Chinese city gates had a 2nd inner trap-courtyard. Why?
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Answer: To trap attackers in a kill-box if the outer gate falls
To trap attackers in a kill-box if the outer gate falls ✓ — Correct! The 瓮城 (wèngchéng, 'urn city') is a small enclosed courtyard between an outer gate and an inner gate. If attackers smash through the outer gate, they enter the urn — and the inner gate stays shut. Defenders shoot down from all four walls. Nanjing's Zhonghua Gate has THREE such urns stacked, plus 27 hidden chambers for soldiers — the most complex surviving city gate on Earth.
To inspect tax cargo before letting it into the city — Wrong. Tax inspection happened at the outer gate or at dedicated customs stations, not in a fortified kill-box. The urn-city's design is purely military — too small and too lethal to be a customs office.
To park merchant caravans overnight outside the city — Wrong. Caravans camped at dedicated caravanserais outside the wall. Trapping a caravan in the urn-city would block the gate. The space exists to kill people who broke in, not to host people who didn't.
More History & Culture questions
- Why didn't ancient Rome have city walls at the empire's peak?
- Why does every brick in Nanjing's Ming wall carry a person's name?
- Why did city walls have protruding towers every 50 meters?
- Why did almost every old city wall have a moat around it?
- Why did cannons shatter European walls but barely dent Chinese ones?
- Why are Chinese city walls 5-10x thicker than European ones?
