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What is the most heavily fortified city in the world?

When completed, the city's defenses totaled 68 forts and 93 batteries connected by over 20 miles of rifle trenches, making Washington the most heavily fortified city in the world. Remains of these fortifications can be seen on National Park Service land at Fort Stevens, Fort Totten, Fort Marcy, and Fort DeRussy.



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Constantinople was unconquered for 874 years The cities with a better defense than Constantinople's existed throughout history. However, there was not a single city that was so unfathomably rich and important as Constantinople was and withstood every siege for over eight hundred years!

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The great fortified walls that surround the medieval city of Ávila date back to the end of the 11th century, built to defend the town's population against the threat of the Moorish armies.

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Uruk in ancient Sumer (Mesopotamia) is one of the world's oldest known walled cities. Before that, the proto-city of Jericho in the West Bank had a wall surrounding it as early as the 8th millennium BC. The earliest known town wall in Europe is of Solnitsata, built in the 6th or 5th millennium BC.

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Cartagena, Colombia Known in the city as 'Las Murallas', Cartagena's city walls bear many a scar from battles across the centuries. Construction on the walls began in the 16th century in order to protect the city and it took nearly 200 years to complete them – they still encase Cartagena's Old Town today.

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Boston is one of the cities in the United States that holds a lot of history. It is the oldest city in the country and carries its history. Notable events and places include Harvard University, the oldest and the first university in the United States. Boston also carried the history of America's revolution event.

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Tallinn is one of the most immaculately preserved medieval cities in Europe, with its winding, cobbled lanes, crooked, half-timbered houses, and ancient squares. The whole of the center is protected by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site.

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