Stronghold: A History of Military Architecture |
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Page 107
One of the standard methods of breaching a fortress wall was to dig a tunnel under it and remove the foundations , shoring up the space with timbers which were then set on fire . When they collapsed , so did the wall .
One of the standard methods of breaching a fortress wall was to dig a tunnel under it and remove the foundations , shoring up the space with timbers which were then set on fire . When they collapsed , so did the wall .
Page 119
A ravelin was an island or isolated outwork in the moat or ditch , and in front of a gate into the fortress . It was accessible either by drawbridge or if purely defensive and not part of the town's road system - by underground tunnel .
A ravelin was an island or isolated outwork in the moat or ditch , and in front of a gate into the fortress . It was accessible either by drawbridge or if purely defensive and not part of the town's road system - by underground tunnel .
Page 147
So , the fortress guns had to be shielded from long- range heavy artillery and from infiltrating infan- try . Such was the rapidity of technological pro- gress that each innovation was eventually shown to be ineffective , either in war ...
So , the fortress guns had to be shielded from long- range heavy artillery and from infiltrating infan- try . Such was the rapidity of technological pro- gress that each innovation was eventually shown to be ineffective , either in war ...
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