Fortification and Siege Vocabulary and Pronunciation

Early Fortification and Siege

bar·bi·can (bär¹bî-ken) noun

A tower or other fortification on the approach to a castle or town, especially one at a gate or drawbridge.

[Middle English, from Old French barbacane, from Medieval Latin barbacana, from Persian barbârkhâna : barbâr, guard (from Old Iranian *parivâraka-, protective) + khâna, house (from Middle Persian khânak).]

cur·tain (kûr¹tn) noun

4. The part of a rampart or parapet connecting two bastions or gates.

5.Architecture. An enclosing wall connecting two towers or similar structures.

don·jon (dòn¹jen, dùn¹-) noun

The fortified main tower of a castle; a keep.

draw·bridge (drô¹brîj´) noun

A bridge that can be raised or drawn aside either to prevent access or to permit passage beneath it.

em·bra·sure (èm-brâ¹zher) noun

1.An opening in a thick wall for a door or window, especially one with sides angled so that the opening is larger on the inside of the wall than on the outside.

2.A flared opening for a gun in a wall or parapet.

[French, from embraser, to widen an opening.]

es·carp (î-skärp¹) noun

2.The inner wall of a ditch or trench dug around a fortification.

keep (kêp) noun

3.a. The stronghold of a castle.

ma·chic·o·la·tion (me-chîk´e-lâ¹shen) noun

1.a. A projecting gallery at the top of a castle wall, supported by a row of corbeled arches and having openings in the floor through which stones and boiling liquids could be dropped on attackers. b. One of these openings.

mer·lon (mûr¹len) noun

A solid portion of a crenelated wall between two open spaces.

[French, from Italian merlone, augmentative of merlo, battlement, perhaps from Medieval Latin merulus, from Latin, merle (from their imagined similarity to blackbirds sitting on a wall).]

par·a·pet (pàr¹e-pît, -pèt´) noun

1.A low protective wall or railing along the edge of a raised structure such as a roof or balcony.

2.An earthen or stone embankment protecting soldiers from enemy fire. See synonyms at BULWARK.

[French, from Italian parapetto : parare, to shield. See PARASOL + petto, chest (from Latin pectus).]

port·cul·lis (pôrt-kùl¹îs, port-) noun

A grating of iron or wooden bars or slats, suspended in the gateway of a fortified place and lowered to block passage.

[Middle English port-colice, from Old French porte coleice, sliding gate : porte, gate (from Latin porta) + coleice, feminine of coleis, sliding (from Vulgar Latin *colâtìcius, from Latin colâtus, past participle of colâre, to filter, strain, from colum, sieve).]

pos·tern (po¹stern, pòs¹tern) noun

A small rear gate, especially one in a fort or castle.

[Middle English posterne, from Old French, alteration of posterle, from Late Latin posterula, diminutive of Latin posterus, behind. See POSTERIOR.]

sally portnoun

A gate in a fortification designed for sorties.

ward (wôrd) noun

5.An open court or area of a castle or fortification enclosed by walls.

Vocabulary and Pronunciation

Late Fortification and Siege

bas·tion (bàs¹chen, -tê-en) noun

1.A projecting part of a fortification.

[French, from Old French bastillon, from bastille, fortress. See BASTILLE.]

cir·cum·val·late (sûr´kem-vàl¹ât´) verb, transitive

cir·cum·val·lat·ed, cir·cum·val·lat·ing, cir·cum·val·lates

To surround with or as if with a rampart.

adjective

1.(also -ît). Surrounded with or as if with a rampart.

[Latin circumvallâre, circumvallât- : circum-, circum- + vallum, rampart with palisades, from vallus, post, stake.]

— cir´cum·val·la¹tionnoun

ram·part (ràm¹pärt´, -pert) noun

1.A fortification consisting of an embankment, often with a parapet built on top.

2.A means of protection or defense; a bulwark. See synonyms at BULWARK.

verb, transitive

ram·part·ed, ram·part·ing, ram·parts

To defend with a rampart.

[French rempart, from Old French, from remparer, to fortify : re-, re- + emparer, to fortify, take possession of (from Old Provençal amparar, from Vulgar Latin *ante parâre, to prepare : Latin ante-, ante- + Latin parâre, to prepare).]

par·a·pet (pàr¹e-pît, -pèt´) noun

1.A low protective wall or railing along the edge of a raised structure such as a roof or balcony.

2.An earthen or stone embankment protecting soldiers from enemy fire. See synonyms at BULWARK.

[French, from Italian parapetto : parare, to shield. See PARASOL + petto, chest (from Latin pectus).]

ga·bi·on (gâ¹bê-en) noun

1.A cylindrical wicker basket filled with earth and stones, formerly used in building fortifications.

2.A hollow metal cylinder used especially in constructing dams and foundations.

[French, from Italian gabbione, augmentative of gabbia, cage, from Latin cavea.]

gla·cis (glà-sê¹, glàs¹ê, glâ¹sîs) noun

pluralglacis

1.a. A gentle slope; an incline. b. A slope extending down from a fortification.

2.A neutral area separating conflicting forces.

[French, from Old French, from glacer, to slide, from glace, ice, from Latin glaciês.]