football, glossary, association, football, terms, infantry, formation, shield, wall, confused, with, border, barrier, defensive, wall, fortification, usually, used, protect, city, town, other, settlement, from, p. For the expression used in association football see Glossary of association football terms W For the infantry formation see Shield wall Not to be confused with Border barrier A defensive wall is a fortification usually used to protect a city town or other settlement from potential aggressors The walls can range from simple palisades or earthworks to extensive military fortifications with towers bastions and gates for access to the city 1 From ancient to modern times they were used to enclose settlements Generally these are referred to as city walls or town walls although there were also walls such as the Great Wall of China Walls of Benin Hadrian s Wall Anastasian Wall and the Atlantic Wall which extended far beyond the borders of a city and were used to enclose regions or mark territorial boundaries In mountainous terrain defensive walls such as letzis were used in combination with castles to seal valleys from potential attack Beyond their defensive utility many walls also had important symbolic functions representing the status and independence of the communities they embraced Left to right Walls of Constantinople Hadrian s Wall Servian Wall walls of Pingyao and Nanjing two sections of the Great Wall of China Walls of Dubrovnik Gates of Baghdad walls of the Jaisalmer Fort Existing ancient walls are almost always masonry structures although brick and timber built variants are also known Depending on the topography of the area surrounding the city or the settlement the wall is intended to protect elements of the terrain such as rivers or coastlines may be incorporated in order to make the wall more effective Walls may only be crossed by entering the appropriate city gate and are often supplemented with towers The practice of building these massive walls though having its origins in prehistory was refined during the rise of city states and energetic wall building continued into the medieval period and beyond in certain parts of Europe Simpler defensive walls of earth or stone thrown up around hillforts ringworks early castles and the like tend to be referred to as ramparts or banks Contents 1 History 1 1 Mesopotamia 1 2 South Asia 1 3 Southeast Asia 1 4 China 1 5 Europe 1 6 Gunpowder era 1 6 1 Chinese city walls 1 6 2 Bastions and star forts 1 7 Decline 1 8 Modern era 2 Composition 2 1 Dimensions of famous city walls 3 Gallery 3 1 Africa 3 2 Americas 3 3 Asia 3 4 China 3 5 Europe 3 6 Roman 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory Edit 9th century BC relief of an Assyrian attack on a walled town The lakeside wall of the Yueyang Tower Yuan dynasty Medieval defensive walls and towers in Szprotawa Poland made of field stone and bog iron Mesopotamia Edit From very early history to modern times walls have been a near necessity for every city Uruk in ancient Sumer Mesopotamia is one of the world s oldest known walled cities Before that the proto city of Jericho in the West Bank had a wall surrounding it as early as the 8th millennium BC The earliest known town wall in Europe is of Solnitsata built in the 6th or 5th millennium BC The Assyrians deployed large labour forces to build new palaces temples and defensive walls 2 Babylon was one of the most famous cities of the ancient world especially as a result of the building program of Nebuchadnezzar who expanded the walls and built the Ishtar Gate The Persians built defensive walls to protect their territories notably the Derbent Wall and the Great Wall of Gorgan built on the either sides of the Caspian Sea against nomadic nations South Asia Edit Some settlements in the Indus Valley civilization were also fortified By about 3500 BC hundreds of small farming villages dotted the Indus floodplain Many of these settlements had fortifications and planned streets The stone and mud brick houses of Kot Diji were clustered behind massive stone flood dykes and defensive walls for neighboring communities quarreled constantly about the control of prime agricultural land 3 Mundigak c 2500 BC in present day south east Afghanistan has defensive walls and square bastions of sun dried bricks 4 Southeast Asia Edit The concept of a city fully enclosed by walls was not fully developed in Southeast Asia until the arrival of Europeans However Burma serves an exception as they had a longer tradition of fortified walled towns towns in Burma had city walls by 1566 Besides that Rangoon in 1755 had stockades made of teak logs on a ground rampart The city was fortified with six city gates with each gate flanked by massive brick towers 5 6 In other areas of Southeast Asia city walls spread in the 16th and 17th century along with the rapid growth of cities in this period as a need to defend against European naval attack Ayutthaya built its walls in 1550 and Banten Jepara Tuban and Surabaya all had theirs by 1600 while Makassar had theirs by 1634 A sea wall was the main defense for Gelgel For cities that did not have city walls the least it would have had was a stockaded citadel This wooden walled area housed the royal citadel or aristocratic compounds such as in Surakarta and Aceh 6 China Edit Large rammed earth walls were built in ancient China since the Shang Dynasty c 1600 1050 BC as the capital at ancient Ao had enormous walls built in this fashion see siege for more info Although stone walls were built in China during the Warring States 481 221 BC mass conversion to stone architecture did not begin in earnest until the Tang Dynasty 618 907 AD Sections of the Great Wall had been built prior to the Qin Dynasty 221 207 BC and subsequently connected and fortified during the Qin dynasty although its present form was mostly an engineering feat and remodeling of the Ming Dynasty 1368 1644 AD The large walls of Pingyao serve as one example Likewise the walls of the Forbidden City in Beijing were established in the early 15th century by the Yongle Emperor According to Tonio Andrade the immense thickness of Chinese city walls prevented larger cannons from being developed since even industrial era artillery had trouble breaching Chinese walls 7 8 Europe Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In ancient Greece large stone walls had been built in Mycenaean Greece such as the ancient site of Mycenae famous for the huge stone blocks of its cyclopean walls In classical era Greece the city of Athens built a long set of parallel stone walls called the Long Walls that reached their guarded seaport at Piraeus Exceptions were few but neither ancient Sparta nor ancient Rome had walls for a long time choosing to rely on their militaries for defense instead Initially these fortifications were simple constructions of wood and earth which were later replaced by mixed constructions of stones piled on top of each other without mortar The Romans later fortified their cities with massive mortar bound stone walls Among these are the largely extant Aurelian Walls of Rome and the Theodosian Walls of Constantinople together with partial remains elsewhere These are mostly city gates like the Porta Nigra in Trier or Newport Arch in Lincoln In Central Europe the Celts built large fortified settlements which the Romans called oppida whose walls seem partially influenced by those built in the Mediterranean The fortifications were continuously expanded and improved Apart from these the early Middle Ages also saw the creation of some towns built around castles These cities were only rarely protected by simple stone walls and more usually by a combination of both walls and ditches From the 12th century AD hundreds of settlements of all sizes were founded all across Europe which very often obtained the right of fortification soon afterwards Several medieval town walls have survived into the modern age such as the walled towns of Austria walls of Tallinn or the town walls of York and Canterbury in England as well as Nordlingen Dinkelsbuhl and Rothenburg ob der Tauber in Germany In Spain Avila and Tossa del Mar hosts surviving medieval walls while Lugo has an intact Roman wall The founding of urban centers was an important means of territorial expansion and many cities especially in central and eastern Europe were founded for this purpose during the period of Eastern settlement These cities are easy to recognise due to their regular layout and large market spaces The fortifications of these settlements were continuously improved to reflect the current level of military development Gunpowder era Edit Chinese city walls Edit Remains of a defensive wall of Prince Qin Mansion a citadel within Xi an The Stone City is a wall in Nanjing dated to the Six Dynasties 220 589 Almost all of the original city is gone but portions of the city wall remain Not to be confused with the City Wall of Nanjing Main article Chinese city wall While gunpowder and cannons were invented in China China never developed wall breaking artillery to the same extent as other parts of the world Part of the reason is probably because Chinese walls were already highly resistant to artillery and discouraged increasing the size of cannons 9 In the mid twentieth century a European expert in fortification commented on their immensity in China the principal towns are surrounded to the present day by walls so substantial lofty and formidable that the medieval fortifications of Europe are puny in comparison 9 Chinese walls were thick The eastern wall of Ancient Linzi established in 859 BC had a maximum thickness of 43 metres and an average thickness of 20 30 metres 10 Ming prefectural and provincial capital walls were 10 to 20 metres 33 to 66 ft thick at the base and 5 to 10 metres 16 to 33 ft at the top In Europe the height of wall construction was reached under the Roman Empire whose walls often reached 10 metres 33 ft in height the same as many Chinese city walls but were only 1 5 to 2 5 metres 4 ft 11 in to 8 ft 2 in thick Rome s Servian Walls reached 3 6 and 4 metres 12 and 13 ft in thickness and 6 to 10 metres 20 to 33 ft in height Other fortifications also reached these specifications across the empire but all these paled in comparison to contemporary Chinese walls which could reach a thickness of 20 metres 66 ft at the base in extreme cases Even the walls of Constantinople which have been described as the most famous and complicated system of defence in the civilized world 11 could not match up to a major Chinese city wall 12 Had both the outer and inner walls of Constantinople been combined they would have only reached roughly a bit more than a third the width of a major wall in China 12 According to Philo the width of a wall had to be 4 5 metres 15 ft thick to be able to withstand ancient non gunpowder siege engines 13 European walls of the 1200s and 1300s could reach the Roman equivalents but rarely exceeded them in length width and height remaining around 2 metres 6 ft 7 in thick It is apt to note that when referring to a very thick wall in medieval Europe what is usually meant is a wall of 2 5 metres 8 ft 2 in in width which would have been considered thin in a Chinese context 14 There are some exceptions such as the Hillfort of Otzenhausen a Celtic ringfort with a thickness of 40 metres 130 ft in some parts but Celtic fort building practices died out in the early medieval period 15 Andrade goes on to note that the walls of the marketplace of Chang an were thicker than the walls of major European capitals 14 Aside from their immense size Chinese walls were also structurally different from the ones built in medieval Europe Whereas European walls were mostly constructed of stone interspersed with gravel or rubble filling and bonded by limestone mortar Chinese walls had tamped earthen cores which absorbed the energy of artillery shots 16 Walls were constructed using wooden frameworks which were filled with layers of earth tamped down to a highly compact state and once that was completed the frameworks were removed for use in the next wall section Starting from the Song dynasty these walls were improved with an outer layer of bricks or stone to prevent corrosion and during the Ming earthworks were interspersed with stone and rubble 16 Most Chinese walls were also sloped rather than vertical to better deflect projectile energy 17 The defensive response to cannon in Europe was to build relatively low and thick walls of packed earth which could both withstand the force of cannon balls and support their own defensive cannon Chinese wall building practice was by happenstance extremely resistant to all forms of battering This held true into the twentieth century when even modern explosive shells had some difficulty in breaking through tamped earth walls 7 Peter Lorge The Chinese Wall Theory essentially rests on a cost benefit hypothesis where the Ming recognized the highly resistant nature of their walls to structural damage and could not imagine any affordable development of the guns available to them at the time to be capable of breaching said walls Even as late as the 1490s a Florentine diplomat considered the French claim that their artillery is capable of creating a breach in a wall of eight feet in thickness 18 to be ridiculous and the French braggarts by nature 18 In fact twentieth century explosive shells had some difficulty creating a breach in tamped earthen walls 7 We fought our way to Nanking and joined in the attack on the enemy capital in December It was our unit which stormed the Chunghua Gate We attacked continuously for about a week battering the brick and earth walls with artillery but they never collapsed The night of December 11 men in my unit breached the wall The morning came with most of our unit still behind us but we were beyond the wall Behind the gate great heaps of sandbags were piled up We cleared them away removed the lock and opened the gates with a great creaking noise We d done it We d opened the fortress All the enemy ran away so we didn t take any fire The residents too were gone When we passed beyond the fortress wall we thought we had occupied this city 19 Nohara Teishin on the Japanese capture of Nanjing in 1937 Bastions and star forts Edit Main articles Bastion and Bastion fort 17th century map of the city of Palmanova Italy an example of a Venetian star fort Chinese angled bastion fort 1638 As a response to gunpowder artillery European fortifications began displaying architectural principles such as lower and thicker walls in the mid 1400s 20 Cannon towers were built with artillery rooms where cannons could discharge fire from slits in the walls However this proved problematic as the slow rate of fire reverberating concussions and noxious fumes produced greatly hindered defenders Gun towers also limited the size and number of cannon placements because the rooms could only be built so big Notable surviving artillery towers include a seven layer defensive structure built in 1480 at Fougeres in Brittany and a four layer tower built in 1479 at Querfurth in Saxony 21 The star fort also known as the bastion fort trace italienne or renaissance fortress was a style of fortification that became popular in Europe during the 16th century The bastion and star fort was developed in Italy where the Florentine engineer Giuliano da Sangallo 1445 1516 compiled a comprehensive defensive plan using the geometric bastion and full trace italienne that became widespread in Europe 22 The main distinguishing features of the star fort were its angle bastions each placed to support their neighbor with lethal crossfire covering all angles making them extremely difficult to engage with and attack Angle bastions consisted of two faces and two flanks Artillery positions positioned at the flanks could fire parallel into the opposite bastion s line of fire thus providing two lines of cover fire against an armed assault on the wall and preventing mining parties from finding refuge Meanwhile artillery positioned on the bastion platform could fire frontally from the two faces also providing overlapping fire with the opposite bastion 23 Overlapping mutually supporting defensive fire was the greatest advantage enjoyed by the star fort As a result sieges lasted longer and became more difficult affairs By the 1530s the bastion fort had become the dominant defensive structure in Italy 24 Outside Europe the star fort became an engine of European expansion 20 and acted as a force multiplier so that small European garrisons could hold out against numerically superior forces Wherever star forts were erected the natives experienced great difficulty in uprooting European invaders 20 In China Sun Yuanhua advocated for the construction of angled bastion forts in his Xifashenji so that their cannons could better support each other The officials Han Yun and Han Lin noted that cannons on square forts could not support each side as well as bastion forts Their efforts to construct bastion forts and their results were limited Ma Weicheng built two bastion forts in his home county which helped fend off a Qing incursion in 1638 By 1641 there were ten bastion forts in the county Before bastion forts could spread any further the Ming dynasty fell in 1644 and they were largely forgotten as the Qing dynasty was on the offensive most of the time and had no use for them 25 Decline Edit Multiple barbicans of Tongji Gate Nanjing In the wake of city growth and the ensuing change of defensive strategy focusing more on the defense of forts around cities many city walls were demolished Also the invention of gunpowder rendered walls less effective as siege cannons could then be used to blast through walls allowing armies to simply march through Today the presence of former city fortifications can often only be deduced from the presence of ditches ring roads or parks Furthermore some street names hint at the presence of fortifications in times past for example when words such as wall or glacis occur In the 19th century less emphasis was placed on preserving the fortifications for the sake of their architectural or historical value on the one hand complete fortifications were restored Carcassonne on the other hand many structures were demolished in an effort to modernize the cities One exception to this is the monument preservation law by the Bavarian King Ludwig I of Bavaria which led to the nearly complete preservation of many monuments such as the Rothenburg ob der Tauber Nordlingen and Dinkelsbuhl The countless small fortified towns in the Franconia region were also preserved as a consequence of this edict Modern era Edit Walls and fortified wall structures were still built in the modern era They did not however have the original purpose of being a structure able to resist a prolonged siege or bombardment Modern examples of defensive walls include Berlin s city wall from the 1730s to the 1860s was partially made of wood Its primary purpose was to enable the city to impose tolls on goods and secondarily also served to prevent the desertion of soldiers from the garrison in Berlin The Berlin Wall 1961 to 1989 did not exclusively serve the purpose of protection of an enclosed settlement One of its purposes was to prevent the crossing of the Berlin border between the German Democratic Republic and the West German exclave of west Berlin The Nicosia Wall along the Green Line divides North and South Cyprus In the 20th century and after many enclaved Jewish settlements in Israeli occupied territory in the West Bank were and are surrounded by fortified walls Mexico United States barrier a wall advocated by U S President Donald Trump for the Mexico United States border to prevent illegal immigration drug smuggling human trafficking and entry of potential terrorists 26 Belfast Northern Ireland by the peace lines Gated communities are modern residential neighborhoods where access is controlled often prohibiting through travelers or non residents via a wall and guardsAdditionally in some countries different embassies may be grouped together in a single embassy district enclosed by a fortified complex with walls and towers this usually occurs in regions where the embassies run a high risk of being target of attacks An early example of such a compound was the Legation Quarter in Beijing in the late 19th and early 20th centuries Most of these modern city walls are made of steel and concrete Vertical concrete plates are put together so as to allow the least space in between them and are rooted firmly in the ground The top of the wall is often protruding and beset with barbed wire in order to make climbing them more difficult These walls are usually built in straight lines and covered by watchtowers at the corners Double walls with an interstitial zone of fire as the former Berlin Wall had are now rare In September 2014 Ukraine announced the construction of the European Rampart alongside its border with Russia to be able to successfully apply for a visa free movement with the European Union 27 Modern defensive walls A view of the Berlin Wall in 1986 A peace line in Belfast Northern Ireland The fortified wall of a police station in Belfast Northern IrelandComposition Edit A model of a typical Chinese city wall At its simplest a defensive wall consists of a wall enclosure and its gates For the most part the top of the walls were accessible with the outside of the walls having tall parapets with embrasures or merlons North of the Alps this passageway at the top of the walls occasionally had a roof In addition to this many different enhancements were made over the course of the centuries City ditch a ditch dug in front of the walls occasionally filled with water to form a moat Gate tower a tower built next to or on top of the city gates to better defend the city gates Wall tower a tower built on top of a segment of the wall which usually extended outwards slightly so as to be able to observe the exterior of the walls on either side In addition to arrow slits ballistae catapults and cannons could be mounted on top for extra defence Pre wall wall built outside the wall proper usually of lesser height the space in between was usually further subdivided by additional walls Additional obstacles in front of the walls The defensive towers of west and south European fortifications in the Middle Ages were often very regularly and uniformly constructed cf Avila Provins whereas Central European city walls tend to show a variety of different styles In these cases the gate and wall towers often reach up to considerable heights and gates equipped with two towers on either side are much rarer Apart from having a purely military and defensive purpose towers also played a representative and artistic role in the conception of a fortified complex The architecture of the city thus competed with that of the castle of the noblemen and city walls were often a manifestation of the pride of a particular city Urban areas outside the city walls so called Vorstadte were often enclosed by their own set of walls and integrated into the defense of the city These areas were often inhabited by the poorer population and held the noxious trades In many cities a new wall was built once the city had grown outside of the old wall This can often still be seen in the layout of the city for example in Nordlingen and sometimes even a few of the old gate towers are preserved such as the white tower in Nuremberg Additional constructions prevented the circumvention of the city through which many important trade routes passed thus ensuring that tolls were paid when the caravans passed through the city gates and that the local market was visited by the trade caravans Furthermore additional signaling and observation towers were frequently built outside the city and were sometimes fortified in a castle like fashion The border of the area of influence of the city was often partially or fully defended by elaborate ditches walls and hedges The crossing points were usually guarded by gates or gate houses These defenses were regularly checked by riders who often also served as the gate keepers Long stretches of these defenses can still be seen to this day and even some gates are still intact To further protect their territory rich cities also established castles in their area of influence An example of this practice is the Romanian Bran Castle which was intended to protect nearby Kronstadt today s Brasov The city walls were often connected to the fortifications of hill castles via additional walls Thus the defenses were made up of city and castle fortifications taken together Several examples of this are preserved for example in Germany Hirschhorn on the Neckar Konigsberg and Pappenheim Franken Burghausen in Oberbayern and many more A few castles were more directly incorporated into the defensive strategy of the city e g Nuremberg Zons Carcassonne or the cities were directly outside the castle as a sort of pre castle Coucy le Chateau Conwy and others Larger cities often had multiple stewards for example Augsburg was divided into a Reichstadt and a clerical city These different parts were often separated by their own fortifications Dimensions of famous city walls Edit Wall Max width m Minimum width m Max Height m Lowest Height m Length km Aurelian Walls 3 5 16 8 19Avila 3 12 2 5Baghdad 45 12 30 18 7Beijing inner 20 12 15 24Beijing outer 15 4 5 7 6 28Carcassonne 3 8 6 3Chang an 16 12 12 26Dubrovnik 6 1 5 25 1 9Forbidden City 8 6 6 6 8Harar 5 3 5Itchan Kala 6 5 10 2Jerusalem 2 5 12 4Khanbaliq 10 6Linzi 42 26Luoyang 25 11 12Marrakech 2 9 20Nanjing 19 75 7 26 25 1Nicaea 3 7 9 5Pingyao 12 3 10 8 6Seoul Hanyang doseong Servian Wall 4 3 6 10 6 11Suwon Hwaseong 5 3 5Suzhou 11 5 7Theodosian Walls inner 5 25 12 6Theodosian Walls outer 2 9 8 5 6Vatican 2 5 8 3Xi an 18 12 12 14Xiangyang 10 8 7 3Zhongdu 12 24Gallery EditAfrica Edit African defensive walls A defensive wall in Taroudannt Morocco Defensive walls around the ancient Egyptian settlement of Buhen Americas Edit American defensive walls Castillo San Cristobal in San Juan Puerto Rico a UNESCO World Heritage Site Defensive wall in Cartagena Colombia Part of the wall in San Francisco de Campeche a UNESCO World Heritage Site Porte St Louis part of Ramparts of Quebec City the only remaining fortified city walls in North America north of Mexico Asia Edit Asian defensive walls Wall of Hittite Capital Hattusa reconstruction Derbent Walls late Sassanian period Walls of the Ark of Bukhara Derawar Wall located in Bahawalpur Pakistan Walls of Kumbhalgarh Fort Walls of the Rohtas Fort The defensive walls of Intramuros the Walled City of old Manila Philippines China Edit Chinese defensive walls Late Han dynasty castle wubi Fortress and soldiers training Tang dynasty Prince of Teng Pavilion Yuan dynasty Old City of Shanghai with walls and seafront Top of the Beijing city wall Barbican of Linhai city wall Walled tulou villages Europe Edit European defensive walls Daorson Bosnia built around a prehistoric central fortified settlement or acropolis existed there cca 17 16th to the end of the Bronze Age cca 9 8th c BCE surrounded by cyclopean walls similar to Mycenae dated to the 4th c BCE 28 29 City walls in Avila Spain a UNESCO World Heritage Site The remaining section of city walls in town of Svaty Jur Slovakia The walls of Tallinn Estonia a UNESCO World Heritage Site A city gate with its towers the defensive walls and the city ditch from the 13th century in Metz France The medieval fortress overlooking the city of Ohrid in North Macedonia Narikala fortress Tbilisi Georgia Badajoz Spain Roman Edit Roman defensive walls The gate of the Gonio castle Lugo s Roman walls Galicia Spain a UNESCO World Heritage SiteSee also EditList of cities with defensive walls List of town walls in England and Wales List of walls Ancient Roman defensive walls Barricade Border barrier Chinese city wall Citadel Glacis Medieval fortification Mural crown Murus Dacicus Murus Gallicus Talus fortification Notes Edit Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 756 ISBN 978 0415862875 Banister Fletcher s A History of Architecture By Banister Fletcher Sir Dan Cruickshank Published 1996 Architectural Press Architecture 1696 pages ISBN 0 7506 2267 9 p 20 The Encyclopedia of World History ancient medieval and modern chronologically arranged By Peter N Stearns William Leonard Langer Compiled by William L Langer Published 2001 Houghton Mifflin Books History General History ISBN 0 395 65237 5 p 17 Banister Fletcher s A History of Architecture By Banister Fletcher Sir Dan Cruickshank Published 1996 Architectural Press Architecture 1696 pages ISBN 0 7506 2267 9 p 100 Hla U Kan 1978 Traditional Town Planning in Burma Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 37 2 92 97 98 doi 10 2307 989177 ISSN 0037 9808 JSTOR 989177 a b Reid Anthony 1993 Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce 1450 1680 Vol 2 Expansion and Crisis The Journal of Economic History Yale University Press 54 4 78 84 86 88 doi 10 1017 S0022050700015679 S2CID 154715462 a b c Lorge 2008 p 43 Andrade 2016 p 103 a b Andrade 2016 p 96 Chang Kwang Chih Xu Pingfang Lu Liancheng Pingfang Xu Wangping Shao Zhongpei Zhang Renxiang Wang January 2005 The Formation of Chinese Civilization An Archaeological Perspective ISBN 0300093829 Andrade 2016 p 92 a b Andrade 2016 p 97 Purton 2009 p 363 a b Andrade 2016 p 98 Andrade 2016 p 339 a b Andrade 2016 p 99 Andrade 2016 p 100 a b Andrade 2016 p 101 Cook 2000 p 32 a b c Andrade 2016 p 211 Arnold 2001 p 37 Nolan 2006 p 67 Arnold 2001 p 40 Arnold 2001 p 45 Andrade 2016 p 214 Davis Julie Hirschfeld 25 January 2017 Trump Orders Mexican Border Wall to Be Built and Plans to Block Syrian Refugees New York Times Yatseniuk Project Wall to allow Ukraine to get visa free regime with EU Interfax Ukraine Seka Brkljaca 1996 Urbano bice Bosne i Hercegovine in Serbo Croatian Sarajevo Međunarodni centar za mir Institut za istoriju p 27 Retrieved 28 October 2021 The natural and architectural ensemble of Stolac UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 28 October 2021 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Defensive walls Andrade Tonio 2016 The Gunpowder Age China Military Innovation and the Rise of the West in World History Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13597 7 Arnold Thomas 2001 History of Warfare The Renaissance at War Cook Haruko Taya 2000 Japan At War An Oral History Phoenix Press Lorge Peter A 2008 The Asian Military Revolution from Gunpowder to the Bomb Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60954 8 Monika Porsche Stadtmauer und Stadtentstehung Untersuchungen zur fruhen Stadtbefestigung im mittelalterlichen Deutschen Reich Hertingen 2000 ISBN 3 930327 07 4 Nolan Cathal J 2006 The Age of Wars of Religion 1000 1650 an Encyclopedia of Global Warfare and Civilization Vol 1 A K vol 1 Westport amp London Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 33733 8 Purton Peter 2009 A History of the Early Medieval Siege c 450 1200 The Boydell Press Purton Peter 2010 A History of the Late Medieval Siege 1200 1500 Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 449 6External links EditSan Juan City Walls Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Defensive wall amp oldid 1130518558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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