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  2. Spanish colonial fortifications in the Philippines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_colonial...

    Currently, there are initiatives for restorations of all forts, beginning when the Baluarte Luna of La Union and the Intramuros of Manila were restored in the 2010s. In 2013, a typhoon and earthquake hit Central Visayas and damaged numerous Spanish fortifications, leading to the largest restoration activity for fortifications in Philippine history.

  3. Fortifications on the Caribbean Side of Panama: Portobelo-San ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortifications_on_the...

    In all, 10 different fortifications were built on the hills behind Portobelo port, making it the "most heavily fortified Spanish coastal control point in the Americas". [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Many of the fortifications were attacked and crumbled to heaps of rubble; only the fortifications built in 1753 have survived in good condition, as Admiral Vernon ...

  4. Spanish fortifications in America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_fortifications_in...

    They massacred the Portobelo barracks in 1668 and managed to capture numerous Spanish coastal towns and fortifications. On several occasions, buccaneers forces crossed the isthmus, capturing Spanish ships, and captured weakly fortified Pacific ports in Central America, Mexico, and Peru. While the great fortresses of the Caribbean should have ...

  5. Fort San Pedro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_San_Pedro

    The Fort San Pedro restoration was a tedious, time and labor consuming project. To restore the fort as close to the original as possible, coral stones hauled from under the sea along Cebu coastal towns were utilized. Delivered crudely cut to the restoration site, the fort laborers did the final cutting and polishing to make the blocks fit each ...

  6. Fortifications of al-Andalus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortifications_of_al-Andalus

    The gate of the ruined Castle of Gormaz, Spain (10th century). In the Umayyad period (8th–10th centuries) an extensive network of fortifications stretched in a wide line roughly from Lisbon in the west then up through the Central System of mountains in Spain, around the region of Madrid, and finally up to the areas of Navarre and Huesca, north of Zaragoza, in the east.

  7. Chagres and Fort San Lorenzo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chagres_and_Fort_San_Lorenzo

    Chagres (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈtʃaɣɾes]), once the chief Atlantic port on the isthmus of Panama, is now an abandoned village at the historical site of Fort San Lorenzo (Spanish: Fuerte de San Lorenzo). The fort's ruins and the village site are located about 8 miles (13 km) west of Colón, on a promontory overlooking the mouth of the ...

  8. Badajoz bastioned enclosure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Badajoz_bastioned_enclosure

    The site where the fort stands, Cerro de San Cristóbal, was once the location of the Dukes of Orinaza's palace, and Ibn Marwan planned to establish the city of Badajoz there in the 9th century. [75] Constructed during the Portuguese Restoration War, the fort was among the first to enhance Badajoz's medieval defensive system. Construction began ...

  9. Twin Forts of Romblon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twin_Forts_of_Romblon

    The Twin Forts of Romblon (Filipino: Magkaparis na Tanggulan ng Romblon) are a pair of Spanish fortifications located in the town of Romblon, Romblon in the Philippines.It was built by the Spanish in 1644 to protect the town from Muslim raids and Dutch piracy in the country during the Eighty Years' War.