Dictionary Definition
moat n : ditch dug as a fortification and usually
filled with water [syn: fosse]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -əʊt
Homophones
Noun
- A deep, wide defensive ditch, normally filled with water surrounding a fortified habitation.
Synonyms
Translations
defensive ditch
- Czech: vodní příkop
- Dutch: slotgracht
- Finnish: vallihauta
- French: douve
- Korean: 해자 (垓字, haeja)
- Polish: fosa
- Swedish: vallgrav
Anagrams
Finnish
Noun
moat- Plural of lang=Finnish|moa
Extensive Definition
A moat is deep, broad trench, usually filled with
water, that surrounds a
structure, installation, or town, normally to provide it with a
preliminary line of defense.
Historic uses
Traditionally, moats were excavated around castles and fortifications as part of the defensive system, and were usually filled with water. They provided a preliminary barrier outside the fortification walls against attacks upon the complex. A moat made access to the walls difficult for siege weapons, such as a siege towers and battering rams, which needed to be brought up against a wall to be effective. A very important feature was that a water-filled moat made very difficult the practice of mining, that is to say digging tunnels under the fortifications in order to effect a collapse of the defenses.The word was adapted in Middle
English from the French motte "mound, hillock" and was first
applied to the central mound on which a fortification was erected
(see Motte and
bailey), and then came to be applied to the excavated ring, a
"dry moat". The term moat is also applied to natural formations
reminiscent of the artificial structure.
Europe
In the violent conditions of the 14th and 15th
centuries in England, though defensive walling required a charter
from the king, a moat round a manor house
could deter all but the most determined intruders (illustration,
top right). See also Ightham
Mote. Moated fortresses are also evident in Ferrara, the
Rocca
Sanvitale in Fontanelleta, and the Rocca
Scaglieri in Sirmione on the shores of Lake Garda.
Often streams were diverted in the Middle Ages
to fill the ditch. Moats required upkeep. They had to be dredged
for debris which could potentially form a traversable bridge from
one side to another.
Withdrawable bridges spanned moats in the
Middle Ages. At first they were only simple wooden bridges that
could easily be dismantled if an enemy was about to breach the
fortifications. Later Drawbridges were
used for moat spans.
Moats sometimes had long wooden spikes in them,
to prevent enemies from swimming across. The practice of stocking
them with alligators, crocodiles, sharks or other dangerous animals
is almost certainly a myth, however. http://www.castles-of-britain.com/castleso.htm
As late as the seventeenth century, French
châteaux that were not remotely fortified nor built on
traditionally fortified and moated sites, pleasure houses such as
Vaux-le-Vicomte,
were surrounded by traditional formal moats that isolated the main
corps de
logis and were bridged by an axial approach.
Asia
Modern uses
Moats are no longer a significant tool of
warfare; however, in some cases a moat may still serve as a line of
defense from other threats, as well as a number of other creative
uses. A moat wide and deep enough can prove an obstacle to armoured
fighting vehicles.
Installation security
The Catawba
Nuclear Station, for instance, has been constructing a concrete
moat around some of the plant (other sides of the plant are
bordering a lake). The moat is a part of industry wide added
precautions after the
September 11, 2001 attacks. Related individuals have made a
point to claim that the moat is not connected to the new MOX fuel that
the plant will be receiving. "The concrete moat under construction
at the station south of Charlotte has little to do with the
utility's plans to start burning mixed-oxide fuel containing small
amounts of weapons-grade plutonium next spring. Designed to prevent
everything from passenger cars to military tanks from getting too
close to the reactor, the moat is part of a post-Sept 11, 2001
security upgrade"http://www.nukeworker.com/pictures/displayimage.php?album=98&pos=0
Animal containment
Moats rather than fences separate animals from
spectators in many modern zoo installations. Moats were first
used in this way by Carl
Hagenbeck at his Tierpark.
The structure, with a vertical outer retaining wall rising directly
from the moat, is an extended usage of the ha-ha of
English landscape gardening.
National defense
In 2004 plans were suggested for a two-mile moat
across the southern border of the Gaza Strip to
prevent tunnelling from Egyptian territory to the border town of
Rafah .
Migration control
In 2008, city officials in Yuma, Arizona planned
to dig out a two-mile stretch of a 180-hectare (440-acre) wetland
known as Hunters Hole, to control immigrants coming from
Mexico.
See also
- Drawbridge
- Turret
- Moot hill sometimes written as Moat Hill.
References
moat in Czech: Vodní příkop
moat in Danish: Voldgrav
moat in German: Burggraben
moat in Spanish: Foso
moat in Persian: خندق
moat in Finnish: Vallihauta
moat in French: Douve (fossé)
moat in Hebrew: חפיר
moat in Italian: Fossato (architettura)
moat in Japanese: 堀
moat in Macedonian: Шанец
moat in Dutch: Slotgracht
moat in Polish: Fosa
moat in Romanian: Şanţ (fortificaţie)
moat in Russian: Ров
moat in Serbian: Шанац
moat in Swedish: Vallgrav
moat in Chinese: 護城河
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abri,
abysm, abyss, approach trench, aqueduct, arch dam, arroyo, backstop, bamboo curtain,
bank, bar, barrage, barrier, bear-trap dam, beaver
dam, boom, box canyon,
breach, break, breakwater, breastwork, brick wall,
buffer, bulkhead, bulwark, bunker, canal, canalization, canyon, cavity, channel, chap, chasm, check, chimney, chink, cleft, cleuch, clough, cofferdam, col, communication trench, coulee, couloir, countermine, coupure, crack, cranny, crevasse, crevice, crimp, cut, cwm, dam, defense, defile, dell, dike, ditch, donga, double sap, draw, dugout, earthwork, embankment, entrenchment, excavation, fault, fence, fire trench, fissure, flaw, flume, flying sap, fortified
tunnel, fosse, foxhole, fracture, furrow, gallery, gap, gape, gash, gate, goffer, gorge, gravity dam, groin, groove, gulch, gulf, gully, gutter, ha-ha, hole, hydraulic-fill dam, incision, iron curtain,
jam, jetty, joint, kennel, kloof, leak, leaping weir, levee, logjam, milldam, mine, mole, mound, notch, nullah, opening, parallel, parapet, pass, passage, pleat, portcullis, rampart, ravine, rent, rift, rime, roadblock, rock-fill dam,
rupture, sap, scissure, seam, seawall, shutter dam, slit, slit trench, slot, split, stone wall, sunk fence,
trench, trough, tunnel, valley, void, wadi, wall, weir, wicket dam, work