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Defensive wall
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====Bastions and star forts==== {{main|Bastion|Bastion fort}} [[File:Palmanova1600.jpg|right|thumb|17th-century map of the city of [[Palmanova]], [[Italy]], an example of a [[Republic of Venice|Venetian]] star fort]] [[File:Shouyuquanshu 1638.jpg|thumb|Chinese angled bastion fort, 1638]] As a response to gunpowder artillery, European fortifications began displaying architectural principles such as lower and thicker walls in the mid-1400s.{{sfn|Andrade|2016|p=211}} Cannon towers were built with artillery rooms where cannons could discharge fire from slits in the walls. However, this proved problematic as the slow rate of fire, reverberating concussions, and noxious fumes produced greatly hindered defenders. Gun towers also limited the size and number of cannon placements because the rooms could only be built so big. Notable surviving artillery towers include a seven layer defensive structure built in 1480 at [[Fougères]] in [[Brittany]], and a four layer tower built in 1479 at Querfurth in Saxony.{{sfn|Arnold|2001|p=37}} The star fort, also known as the bastion fort, ''trace italienne'', or renaissance fortress, was a style of fortification that became popular in Europe during the 16th century. The bastion and star fort was developed in Italy, where the Florentine engineer [[Giuliano da Sangallo]] (1445–1516) compiled a comprehensive defensive plan using the geometric [[bastion]] and full ''trace italienne'' that became widespread in Europe.{{sfn|Nolan|2006|p=67}} The main distinguishing features of the star fort were its angle bastions, each placed to support their neighbor with lethal crossfire, covering all angles, making them extremely difficult to engage with and attack. Angle bastions consisted of two faces and two flanks. Artillery positions positioned at the flanks could fire parallel into the opposite bastion's line of fire, thus providing two lines of cover fire against an armed assault on the wall, and preventing mining parties from finding refuge. Meanwhile, artillery positioned on the bastion platform could fire frontally from the two faces, also providing overlapping fire with the opposite bastion.{{sfn|Arnold|2001|p=40}} Overlapping mutually supporting defensive fire was the greatest advantage enjoyed by the star fort. As a result, sieges lasted longer and became more difficult affairs. By the 1530s the bastion fort had become the dominant defensive structure in Italy.{{sfn|Arnold|2001|p=45}} Outside Europe, the star fort became an "engine of European expansion,"{{sfn|Andrade|2016|p=211}} and acted as a force multiplier so that small European garrisons could hold out against numerically superior forces. Wherever star forts were erected the natives experienced great difficulty in uprooting European invaders.{{sfn|Andrade|2016|p=211}} In China, [[Sun Yuanhua]] advocated for the construction of angled [[bastion forts]] in his ''Xifashenji'' so that their cannons could better support each other. The officials Han Yun and Han Lin noted that cannons on square forts could not support each side as well as bastion forts. Their efforts to construct bastion forts, and their results, were limited. Ma Weicheng built two bastion forts in his home county, which helped fend off a [[Qing dynasty|Qing]] incursion in 1638. By 1641, there were ten bastion forts in the county. Before bastion forts could spread any further, the Ming dynasty fell in 1644, and they were largely forgotten as the Qing dynasty was on the offensive most of the time and had no use for them.{{sfn|Andrade|2016|p=214}}
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