Pincer gate
A pincer gate (German: Zangentor) is a gate in a fortification that is deeply embedded between two inward angled exterior walls. Those wishing to enter the fort have to approach what is in effect a sunken road and, if hostile, can be attacked from both side walls in a pincer fashion.
Pincer gates were already being used in Urnfield and Celtic fortification in Central Europe and may also be seen in Early Medieval circular ramparts. They were common well into the High Middle Ages.
Literature
- Horst Wolfgang Böhme, Reinhard Friedrich, Barbara Schock-Werner: Wörterbuch der Burgen, Schlösser und Festungen. Philipp Reclam, Stuttgart, 2004, ISBN 3-15-010547-1, pp. 241–242.
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gollark: You'd have to actually implement a filesystem layer on top of the underlying relational database structure, but that wouldn't be extremely hard.
gollark: I have not actually tried this. It should work okay, as long as you can somehow split up the WAL and main data thing.
gollark: SQLite on bare metal, actually.
gollark: Unrelatedly, https://twitter.com/ComradeTechBro/status/1489725949155233792
See also
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