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Walmgate Bar is the most easterly of the gates of
York's medieval wall. It is the only gate still to retain its barbican
(the outer extension prominently seen in this shot), a fourteenth
century addition which originally ran over a water-filled defensive ditch.
Heads of those executed for treason were stuck on pikes which were mounted
atop this gate, as a public warning.
By at least the latter part of the fourteenth century, the gatehouse was
being rented out by the city to private citizens. It was perhaps this
residence that was in 1478 assigned, rent-free, to a mason as part of the
terms of his employment as a civil servant with the duty to "view
and oversee yearly the walls of this city and all defaults therein
to show and declare to the mayor and chamberlains of the time being, and he
at all times to have and receive for him and his servants labouring on
the said defaults such wages as belong to a mason to take daily."
[The York House Books 1461-1490, ed. L. Attreed,
1991, vol.1 p.139; language modernised somewhat by me.] That the
previous tenant was also a mason may reflect a similar, less formal
arrangement.
Providing for a city's defence was not just a matter of building strong
surrounding walls. It was necessary to furnish the gates with barriers
such as portcullises (as Walmgate Bar had, and still has today). When
Richard Spynk funded the improvement of
Norwich's defences in the fourteenth century, this included provision for
portcullises, wooden doors reinforced with lead, bars and chains for the
entranceways (presumably when the doors were open), 28 springalds with
ammunition for each, and a special defence
for the river access into the city at the south end. By the end of the
century, small cannon were being used to defend city walls. In the
context of the civil war, ca. 1463, York took measures to repair the walls
and the guns of the city and to buy supplies of gunpowder. By 1487,
however, the citizens were petitioning the king to send them some of the
royal armaments to augment city defences; Henry VII arranged for 12
serpentines, with gunpowder, to be transferred from Scarborough.
At the same time, the heads of each city ward were ordered to have the citizens
of their wards assemble, armed and armoured, at a specified location for
a "view of arms" by the mayor. This was a further essential element of
city defence: the allocation of responsibility for defence of particular
gates and stretches of wall to one or more wards and wardens or, in 1380, to
parishes and constables and the provision of guards at each gate
overnight in times of threat. Under the Assize of Arms (1181), reinforced
by the Statute of Winchester (1285) each adult freeman had to provide
himself with certain arms and armour, according to his financial means, and
each hundred was to hold a review of the armed militia twice a year. Some
townsmen (the information here coming from mid-14th century Norwich
records) were wealthy enough that it was expected they be able to equip
themselves with a full set of body armour suitable for a foot-soldier:
breastplate with a padded undergarment such as a doublet, a bascinet
helmet with neck protection (aventail), and brassarts and gauntlets to
protect arms and hands. Others were only partly armoured (arm protection
being the most dispensable item), while others had no armour, only weapons:
usually a sword, dagger and staff or cudgel, although some specialized as
archers.
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