¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Bartizans
1. bartizan [n] - See also: bartizan
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bartizans
Literary usage of Bartizans
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Glossary of Terms Used in Heraldry by Henry Gough, James Parker (1894)
"... called bartizans, in others. Other additions are occasionally named, eg a
trench, or the castle, may he standing in water or surrounded hy a wall. ..."
2. Some Account of Domestic Architecture in England, from Richard II. to Henry by John Henry Parker (1859)
"WHITTON, or WITTON tower, is a pele of the fifteenth century, with square bartizans
or corner turrets on the battlement, and square windows. ..."
3. Norway, Sweden and Denmark: Handbook for Travellers by Karl Baedeker (1892)
"... and resting on the ground, while between them a series of bartizans ...
are still in good preservation, but the bartizans have almost all disappeared. ..."
4. Bygone Yorkshire by W. ANDREWS (1892)
"... and contain two small circular bartizans, it also bears the City arms, but
they are a modern addition. This Bar suffered much in the siege of York by ..."
5. The Ruined Castles of Mid-Lothian: Their Position; Their Families; Their by John Dickson (1894)
"The east parapet with its corbels and bartizans were then destroyed; ... Parts of
the circular bartizans at the angles, and some of the corbels, ..."