[Elements of Military Art and Science by Henry Wager Halleck]@TWC D-Link bookElements of Military Art and Science CHAPTER XIII 21/25
The _re-entering places of arms_, are small redans arranged at the points of junction of the covered ways of the bastion and demi-lune.
The _salient places of arms_ are the parts of the covered way in front of the salients of the bastion and demi-lune. Small permanent works, termed _redoubts_, are placed within the demi-lune and re-entering places of arms for strengthening those works. Works of this character constructed within the bastion are termed _interior retrenchments;_ when sufficiently elevated to command the exterior ground, they are called _cavaliers._ _Caponniers_ are works constructed to cover the passage of the ditch from the tenaille to the gorge of the demi-lune, and also from the demi-lune to the covered way, by which communication may be maintained between the enceinte and outworks. _Posterns_ are underground communications made through the body of the place or some of the outworks. _Sortie-passages_ are narrow openings made through the crest of the glacis, which usually rise in the form of a ramp from the covered way, by means of which communication may be kept up with the exterior.
These passages are so arranged that they cannot be swept by the fire of the enemy.
The other communications above ground are called _ramps, stairs,_ &c. _Traverses_ are small works erected on the covered way to intercept the fire of the besieger's batteries. _Scarp_ and _counterscarp_ galleries are sometimes constructed for the defence of the ditch.
They are arranged with loop-holes, through which the troops of the garrison fire on the besiegers when they have entered the ditch, without being themselves exposed to the batteries of the enemy. In sea-coast defences, and sometimes in a land front for the defence of the ditch, embrasures are made in the scarp wall for the fire of artillery; the whole being protected from shells by a bomb-proof covering over head: this arrangement is termed a _casemate_. Sometimes double ramparts and parapets are formed, so that the interior one shall fire over the more advanced; the latter in this case is called _a faussebraie_. If the inner work be separated from the other it is called a _retrenchment_[44] and if in addition it has a commanding fire, it is termed, as was just remarked, a _cavalier_. [Footnote 44: The term _retrenchment_ implies an interior work, which is constructed within or in rear of another, for the purpose of strengthening it; the term _intrenchment_, on the contrary, implies an independent work, constructed in the open field, without reference to any other adjoining work.] The _capital_ of a bastion is a line bisecting its salient angle.
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