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Chinese city gates had a 2nd inner trap-courtyard. Why?

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Answer: To trap attackers in a kill-box if the outer gate falls

To trap attackers in a kill-box if the outer gate fallsCorrect! The 瓮城 (wèngchéng, 'urn city') is a small enclosed courtyard between an outer gate and an inner gate. If attackers smash through the outer gate, they enter the urn — and the inner gate stays shut. Defenders shoot down from all four walls. Nanjing's Zhonghua Gate has THREE such urns stacked, plus 27 hidden chambers for soldiers — the most complex surviving city gate on Earth.

To inspect tax cargo before letting it into the cityWrong. Tax inspection happened at the outer gate or at dedicated customs stations, not in a fortified kill-box. The urn-city's design is purely military — too small and too lethal to be a customs office.

To park merchant caravans overnight outside the cityWrong. Caravans camped at dedicated caravanserais outside the wall. Trapping a caravan in the urn-city would block the gate. The space exists to kill people who broke in, not to host people who didn't.

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