portcullis
noun·/pɔːrtˈkʌl.ɪs/
A heavy, vertically sliding gate, often a gridded lattice of wood and iron, used to secure a castle or fortified entrance. Defense made architectural. A portcullis implies siege-thinking: a barrier built to drop fast and mean it.
At dusk the portcullis groaned down, and the courtyard became an island of torchlight cut off from the dark fields.
Etymology
From Middle French porte coulisse "sliding door," from porte "door" + coulisser "to slide." The word preserves the motion: not swung, but dropped, gravity recruited as security.
Related Words
drawbridgeanother fortified threshold device
barbicana defensive outwork protecting a gate
rampartthe broader defensive structure
gatehousethe architectural context that houses a portcullis