Barricades

/ˈbærɪkeɪdz/ noun

Barriers or walls put up quickly to block a passage or protect against attack, or to use something as a barrier.

From French 'barricade,' derived from Spanish 'barrica' (barrel) because the French initially used barrels filled with earth and stones during the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre (1572). The word entered English to describe any improvised defensive barrier.

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