Bretèche
In
Medieval latrines (called garderobes) were fairly similar in construction, but they were not placed over doors.[1] In Catalan (lladronera) and Portuguese (ladroneira) the word for bretèche was in fact derived from the Byzantine latreys (latrine), but this regionalism did not carry over to other languages. Because the places protected by bretèches were usually vital, they were usually manned by professional soldiers, often mercenaries in the Middle Ages. As a result of these circumstances, the word for latrine even denoted a mercenary in some regions.
A bretèche is pictured in Bellifortis, Livro das Fortalezas, and in several other medieval military texts.[3]
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An open bretèche at the Fort of Beauregard, Besançon
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A closed bretèche of the fortified church at Archon, Aisne
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Inside view of the Citadel of Damascus; twin bretèches project from each tower overseeing a section of the curtain wall
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Bretèches protecting the door and windows of the fortified church at Rudelle, France
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Three open bretèches at Krak des Chevaliers
See also
- Bartizan
- Murder-hole
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0-306-81358-0.
- ISBN 978-0-313-32525-0.
- ISBN 978-84-86839-02-4.