Early thermal weapons

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The Siege and Destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans Under the Command of Titus, A.D. 70, by John Roberts (1850), shows the city burning
The Siege and Destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans Under the Command of Titus, A.D. 70, by John Roberts (1850), shows the city burning

Early thermal weapons were devices or substances used in warfare during the classical and medieval periods (approx 8th century BC until the mid-16th century AD) which used heat or burning action to destroy or damage enemy personnel, fortifications or territories.

Incendiary devices were frequently used as projectiles during warfare, particularly during sieges and naval battles; some substances were boiled or heated to inflict damage by scalding or burning. Other substances relied on their chemical properties to inflict burns or damage. These weapons or devices could be used by individuals, manipulated by war machines, or utilised as army strategy.

The simplest, and most common, thermal projectiles were boiling water and hot sand, which could be poured over attacking personnel. Other anti-personnel weapons included the use of hot pitch, oil, resin, animal fat and other similar compounds. Smoke was used to confuse or drive off attackers. Substances such as quicklime and sulfur could be toxic and blinding.

Fire and incendiary weapons were used against enemy structures and territory, as well as personnel, sometimes on a massive scale. Large tracts of land, towns and villages were frequently destroyed as part of a scorched earth strategy. Incendiary mixtures, such as the oil-based Greek fire, could be launched by throwing machines or administered through a siphon. Sulfur- and oil-soaked materials were sometimes ignited and thrown at the enemy, or attached to spears, arrows and bolts and fired by hand or machine. Some siege techniques, such as mining and boring relied on combustibles and fire to complete the collapse of walls and structures.

Towards the latter part of the period, gunpowder was discovered, which increased the sophistication of the weapons, and led to the eventual development of the cannon and other firearms. Development of the early weapons has continued ever since, with a number of modern war weapons, such as napalm, flame throwers, and other explosives having direct roots in the original early thermal weapons. Fire-raising and other destructive strategies can still be seen in modern strategic bombing.

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[edit] "Fire and sword"

"Behold from your walls the lands laid waste with fire and sword, booty driven off, the houses set on fire in every direction and smoking." Livy, The History of Rome[1]

The destruction of enemy possessions and territory was a fundamental strategy of war, serving the dual purpose of punishment and deprivation of resources.[2] Until the 5th century BC, the Greeks had little expertise in siege warfare and relied on a strategy of devastation to draw the enemy out; they destroyed crops, trees and houses. Centuries later, the Byzantines recommended this strategy, even though they had developed siege technology.[3]

Fire was the easiest way of harrying and destroying territories, and could be done easily and quickly by small forces.[4] It was a strategy put to good use by the Scots during the Wars of Independence; they repeatedly raided into northern England, firing much of the countryside until the whole region was transformed.[2] King Edward II of England pursued one raiding party in 1327 by following the lights of burning villages.[4]

"War without fire is like sausages without mustard" Jean Juvénal des Ursins on Henry V's firing of Meaux in 1421[5]

The tactics were replicated by England during the Hundred Years' War; fire became their chief weapon as they laid waste to the French countryside during lightning raids called chevauchées, in a form of economic warfare. One estimate records the destruction of over 2000 villages and castles during one raid in 1339.[6]

As well as causing the destruction of lands, foods and belongings, fire could also be used to divert manpower. 13th century Mongol armies regularly sent out small detachments from their main forces to start grass fires and fire settlements as diversions.[7]

Devastation by fire was not only used as an offensive tactic; some countries and armies employed 'scorched earth' policies on their own land to deprive invading armies of all food and forage. Robert I of Scotland reacted to the English invasion of 1322 by launching punitive and diversionary chevauchées into north-west England, then retreating to Culross, burning as he went the Scottish lands which lay in the path of the English army. The English ran out of food and had to abandon the campaign.[8]

Such acts of aggression were not limited to wars against territorial enemies, but could form part of the strategies of conquest, subjugation and punishment of rebellion. Alexander the Great suppressed a revolt in Thebes, Greece in 335 BC, after which he ordered the city to be torched and laid waste.[9] Alexander ordered (or allowed) a similar arson at Persepolis in 330 BC.[10] It was a policy which was repeated throughout the period. Following his conquest of England in the 11th century, William I of England asserted his control of Northumbria by destructive campaigns throughout the region: "He ordered that crops and herds, tools and food should be burned to ashes. More than 100,000 people perished of hunger," reported Orderic Vitalis, a contemporary chronicler.[11] It was a scene repeated the following century, during the anarchy of Stephen of England's reign. Civil war erupted between Stephen's supporters and those of the Empress Matilda, a rival claimant for the throne. The Gesta Stephani tells of the deeds of one of Stephen's supporters, Philip of Gloucester, by describing how he "raged in all directions with fire and sword, violence and plunder", reducing territory to "bare fields and dreadful desert".[12]

[edit] Techniques of use

Normans use torches to fire the wooden keep on a motte at Dinan, 1064, Bayeux Tapestry
Normans use torches to fire the wooden keep on a motte at Dinan, 1064, Bayeux Tapestry

At the simplest level, fire itself was used as a weapon to cause large-scale destruction, or to target specific enemy positions or machinery. It was frequently used against siege engines and wooden structures.[13] Incendiary weapons could be used to set fire to towns and fortifications, and a wide range of thermal weapons were used against enemy personnel. Some armies developed specialised "fire-troops". By 837, many Muslim armies had groups of "naffatin" (fire archers),[14] and when the Mamluk Sultanate raised a fleet for an attack on Cyprus they had "nafata", or firetroops.[15]

[edit] Simple fire-raising

The burning of enemy positions and equipment was not necessarily a complicated procedure, and many fires were set by individuals using common materials. When William I of England's army besieged Mayenne in 1063, they shot fire into the castle to panic the garrison, while two boys stole into the castle in order to start a fire within. The garrison surrendered.[16]

Besieged forces would sometimes launch sorties in an attempt to fire the attackers camps or equipment. When Hugh Capet besieged Laon in 986–987, his troops became drunk one night, and Duke Charles's men sallied forth and torched the camp, forcing Hugh to abandon the siege.[17]

The besieged were not the only ones who might fire siege equipment; when Frederick I Barbarossa abandoned his siege of Alexandria in 1175, he burned his own camp and equipment.[18]

However, like all weapons, fire-raising had its own dangers. In 651 Penda of Mercia attempted to win Bamburgh Castle by building a pyre at its base from planks, beams, wattle and thatch. The wind changed direction and the fire blew back on Penda's men, who had to abandon the attack. This fortuitous wind-change was credited to Saint Aidan, who saw the smoke from the Farne Islands and prayed for the defenders.[19]

1869 engraving showing a 13th century trebuchet launching an incendiary missile
1869 engraving showing a 13th century trebuchet launching an incendiary missile

[edit] Throwing machines

Main article: Siege engine

A number of throwing machines were in use throughout the classical and medieval periods. Generally referred to as "artillery", these engines could hurl, fire or shoot missiles and most could be used or adapted for throwing thermal weapons, by attacking and defending forces.[20] Barrels and other breakable containers of pitch, Greek fire, and other incendiary mixtures could be thrown;[21] other machines fired arrows and bolts, which could be ignited, or adapted to carry flammable mixtures.[22] From the 12th century, Muslims in Syria were using clay and glass grenades for fire weapons, thrown by machines.[23]

Most of the terms used for throwing machines were vague, and could refer to a number of specific engines, and all went through a number of changes and developments over the period. Among the most common were the ballista, mangonel and trebuchet. The ballista was developed from large crossbows and served as a catapult, which used a string-winding mechanism to fire a missile or bolt placed in a groove.[24] Other giant crossbows were used throughout the period, and an "espringal", which threw large bolts, was developed in the 13th century.[25] Torsion-powered arrow firers had been used from 400 BC, and were adapted for stones.[22] A mangonel had a wooden spoon-shaped arm, to hold a stone or object, which was manipulated under tension from a twisted rope.[26] The trebuchet was an advanced development of the 12th or 13th century, which used a counter-weight to power the throwing arm, and was the major siege engine until the cannon became widespread.[26]

[edit] Thermal weapons in mining

Main article: Mining (military)

Forces attacking a castle of other strong fortification would sometimes seek to undermine the foundations by digging "mines" or tunnels underneath them. Usually, such mining or digging machinery would be protected by a tortoise (also called a cat, sow, or owl): a covered shed on wheels, which would protect the miners from missile attack.[27]

As the tunnels were constructed, they would generally be supported by wooden beams and posts.[28] Once the mine had been finished, the internal space was filled with combustibles, such as brushwood, firewood, resin, and other incendiary substances; once ignited, these would burn the supporting props, causing the mine to collapse, bringing down with it the structures lying above.[29] From the 15th century, gunpowder was also used, although the aim remained to burn the props.[30]

Defenders might sometimes dig counter-tunnels in order to reach the enemy's mines and launch an attack; frequently thermal weapons would be used to drive the besiegers from the tunnels.[31]

Rather than undermining a structure, some besiegers used borers to drill holes in the outer walls in an effort to destroy them; such methods were more effective than rams on brick walls (which tended to absorb the shocks from the ram).[32] Borers differed in size and mechanism, but a typical machine was made from a log of wood, tipped with iron and supported and driven by windlasses or ropes.[32] Once a series of holes had been bored along the length of a wall, the holes were typically filled with rods of dry wood, saturated with sulfur or pitch and then ignited. Bellows could be used to encourage a blaze.[33]

Chinese fire ships from the Wujing Zongyao military manuscript, 1044, Song Dynasty.
Chinese fire ships from the Wujing Zongyao military manuscript, 1044, Song Dynasty.

[edit] Fire ships

Main article: Fire ship

Fire ships were used on a number of occasions throughout the period. In 332 BC Alexander the Great lay siege to Tyre, a coastal base of the Phoenicians. In order to bring his siege engines within range, Alexander ordered the construction of moles. The Tyrians responded by attacking the first mole with a large fireship, which destroyed it. A large horse transport ship was packed with cedar torches, pitch, dried brush and other combustibles; above this were suspended cauldrons of sulfur, bitumen and "every sort of material apt to kindle and nourish flame".[34] This was towed to the mole, and lit by the Phoenicians before they jumped overboard and swam away.[35]

Another example occurred during the 886 Siege of Paris, when the Vikings filled three warships with combustible material and pulled them upriver in a failed attempt to destroy the Franks' fortified bridges.[36] Fire ships containing straw and powder were also used during the Chinese Battle of Lake Poyang in 1363.[37]

[edit] Other methods

Often ingenious methods were developed for administering the weapons. The 10th-century Olga of Kiev is reported to have tied burning tinder to birds which, when released, flew back to their nests in the hostile town and set them alight.[38] Siege towers and ladders could be fitted with a long, narrow tilting beam at the top, gouged with a groove, so that hot oil and water could be poured down on the enemy defenders during an escalade.[39]

During an attack, castle or fortification defenders could launch or pour the substances on the heads of attackers below. This could be done over the battlements, but also through purpose-built holes such as machicolations and murder-holes.[40] Indian records suggest smoke and fire was used defensively within a fortress to confuse and disorientate attackers; iron grills could also be heated and used to block passageways.[41] During night attacks, defenders could drop lighted bundles over the walls so the enemy could be seen; Chinese and Muslim sources also describe the light gained by torches hung on the walls.[42]

[edit] Use against stone castles

Stone castles were susceptible to fire, since they contained many combustible materials.[43] In 1139, Henry de Tracy forced the surrender of Torrington Castle by the simple expedient of tossing lighted torches through the keep's loopholes.[44]

Stone was also susceptible to intense heat, which would cause it to crack and collapse. Byzantine sources recorded the demolition of stone structures caused by placing clay pots of burning charcoal at the base of walls moistened with vinegar or urine,[38] and the 6th century treatise by an engineer in Justinian's army includes the lighting fires beneath the walls amongst its instructions for sieges.[45]

Stone castles sometimes offered other inflammatory targets. During the Crusades, Muslim defenders frequently hung bundles of straw against their walls as buffers against stones and rams; in turn, the Crusader archers would set these alight with fire arrows.[46]

[edit] Defence against thermal attack

Defence from thermal weapons and fire attacks was usually water or other liquids such as urine; hides were soaked and draped over vulnerable wooden hoardings and siege engines, and vats and barrels of liquid were collected and stored by defenders and attackers.[40] Hides were hung in an overlapping manner so that any water would run down the whole structure to extinguish flames.[47] Some thermal weapons (such as quicklime or oil) could not be extinguished or eased by water, in which case sand or earth could be used.[48] Wooden structures were frequently soaked in alum to increase their fire resistance.[48] The Romans covered their tortoises (mobile siege sheds) with raw hides packed with vinegar-soaked seaweed or chaff, to serve as protection against regular and incendiary missiles.[49] Throughout the period, sacks or nets might be filled with vinegar-moistened chaff, seaweed or wet moss and hung on the exterior.[47] The wooden siege engines of the Crusaders were vulnerable to attack from the Byzantine and Muslim fire-weapons, so the troops inside siege towers kept stores of water and vinegar.[50]

During the High Middle Ages, the majority of Poland's castles were still made of wood, so uncut stone was frequently added to the front to improve their fire defences.[51]

Both attackers and defenders needed to be prepared for incendiary and thermal attack. When the Athenians besieged Syracuse in 416 BC they lost many siege engines to fire. The Syracusan ruler Dionysius I must have taken note of this success, for when he laid siege to Motya in 398 BC he organised special fire "brigades", who successfully doused the fires when his siege engines were bombarded.[52]

[edit] Types of weapons

[edit] Fire arrows, bolts, spears and rockets

Lit torches (burning sticks) were likely the earliest form of incendiary device. They were followed by incendiary arrows, which were used throughout the ancient and medieval periods. The simplest flaming arrows had oil- or resin-soaked tows tied just below the arrowhead and were effective against wooden structures.[13] Both the Assyrians and the Judeans used fire arrows at the siege of Lachish in 701 BC.[53] More sophisticated devices were developed by the Romans which had iron boxes and tubes which were filled with incendiary substances and attached to arrows or spears. These arrows needed to be fired from loose bows, since swift flight extinguished the flame; spears could be launched by hand or throwing machine.[54]

Fire arrows and crossbow bolts were used throughout the period. 15th Century writer Gutierre Diaz de Gamez witnessed a Spanish attack on the Moorish town of Oran in 1404 and later described how "During the most part of the night, the galleys did not cease from firing bolts and quarrells dipped in tar into the town, which is near the sea. The noise and the cries which came from the town were very great by reason of the havoc that was wrought."[55]

A 2 m (2.2 yd) long iron crossbow-bolt probably designed to carry a fire cartridge was found in a 13th-14th century castle in Vladimir, Eastern Russia.[56] Such large machine-thrown bolts were ideal for incendiary weapons. The Mongols used an "ox-bow" machine to throw bolts which had been dipped in burning pitch, with a range of 2500 paces.[57]

Anna Comnena records that at the 1091 Battle of Levunium, lighted torches were fixed to spears.[58]

Primitive rockets made from bamboo and leather were used by the Mongols, under Genghis Khan, but were inaccurate.[59] However, the Fatamids used "Chinese arrows" from the 11th Century, which probably included saltpetre.[14] The Mamluks experimented with a rocket-powered weapons described as "an egg which moves itself and burns."[60]

Depiction of Greek fire in the late 11th century Madrid Skylitzes manuscript.
Depiction of Greek fire in the late 11th century Madrid Skylitzes manuscript.

[edit] Greek fire

Main article: Greek fire

Greek fire was one of the most effective thermal devices, although it was extremely dangerous for the users.[61] A combustible liquid, it could be shot from siphons or catapults, and it burst into flames on impact. First developed by the Byzantines in the 7th century, it was later used by the Turks during the Crusades, and was probably first used in Western Europe in the 12th century.[62] Early experiments by the Byzantines in the 6th century used a mixture of sulfur and oil, which would have been terrifying if not destructive.[45] Various versions seem to have existed, and the recipes were frequently kept secret; experts today still debate the exact composition, although some recipes are known.[63] It probably had regional variations; the Islamic derivative was known as "naft" and had a petroleum base, with sulfur.[64]

The combustible liquid could be shot from catapults, and would burst into flames on impact.[62] Siphons, frequently of copper, were also developed, first appearing in the 10th and 11th centuries.[65] The siphons could shoot a blazing stream, which a 10th century Mesopotamian source claimed could engulf twelve men.[64] Mardi bin Ali al-Tarsusi, who wrote a military manual for Saladin in the 12th century, suggested that "naft" could be placed inside blown eggshells, which could be thrown from horseback.[64] From the 12th century, mouth-blown tubes were developed for use in mines.[14]

Similar petroleum and bitumen-based incendiary mixtures had been known for centuries before the invention of Greek fire, but this new recipe created a blaze which was extremely difficult to extinguish.[66] It burned on water, and was used effectively in naval warfare,[40] although it was primarily an anti-personnel weapon rather than a ship-burner.[67] It remained effective at sea even after its use had declined on land after the 13th century.[64]

The Greek fire recipes continued to be developed over the centuries, and by the High Middle Ages was much more sophisticated than the early versions.[68] Saltpetre (also called "Chinese salt") was added to the mixture in the Islamic world, and China developed a dry saltpetre mixture in the 12th century, which eventually became gunpowder.[64][69]

[edit] Hot oil

Oil of various kinds could be heated to high temperatures and poured over enemy,[70] although, since it was extremely expensive, its use was limited, both in frequency and quantity.[40][21] Moreover, it could be dangerous and volatile. Since the smoke point of oil is lower than its boiling point, the oil was only heated and not boiled.

Pouring-oil was used in a number of historic battles, and Josephus described its use at Jotapata in AD 67, saying "the oil did easily run down the whole body from head to foot, under their entire armour, and fed upon their flesh like flame itself."[71]

Oil was usually used to create incendiary devices. The Roman-Byzantine armies of the 6th century created "fire-pots", oil-based incendiary weapons which could be launched by hand or with ballistae.[72] During the siege at Montreuil-en-Bellay in 1147, a mixture of oils from nuts, cannabis and flax, was heated in iron containers, launched by mangonel, and burst into flames on impact.[73] The Chinese made early grenades out of oil-soaked hemp and cotton, which were ignited and thrown by mangonels.[74]

Another use of oil can be seen in the naval battle of La Rochelle during the Hundred Years' War; the Castilians sprayed oil on the decks of English ships then ignited it by shooting flaming arrows down.[75]

"They built copper and iron shields, put sand into them, and heated them over hot fire so the sand became red-hot. By means of some mechanism they threw this sand at those who had fought bravest and subjected their victims to most severe suffering. The sand penetrated through the armour into the shirts, burned the body, and it could not be helped [...] they died, going mad with horrible pain, in sufferings piteous and unquenchable." Diodorus Siculus, on the 4th century BC Siege of Tyre.[71]

[edit] Water, sand and other heated missiles

Hot oil was considerably less common than boiling water or heated sand, which were cheap and extremely effective; even "dust from the street" could be used. These would penetrate armour and cause terrible burns.[70] Sand, especially, could work its way through very small gaps in armour.[21] The Phoenicians at the Siege of Tyre in 332 BC dropped burning sand down on the attacking Greeks, which got in behind the armour and burned the flesh.[76] Such heated missiles have also been used in mining situations; the 1st century Roman writer Vitruvius describes a counter-mine dug above the attackers' gallery by defenders at the siege of Apollonia. Piercing the floor between the mines, the Apollonian defenders poured down boiling water, hot sand and hot pitch onto the heads of their enemy.[77] Other mixtures were more innovative; the defenders at Chester in 918 boiled a mixture of water and ale in copper tubs and poured it over the Viking besiegers, causing their skin to peel off.[78]

When Frederick I Babarossa besieged Crema, Italy in the 12th century, the defenders threw red-hot iron objects down on them.[78]

[edit] Pitch, tar and resin

Burning pitch was used on occasion; the Mongols were known to fire containers of burning tar during sieges using catapults and trebuchets.[59] Wheels could be covered in pitch, set alight and rolled along; this technique was commonly used during the Crusades.[79] The besieged Carthaginians in Motya, 398 BC, set alight the siege engines of the attacking Syracusan forces under Dionysius I by dropping burning charred logs and resin-soaked oakum; however, the Syracusans were able to put out the fires.[52]

Pitch was a base ingredient in many incendiary devices throughout the period. The Boeotians developed a fire machine, which they used against the Athenian wooden fortifications during the Battle of Delium in 424 BC. A cauldron of burning coals, pitch and sulfur was suspended at one end of a hollowed-out log and bellows were fixed to the other end.[80] A similar mixture was used 900 years later by the Scots, when they dropped bales of wood, tar and sulfur by crane onto the English "sow" (a large protective shield covering the battering ram) at the 1319 siege of Berwick-upon-Tweed.[43]

[edit] Animal products

At the 1215 siege of Rochester Castle, King John ordered the fat from 40 pigs be used to set fire to the new mines beneath the keep, which caused it to collapse, a cheap and effective technique he used in preference to the more complicated mixture of sulfur, tallow, gum, pitch and quicksilver he had used in France the previous year.[81] Animal fat was not uncommon as an accelerant; in the 13th century French sortie-parties would often be equipped with animal fat, straw and flax to use as fuel when setting fires amongst enemy siege engines.[82]

There were some intriguing uses of animal products; during the Siege of Paris in 886 AD, the Franks dropped bucket-loads of a hot mixture of pitch (or oil), wax and fish on the attacking Vikings; the mixture got under the armour and stuck to the skin.[83] Konrad Kyeser's Bellifortis of 1405 describes a poisonous mixture of sulfur, tar and horses' hooves.[79] Other incendiary ingredients included egg yolks, and pigeon and sheep droppings.[84] Live insects were also used, to sting the enemy. 4th century BC writer Aeneas Tacticus suggested defenders should let wasps and bees into enemy mines,[77]

In 189 BC Ambracia was besieged by the Romans, who dug mines under the walls. The defenders filled a clay jar with chicken feathers, which they then lit, using bellows to blow the acrid smoke down the tunnel; unable to approach the pot due to defensive spears, the Romans were forced to abandon their workings.[77]

[edit] Quicklime, sulfur and smoke

The 15th-century engineer Taccola recommended quicklime,[70] although its use went back to ancient times, and might well have been a component of Greek fire.[85] Quicklime reacts violently with water, and can cause blindness and burns.[85] While quicklime was used in some naval battles,[86] it does not appear to have been standard issue on board ships, due to the danger of the quicklime blowing back and burning the user.[61]

Other substances smoked rather than flamed. Sacks of burning sulfur were effective at clearing enemy mines due to the toxic smoke produced.[21] Any smoke could be used in small confines; the Greek military writer Aeneas Tacticus recommended burning wood and straw to drive out enemy sappers by the smoke.[77]

[edit] Gunpowder and cannon

Siege of Orleans in 1428 (Vigiles de Charles VII, 15th century)
Siege of Orleans in 1428 (Vigiles de Charles VII, 15th century)

The early experiments in adding saltpetre (potassium nitrate) to incendiary mixtures eventually led to the development of gunpowder. Saltpetre (also known as "Chinese salt") was first known in China in the 11th century, and was added to Arabic "naft" in the 12th century, whence its use spread into Western Europe.[87] In a separate development in Europe, Roger Bacon invented gunpowder in the mid 13th century, although the mixture was not very effective.[88][89] The composition of gunpowder varied throughout the period, and did not settle into the current ratios of saltpetre, sulfur and coal until the 17th century.[88]

Gunpowder's first use was in petroleum-based incendiary mixtures.[90] Initially, gunpowder mixtures were utilised through traditional engines and throwing mechanisms; containers and grenades were thrown by mangonels and trebuchets, and explosive rockets and arrows were developed, along with gunpowder flamethrowers.[91]

The first mention of cannon is in a document from 1324, when "iron bullets and cannon made of metal" were commissioned. In a separate document that year there appeared an illustration of the pot-de-fer – a barrel or 'pot' which fired a large arrow or bolt.[92] Cannon were first used by the Muslims at Alicante in 1331, or Algeciras in 1343.[93] Bamboo handguns, operated with gunpowder, had been developed by the Chinese in the 13th century, but their development of metal cannons occurred during mid-late 14th century.[94] From then onwards, the spread and development of the weapons was rapid,[93] with widespread use by the end of the 14th century.[95]

However, early cannon were not very effective, the main benefits being psychological, frightening men and horses.[93] Short barrelled, large-calibre "bombards" were used up until the late 15th century in Europe, during which period they grew increasingly larger.[96] In the mid-15th century, mortars also appeared.[97] Various smaller weapons also existed, including the serpentine, ribaudequin and cropaudin.[98] The powder was of poor quality and was used in small quantities – to prevent explosion of the barrel – so the effective range of these cannon was rarely more than 200–250m.[99]

The barrels of the cannon were forged or cast, and each gun generally differed in calibre and length.[100] Early powder resembled a paste, and tended to burn slowly.[101] Its composition varied in different geographical areas, the powder of Europe being quite different to that used in the East.[102] The projectiles used were generally stone balls for bombards and mortars. Forged iron balls were used in smaller-calibre cannon, and coated with lead to make them smooth. From the 15th century, cast iron balls were used, which caused great destruction. As they were denser than stone, even small balls could be destructive. Thus, cannon became smaller in calibre, and longer-barrels increased the range.[102]

[edit] Later development

The use of incendiary devices had decreased by the 14th century, perhaps due to the increasingly economic realities of war where it became increasingly important that captured castles and towns were undamaged.[21] Moreover, fewer wooden engines and structures were employed in the battlefield after the late 13th century, perhaps because of the prior success of the incendiary weapons at destroying them.[103]

While the incidence of use dropped, towards the latter end of the Middle Ages the incendiary devices became more sophisticated, and the principle of wielding fire with sword remained present throughout the Early Modern and Modern periods; improving technology merely allowed the process to become more efficient.

Burned-out buildings in Hamburg after the 1943 Allied incendiary attacks.
Burned-out buildings in Hamburg after the 1943 Allied incendiary attacks.

[edit] The principle of fire and sword

Fire itself remained a part of warfare. In his reminisces of the Peninsular War (1807–1814), a British soldier recorded that the French soldiers would "regularly burn to the ground every place they pass through. In following them we find each town and village a heap of smoking ruins."[104] During World War I, Leuven, in Belgium was "looted and burned in medieval fashion",[105] when German soldiers set fire to much of the town, destroying the library and other cultural buildings, and causing outrage around the world.[106] Yet the tactic was not dispensed with. In World War II, firebombing with incendiary bombs was carried out by the Germans against Britain during the Blitz, and by the Allies against Germany and Japan. After one heavy raid on Tokyo in March 1945, the resulting firestorms destroyed a quarter of the predominately wooden buildings.[107] Much as the Ancient Greeks before them, it was a strategy of devastation. Fire has continued to be used as a destructive measure in warfare. During the 1991–1992 Gulf War, Iraq set fire to three-quarters of Kuwait's oil wells.[108]

Fire remained an extremely successful weapon. During naval warfare of the Napoleonic wars, "the one thing most likely to destroy a ship was fire".[109] Sometimes the fires were merely a side effect of weapon technology. Early firearms proved incendiary in their use and could start fires. During the Peninsular War, both Talavera and Salamanca battlefields were wracked by tremendous grassfires, first started by the guns.[110] At the Battle of Trafalgar, 1805, the French ship Achille caught fire when musket-flashes from her own men's guns set fire to the tar and grease on the sail rigging; the ship eventually exploded.[109]

Smoke screens have continued to be used by attackers and defenders as a means of sowing confusion and hiding movements. During naval battles in the 18–19th centuries, shots were sometimes fired early so a defensive screen was erected before the ships converged, to spoil the aim of the enemy.[111]

[edit] Development and continued use of weapons

The major development of weapons in the early modern and modern periods occurred with firearms, which became progressively more efficient. Gunpowder settled into its standard ratio in the 17th century,[88] and general ballistic technology improved. Initially, iron round shot replaced the earlier stone balls for cannon then, latterly, different types of shot were invented. For short range use against personnel, canister and the smaller naval grapeshot were popular during the 19th century; it comprised smaller iron or lead pellets contained within a case or bag, which scattered on explosion.[112] In 1784, Lt Henry Shrapnel invented a spherical case-shot, which was later named after him. The case was a hollow iron sphere which was filled with musket balls and was detonated by a gunpowder charge.[113] Shot fired from cannon could be so hot that it scorched or set fire to materials that it brushed.[114]

The incendiary liquids of the ancient and medieval periods were also developed, and have their modern equivalents. World War I saw the development of the flamethrower, a modern version of the Byzantine siphons, which used gas under pressure to squirt a mixture of inflammable oil and petrol, ignited by a burning taper.[115] Technology improved throughout the twentieth century, and the latter half saw the development and use of napalm, an incendiary liquid formed in part from naphtha, which was the main ingredient of the Arabic "naft".

Flames continued to be used for defensive light until artificial lights were developed. At the Siege of Badajoz in 1812, the French defenders flung down burning "carcasses" of straw so that the attacking British might be seen. Like the sieges of old, the British were met by incendiary weapons, but now these took the form of explosive grenades, mines and powder barrels as well as the enemy's guns.[116]

Specific weapons from the ancient and medieval periods continued to develop, and many have modern equivalents. Rocket technology, originally trialled by the Mongols, Indians and the Chinese, amongst others, was improved by the 19th century; one example was the incendiary Congreve rocket, which had a tail, a fuse, and a powder charge (saltpetre, sulfur and carbon) inside a hollow shell.[113] Grenades continued to develop, although still retaining some aspects of their medieval equivalents. The grenades carried on board Royal Navy ships in the late 18th and early 19th century were constructed from hollow cast iron, filled with gunpowder; the fuse was a hollow wooden tube filled with combustible material.[109] During World War I, grenades were still occasionally launched by ballistae.[117]

The use of some weapons continued with little change. The Koreans used fire arrows against the Japanese at the Battle of Hansan Island in 1592.[118] At Trafalgar, in 1805, the British ship Tonnant shot wads covered in sulfur, which set fire to the Algésiras.[119] Fireships were used in later periods. In 1588, the English sent fireships loaded with gunpowder, pitch and tar amongst the anchored Spanish Armada; the Spanish fleet broke formation, setting them up for the later battle.[120] The last battle under sail was the Battle of Navarino (1827), part of the Greek War of Independence, during which fireships were utilised by the Turks.[121]

Chemical warfare had been experimented with during the early period with sulfur, quicklime (calcium oxide), and others, and developments continued. World War I saw a vast number of gases used, including the extremely effective sulfur mustard (mustard gas).[122]

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Titus Livius, The History of Rome p. 335
  2. ^ a b Prestwich, pp. 198–200
  3. ^ Nossov, pp. 27, 58
  4. ^ a b Traquir, p. 198
  5. ^ Bradbury (1992), p. 170
  6. ^ Prestwich, pp. 200–2
  7. ^ Carey et al, p. 118
  8. ^ Traquir, p. 228
  9. ^ Cartledge, p. 57
  10. ^ Cartledge, p. 99
  11. ^ "Orderic's reaction", NormanConquest.co.uk, 24 October 2007. 
  12. ^ quoted in Prestwich, p. 199
  13. ^ a b Nossov, p. 190
  14. ^ a b c Nicolle (1996), p. 85
  15. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 181
  16. ^ Bradbury (2004), p. 151
  17. ^ Bradbury (2004), p. 202
  18. ^ Bradbury (2004), p. 161
  19. ^ Bradbury (2004), p. 135
  20. ^ Bradbury (2004), p. 299
  21. ^ a b c d e Nicolle (1995), p. 208
  22. ^ a b Nossov, pp. 133–5
  23. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 178
  24. ^ Bradbury (2004), p. 300
  25. ^ Nossov, pp. 159–160
  26. ^ a b Bradbury (2004), p. 305
  27. ^ Nossov, p. 123
  28. ^ Bradbury (2004), p. 303
  29. ^ Nossov, p. 124
  30. ^ Nossov, p. 126
  31. ^ Nossov, pp. 129–131
  32. ^ a b Nossov, p. 99
  33. ^ Nossov, pp. 101–2
  34. ^ quote from Cartledge, p. 149
  35. ^ Cartledge, pp. 148–9
  36. ^ Bennett et al, p. 222
  37. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 210
  38. ^ a b Nossov, p. 191
  39. ^ Nossov, p. 78
  40. ^ a b c d Kaufmann & Kaufmann, p. 61
  41. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 208
  42. ^ Nicolle (2006), p. 206
  43. ^ a b Prestwich, p. 291
  44. ^ Prestwich, pp. 297–8
  45. ^ a b Nicolle (1996), p. 45
  46. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 174
  47. ^ a b Nossov, p. 108
  48. ^ a b Nossov, p. 203
  49. ^ Nossov, p. 85
  50. ^ Nicolle (1996) pp. 173–4
  51. ^ Kaufmann & Kaufmann, p. 126
  52. ^ a b Nossov, p. 36
  53. ^ Grant, p. 17
  54. ^ Nossov, pp. 190–191
  55. ^ Diaz de Gamez, p. 90
  56. ^ Nicolle (1996), p 121
  57. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 121
  58. ^ Bradbury (2004), p. 176
  59. ^ a b Carey et al, p. 119
  60. ^ quoted in Nicolle (1996), p. 181
  61. ^ a b Bennett et al, p. 241
  62. ^ a b Bradbury (2004), p. 302
  63. ^ Nossov, pp. 196–8
  64. ^ a b c d e Nicolle (1996), p. 194
  65. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 85
  66. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 45
  67. ^ Bennett et al, p. 215
  68. ^ Nicolle (1995) p. 194
  69. ^ Nicolle (1995), p. 295
  70. ^ a b c Nossov, p. 79
  71. ^ a b quoted in Nossov, p. 79
  72. ^ Nicolle (1995), p. 49
  73. ^ Nossov, pp 200–201
  74. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 205
  75. ^ Bennett et al, p. 248
  76. ^ Cartledge, p. 150
  77. ^ a b c d Nossov, p. 131
  78. ^ a b Nossov, p. 80
  79. ^ a b Nossov, p. 202
  80. ^ Nossov, p. 32
  81. ^ Matarasso, pp. 100–1
  82. ^ Nicolle (2005), p. 152
  83. ^ Bennett et al, pp. 180, 222
  84. ^ Nossov, p. 193
  85. ^ a b Nossov, p. 200
  86. ^ Bennett et al, p. 212
  87. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 294
  88. ^ a b c Nossov, p. 205
  89. ^ Nicolle (1995), p. 296
  90. ^ Nicolle (1995), p. 294
  91. ^ Nicolle (1996), pp. 294–5
  92. ^ Nossov, pp. 205–7
  93. ^ a b c Nossov, p. 209
  94. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 296
  95. ^ Nicolle (1995), p. 206
  96. ^ Nossov, pp. 209–10
  97. ^ Nossov, p. 216
  98. ^ Nicolle (1995), p. 297
  99. ^ Nossov, p. 213
  100. ^ Nossov, pp. 217–8
  101. ^ Nossov, p. 220
  102. ^ a b Nossov, p. 222
  103. ^ Nicolle (1996), p. 178
  104. ^ quoted in Bluth, p. 135
  105. ^ Grant, p. 270
  106. ^ Gibson, Craig (2008). "The culture of destruction in the First World War". Times Literary Supplement (January 30, 2008). 
  107. ^ Grant, p. 329
  108. ^ Grant, p. 351
  109. ^ a b c Adkins, p. 131
  110. ^ Bryant, p. 36
  111. ^ Adkins, p. 107
  112. ^ Grant, p. 156
  113. ^ a b Bluth, p. 140
  114. ^ Adkins, p. 106
  115. ^ Haythornthwaite, p. 73
  116. ^ Bryant, p. 23
  117. ^ Nossov, pp. 184–5
  118. ^ Grant, p. 176
  119. ^ Adkins, p. 185
  120. ^ Grant, p. 148
  121. ^ Ortzen, p. 80
  122. ^ Haythornthwaite, pp. 90–92

[edit] References

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