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bartizan
[ bahr-tuh-zuhn, bahr-tuh-zan ]
noun
- a small overhanging turret on a wall or tower.
bartizan
/ ˌbɑːtɪˈzæn; ˈbɑːtɪzən; ˌbɑːtɪˈzænd; ˈbɑːtɪzənd /
noun
- a small turret projecting from a wall, parapet, or tower
Derived Forms
- bartizaned, adjective
Other Words From
- bar·ti·zaned [bahr, -t, uh, -z, uh, nd, bahr-t, uh, -, zand], adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of bartizan1
Example Sentences
The Alc�zar with its bartizan towers is built on a lofty crag that rises like the prow of a giant ship above the meeting of two bosky little streams, the Eresma which yielded the "trout of exceeding greatness" whereon Charles I of England supped in this castle, and the peaceful brook, Clamores.
Some brooding spirit of the past might have been peering out at them from the watchman's wicket in the bartizan above.
Outside, beyond the drawbridge, he halted to look admiringly up at the massive, ivy-clad frontage of the Main Keep, with its crenellated ramparts and narrow fighting-windows and bartizan.
To the same period belongs the church chest, which has the unique feature of being made of cypress wood, and the tower, also with the unique feature of an external bartizan or watch-turret, apparently for a beacon fire.
The best view of it is from the bridge crossing the river, and surprisingly beautiful it is, with its gabled towers and square bartizan turrets and mullioned windows.
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