Page:The reign of William Rufus and the accession of Henry the First.djvu/106

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Norman military architecture, had perhaps not even a forerunner of its own class. And the minster of Saint Andrew, which the enlargements of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries have still left one of the least among the episcopal churches of England, had then only the lowly forerunner which had risen, which perhaps was still only rising, under the hands of Gundulf. But the steep scarped cliff rising above the broad tidal stream was a stronghold in the Conqueror's days, as it had doubtless been in days long before his. Whether a stone castle had yet been built is uncertain; the fact that such an one was built for William Rufus by Gundulf later in his reign might almost lead us to think that as yet the site, strong in itself, was defended only by earthworks and defences of timber. Below the castle to the south-east lay the city, doubtless fenced

hujusmodi diebus illis fuerant ignari." A forerunner of Kanarês, he had a fire-ship in the river; he also used mines, as the Conqueror had done at Exeter.]
 * [Footnote: Anglicis qualiter circa castrorum assultationes agendum sit, qui penitus