| BARBICAN | A walled outwork or tower to protect a gate or drawbridge of a fortification (8) |
| REDOUBT | Outwork or fieldwork, usually square or polygonal, without flanking defences (7) |
| LEAF | Table or drawbridge section |
| PARADISE | Word for a walled garden of delight, pleasure ground or the garden of Eden, thus heaven, Shangri-la or any other place or state of bliss (8) |
| ESPALIER | Traditional technique of training fruit trees to grow flat against a wall or fence,A especially in a walled kitchen garden (8) |
| ESCALADE | Military action of scaling the defensive walls of a fortification with ladders, common in medieval times (8) |
| BELLROPE | One's hung in the Tower to help give a warning to people |
| HANDBALL | A game similar to fives played in a walled court (8) |
| ENTRANCE | A door, gate or other portal; or, an actor's arrival onto the stage (8) |
| TENAILLE | From French for "pincers", name given to an outwork between bastions, V-shaped, like said tongs (8) |
| LONDONER | Resident of Fulham or Tower Hamlets, eg (8) |
| MINARETS | In coin factories are towers to be seen? (8) |
| PARABEMA | Soldier dropped medal in front of a walled chapel |
| TRACE | Ground plan of a fortification; an amount of rain too small to be measured; the sum of the diagonal elements of a square matrix; or, a line marked by a recording instrument (5) |
| PORTAL | A gate or magnificent doorway; or, in fantasy fiction, a magical entrance to another dimension or location (6) |
| IRONWORK | Ornamental gate or grill |
| WORK | Energy transfer measured in joules; a creation such as a book, musical composition or piece of embroidery, sewing etc; or, a structure such as a wall, built as part of a fortification (4) |
| BULWARKS | Outworks |
| ATTENDANCE | A gate or number of people who are present at an event, such as a sports match (10) |
| LATCH | Piece of hardware used for fastening a gate or door (5) |