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berwick upon tweed |
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Before the union of the English and Scottish crowns in 1603, BERWICK-UPON-TWEED
, some twelve miles north of Holy Island, was the quintessential
frontier town, changing hands no fewer than fourteen times between 1174
and 1482, when the Scots finally ceded the stronghold to the English.
Interminable cross-border warfare ruined Berwick's economy, turning the
prosperous Scottish port of the thirteenth century into an impoverished
garrison town, which the English forcibly cut off from its natural
trading hinterland up the River Tweed. By the late sixteenth century,
Berwick's fortifications were in a dreadful state of repair and
Elizabeth I, apprehensive of the resurgent alliance between France and
Scotland, had the place rebuilt in line with the latest principles of
military architecture.
The new design recognized the technological development of artillery,
which had rendered the traditional high stone wall obsolete.
Consequently, Berwick's ramparts - one and a half miles long and still
in pristine condition - are no more than twenty feet high but incredibly
thick: a facing of ashlared stone protects ten to twelve feet of rubble,
which, in turn, backs up against a vast quantity of earth. Further
protected by ditches on three sides and the Tweed on the fourth, the
walls are strengthened by immense bastions, whose arrowhead-shape
ensured that every part of the wall could be covered by fire. Begun in
1558, the defences were completed after eleven years at a cost of
£128,000, more than Elizabeth paid for all her other fortifications put
together. And, as it turned out, it was all a waste of time and money:
the French didn't attack and, once England and Scotland were united,
Berwick was stuck with a white elephant.
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