Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Castles and Town Walls of King Edward in Gwynedd' has mentioned 'Gate' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
---|---|
The castles were each equipped with a rear or postern gate that would allow them to resupplied directly by sea even if the town had fallen. | WIKI |
The North Gate in Caernarfon's town walls | WIKI |
[114] The main entrance to the castle was the "Gate next the Sea", next to the castle's tidal dock that allowed it to be supplied directly by sea. | WIKI |
[116] The outer ward consisted of an eight-sided curtain wall with twelve turrets; one gateway led out to the Gate next the Sea, and the other, the Llanfaes Gate, led out to the north side of the castle. | WIKI |
[125] A water gate overlooks a protected stairway of 127 steps that runs down to the foot of the cliffs. | WIKI |
There are two main entrances, the King's Gate, leading from the town, and the Queen's Gate, allowing more direct access to the castle. | WIKI |
The West Gate faced onto the harbour, and was also known as the Golden Gate, named after the principal gateway in the city of Constantinople. | WIKI |
[140] The main entrance to the castle is through the western barbican, an exterior defence in front of the main gate. | WIKI |
[142] A postern gate originally led down to the river where a small dock was built, allowing key visitors to enter the castle in private and for the fortress to be resupplied by boat. | WIKI |
[144] The inner ward was separated from the outer by a wall, a drawbridge and a gate, protected by a ditch cut into the rock. | WIKI |