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Written by Jonathan Malory
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Fishergate Bar was the entrance to the city from Selby, and the walls from this Bar to Fishergate Tower commanded the narrow approach to the castle. The Bar consists of a round arch between two wide buttresses, each with passage through. Adjoining the eastern buttress was a rectangular guardroom. The arch is of two orders, continued to the ground with rounded groove for a portcullis.
O ver
the arch is a panel containing the city arms and an inscription. An
insurrection broke out in 1489 amongst the peasantry in Yorkshire. At Topcliffe
the rebels murdered the Earl of Northumberland and then invested York, burning
the gates of Fishergate Bar. The rebels were eventually defeated and one of the
leaders beheaded at York.
Fishergate Tower is provided
with a garderobe, and when built adjoined a wide water area. Adjoining, on the
land side, was a postern under a pointed archway, which has the jambs grooved
evidently to accommodate a portcullis.
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