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There were races, too, and riding at the quintain on the castle tiltyard.
Entry for the day's events at the Tiltyard in Whitehall was set at 12d".
This causeway was called the Tiltyard, as it was used for tilting, or jousting, in medieval times.
The Tiltyard causeway acted both as a dam and as part of the barbican defences.
This toy war of theirs is your tiltyard, your testing ground--let's see what you can do, then.
By 1515, Carew's fame in the lists was such that the King provided him with his own tiltyard at Greenwich.
A tiltyard (or tilt yard or tilt-yard) was an enclosed courtyard for jousting.
Strip him, letting her hands drift over the contours of muscles hewn by long hours of swordplay and at the tiltyard.
As a family they had a reputation for jousting, and the restored tiltyard terraces, the heart of Dartington's garden, are a treasured feature.
The first Horse Guards building was built on the site of the former tiltyard of Westminster Palace in 1664.
There were boys in the tiltyard and in the fields doing their martial exercises, but I was not interested because Richard was not among them.
Leicester was a lifelong sportsman, hunting and jousting in the tiltyard, and an indefatigable tennis-player.
Another tiltyard used during the reign of Queen Elizabeth existed at Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire.
The Tiltyard at Whitehall was "a permanent structure and apparently had room for 10-12,000 spectators, accommodated in conditions which ranged from the spartan to the opulent."
A modern tiltyard was constructed outside the Royal Armouries in Leeds for demonstrations of medieval martial pursuits, including jousting reenactment and falconry.
A motion he had practised so many times, with friends or alone as a child under his father's eye, then drilled by the king's foul-tongued sergeants in the tiltyard at Esteren.
The pageants were held at the tiltyard at the Palace of Whitehall, where the royal party viewed the festivities from the Tiltyard Gallery.
What used to follow, when this was tried in the tiltyard at Garsenc, was a silly, undignified manoeuvre that had usuðally left both combatants rolling in the dust, swearing and laughing.
Horse Guards Parade was formerly the site of the Palace of Whitehall's tiltyard, where tournaments (including jousting) were held in the time of Henry VIII.
And despite the prepossessions and prejudices of the multitude, they shouted unanimously as the knight rode into the tiltyard, The second glance, however, served to destroy the hope that his timely arrival had excited.
To the east of the Tiltyard is a lower area of marshy ground, originally flooded and called the Lower Pool, and to the west an area once called the Great Mere.
This slow procession moved up the gentle eminence, on the summit of which was the tiltyard, and, entering the lists, marched once around them from right to left, and when they had completed the circle, made a halt.
Before his execution in 1553 by Queen Mary for attempting to place Lady Jane Grey on the throne, Dudley had built the new stable block and widened the tiltyard to its current form.
"It is not only that I loved your father, Squire Loring, but it is that I have seen you, half armed as you were, ride against the best of them at the Castle tiltyard.