History of gunpowder

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Earliest known written formula for gunpowder, from the Chinese Wujing Zongyao of 1044 AD.
Earliest known written formula for gunpowder, from the Chinese Wujing Zongyao of 1044 AD.

Gunpowder was the first and only known chemical explosive until the invention of others—nitrocellulose, nitroglycerin, smokeless powder and TNT in the 19th century. However, prior to the invention of gunpowder, many incendiary and burning devices had been used, including Greek fire.

Contents

[edit] China

Earliest known representation of a gun (a fire lance) and a grenade (upper right), Dunhuang, 10th century.
Earliest known representation of a gun (a fire lance) and a grenade (upper right), Dunhuang, 10th century.[1]
A Mongol bomb thrown against a charging Japanese samurai during the Mongol invasions of Japan, 1281.
A Mongol bomb thrown against a charging Japanese samurai during the Mongol invasions of Japan, 1281.
Handgun from the Yuan dynasty.
Handgun from the Yuan dynasty.
Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) Chinese musketeers in drill formation.
Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) Chinese musketeers in drill formation.

The prevailing academic consensus is that gunpowder was discovered in the 9th century by Chinese alchemists searching for an elixir of immortality.[2] The discovery of gunpowder was probably the product of centuries of alchemical experimentation.[3] Saltpetre was known to the Chinese by the mid-1st century AD, and there is strong evidence of the use of saltpetre and sulfur in various largely medicinal combinations.[4] A Chinese alchemical text from 492 noted that saltpeter gave off a purple flame when ignited, providing for the first time a practical and reliable means of distinguishing it from other inorganic salts, making it possible to evaluate and compare purification techniques.[3]

The first reference to gunpowder is probably a passage in the Zhenyuan miaodao yaolüe (真元妙道要略), a Taoist text tentatively dated to the mid-800s:[3]

Some have heated together sulfur, realgar, and saltpeter with honey; smoke and flames result, so that their hands and faces have been burnt, and even the whole house where they were working burned down.[5]

The discovery of gunpowder in the 800s and the subsequent invention of firearms in the 1100s both coincided with long periods of disunity, during which there was some immediate use for infantry and siege weapons.[3] The years 904–906 saw the use of incendiary projectiles called 'flying fires' (fei-huo).[6][7][8] Needham (1986) argues that gunpowder was first used in warfare in China in 919 as a fuse for the ignition of another incendiary, Greek fire. The earliest depiction of a gunpowder weapon is a mid-10th century silk banner from Dunhuang that shows a fire lance, precursor of the gun.[9] The earliest depiction of a gun is a sculpture from a cave in Sichuan dating to the 1100s of a figure carrying a vase-shaped bombard with flames and a cannonball coming out of it.[10][11] The oldest gun ever discovered, dated to 1288, has a muzzle-bore diameter of 2.5 cm; the second oldest, dated to 1332, has a muzzle-bore diameter of 10.5 cm.[12][13][14]

The earliest surviving recipes for gunpowder can be found in the Wujing Zongyao[3] of 1044, which contains three: two for use in incendiary bombs to be thrown by siege engines (48.5% saltpetre, 25.5% sulfur, 21.5% others; 50% saltpetre, 25% sulfur, 6.5% charcoal and 18.75% others) and one intended as fuel for poisonous-smoke bombs (38.5% saltpetre, 19% sulfur, 6.4% charcoal and 35.85% others).[15][16] Many early mixtures of Chinese gunpowder contained toxic substances such as mercury and arsenic compounds. Printed editions of this book were made from about 1488, and in 1608 a hand-copied edition was made.[17]

The formulas in the Wujing zongyao range from 27 to 50 percent nitrate.[18] Experimenting with different levels of saltpetre content eventually produced bombs, grenades, and mines, in addition to giving fire arrows a new lease on life.[3] By the end of the 12th century, there were cast-iron grenades filled with gunpowder formulations capable of bursting through their metal containers.[19] An agglomeration of 60% saltpetre, 20% sulfur, and 20% charcoal that dated to about the late 13th century was unearthed in the city of Xi'an.[20] The 14th century Huolongjing contains gunpowder recipes with nitrate levels ranging from 12% to 91%, six of which approach the theoretical composition for maximal explosive force.[18] Zhang (1986) argues that the use of gunpowder in artillery as an explosive (as opposed to merely an incendiary) was made possible by improvements in the refinement of sulfur from pyrite during the Song Dynasty.

As early as the 11th century, the government of the Song Dynasty was concerned that foreign enemies might break its monopoly on gunpowder technology. The Song Shi (which means the history of Song Dynasty) of 1345 records that, in 1067, the Song government prohibited the people of Hedong (modern-day Shanxi and Hebei) from selling to foreigners any form of sulfur or saltpetre.[21] In 1076 the Song government went further, issuing a ban on all private commercial transactions involving saltpetre and sulfur, for fear that they would be sold across borders, and creating a government monopoly on their production and commercial distribution.[21]

The origin of rocket propulsion is the 'ground-rat,' a type of firework whose use was recorded in 1264 when they frightened the Empress-Mother Kung Sheng at a feast held in her honor by her son the Emperor Lizong.[22] The 14th-century text of the Huolongjing illustrates and describes a Chinese multistage rocket with booster rockets that, when burnt out, ignited a swarm of smaller rockets issuing forth from the front of the missile shaped like a dragon's head.[23] Along with rockets, the Huolongjing also described explosive land mines and naval mines.[24]

A cannon from the Huolongjing, written by Jiao Yu and Liu Ji in the mid 14th century.
A cannon from the Huolongjing, written by Jiao Yu and Liu Ji in the mid 14th century.

In 1260, the personal arsenal of Song Dynasty Prime Minister Zhao Nanchong caught fire and exploded, destroying several outlying houses and killing four of his prized pet tigers.[25] The Gui Xin Za Zhi of 1295 records that a much bigger accident took place at Weiyang in 1280, at an arsenal used primarily for the storage of trebuchet-launched bombs:

Formerly the artisan positions were all held by Southerners (i.e., the Chinese). But they engaged in peculation, so they had to be dismissed, and all their jobs were given to Northerners (probably Mongols, or Chinese who had served them). Unfortunately, these men understood nothing of the handling of chemical substances. Suddenly, one day, while sulfur was being ground fine, it burst into flame, then the (stored) fire lances caught fire, and flashed hither and thither like frightened snakes. (At first) the workers thought it was funny, laughing and joking, but after a short time the fire got into the bomb store, and then there was a noise like a volcanic eruption and the howling of a storm at sea. The whole city was terrified, thinking that an army was approaching...Even at a distance of a hundred li, tiles shook and houses trembled...The disturbance lasted a whole day and night. After order had been restored, an inspection was made, and it was found that a hundred men of the guards had been blown to bits, beams and pillars had been cleft asunder or carried away by the force of the explosion to a distance of over ten li. The smooth ground was scooped into craters and trenches more than ten feet deep. Above two hundred families living in the neighborhood were victims of this unexpected disaster.[25]

In the year 1259, the official Li Zengbo wrote in his Ko Zhai Za Gao, Xu Gao Hou that the city of Qingzhou was manufacturing one to two thousand strong iron-cased bomb shells a month, dispatching to Xiangyang and Yingzhou about ten to twenty thousand such bombs at a time.[26] In the 13th century, the Mongols conquered China and with it the technology of gunpowder.[27] The use of cannon and rockets became a feature of East-Asian warfare thereafter, as Song China's enemies captured valuable craftsmen and engineers and set them to the task of crafting comparable weapons.[28] After 1279, most guns taken from the major cities were kept by the Mongols. In 1330s, a Mongol law prohibited all kinds of weapons' being in the hands of Chinese. However, it was restricted to civilians, who didn't usually carry weapons.[29] An account of a 1359 battle near Hangzhou records that both the Ming Chinese and Mongol sides were equipped with cannon.[30] The low, thick city walls of Beijing (started in 1406), were specifically designed to withstand a gunpowder-artillery attack[31], and the Ming dynasty (1368-1644) moved the capital from Nanjing to Beijing in 1421, because the hills around Nanjing were good locations for invaders to place artillery.

In the 13th century, contemporary documentation shows that gunpowder was beginning to spread from China to the rest of the world, starting with Europe[32] and the Islamic world.[33]

In the 1593 Siege of Poypang 40,000 Ming soldiers deployed a variety of cannons to bombard Japanese army. During the Japanese invasions of Korea 7-Year Battle in Korea (1591-1598), Chinese-Korean coalition and Japanese widely used artillery (muskets and cannons) in land and sea battles.

[edit] Islamic world

See also: Great Turkish Bombard
The bronze Dardanelles cannon, used by the Ottoman Turks in the siege of Constantinople in 1453, was the first supergun.
The bronze Dardanelles cannon, used by the Ottoman Turks in the siege of Constantinople in 1453, was the first supergun.

Though potassium nitrate (thalj al-Sīn, or "Chinese snow") was earlier known to Arabic chemists, the Islamic world did not acquire knowledge of gunpowder until the 13th century. The first Arabic reference to gunpowder is found in Hasan al-Rammah's Al-furusiyyah wa al-manasib al-harbiyya (The Book of Military Horsemanship and Ingenious War Devices), written in the 1270s, which included the first gunpowder recipes to approach the ideal composition for explosive gunpowder used in modern times (75% saltpetre, 10% sulfur, 15% carbon), such as the tayyar "rocket" (75% saltpetre, 8% sulfur, 15% carbon) and the tayyar buruq "lightning rocket" (74% saltpetre, 10% sulfur, 15% carbon). He states in his book that many of these recipes were known to his father and grandfather, hence dating back to at least the late 12th century. The earliest known military applications of these explosive gunpowder compositions were the explosive hand cannons first used by the Egyptians to repel the Mongols at the Battle of Ain Jalut in 1260, and again in 1304. There were four different gunpowder compositions used for the cannons at the battles, with the most explosive cannon having a gunpowder composition (74% saltpetre, 11% sulfur, 15% carbon) again almost identical to the ideal composition for explosive gunpowder. The compositions for an explosive gunpowder effect were not known in China or Europe until the 14th century.[34][35]

The earliest torpedo was also first described in 1270 by Hasan al-Rammah in The Book of Military Horsemanship and Ingenious War Devices, which illustrated a torpedo running with a rocket system filled with explosive materials and having three firing points.[36]

The first major use of gunpowder in the Islamic world is claimed to have been in the year 1118 trying to break the "Firanjah" (= Christian Spanish forces) from occupying Zaragoza,[37] then in 1260 in the Battle of Ain Jalut. The Arabs are reported to have used rockets on the Iberian Peninsula in 1249; and in 1288 rockets attacked Valencia.[citation needed] Ibn Khaldun mention the use of a cannon in the year 1274 during the siege of Sijilmasa. The first supergun was the Great Turkish Bombard, used by the troops of Mehmed II to capture Constantinople in 1453. It had a 762 mm bore, and fired 680 kg (1500 lb) stones.

Although gunpowder weapons were employed in the Middle East, they were not always met with open acceptance, as there was some antagonism by the Mamluks of Egypt towards early riflemen in their infantry.[38] The refusal of their Qizilbash forces to use firearms contributed to the Safavid rout at Chaldiran in 1514.[38]

[edit] Europe

Earliest picture of a European cannon, "De Nobilitatibus Sapientii Et Prudentiis Regum" Walter de Milemete, 1326.
Earliest picture of a European cannon, "De Nobilitatibus Sapientii Et Prudentiis Regum" Walter de Milemete, 1326.
Western European handgun, 1380. 18 cm-long and weighing 1.04 kg, it was fixed to a wooden pole to facilitate manipulation. Musée de l'Armée.
Western European handgun, 1380. 18 cm-long and weighing 1.04 kg, it was fixed to a wooden pole to facilitate manipulation. Musée de l'Armée.
The first Western image of a battle with cannon, Siege of Orleans, 1429.
The first Western image of a battle with cannon, Siege of Orleans, 1429.
A European cannon from the Theuerdank manuscript of 1517, issued in order by Maximilian I.
A European cannon from the Theuerdank manuscript of 1517, issued in order by Maximilian I.

One theory of how gunpowder came to Europe is that it made its way along the Silk Road through the Middle East; another is that it was brought to Europe during the Mongol invasion in the first half of the 13th century,[39][40] or during the subsequent diplomatic and military contacts (see Franco-Mongol alliance). William of Rubruck, an ambassador to the Mongols in 1254-1255, a personal friend of Roger Bacon, is also often designated as a possible intermediary in the transmission of gunpowder know-how between the East and the West.[40][41]

The earliest European reference to gunpowder is found in Roger Bacon's Epistola de secretis operibus artiis et naturae from 1267.[40][42] The oldest written recipes for gunpowder in Europe were recorded under the name Marcus Graecus or Mark the Greek between 1280 and 1300.[43]

In 1326, the earliest known European picture of a gun appeared in a manuscript by Walter de Milemete.[44] On February 11 of that same year, the Signoria of Florence appointed two officers to obtain canones de mettallo and ammunition for the town's defense.[45] A reference from 1331 describes an attack mounted by two Germanic knights on Cividale del Friuli, using gunpowder weapons of some sort.[44] The French raiding party that sacked and burned Southampton in 1338 brought with them a ribaudequin and 48 bolts (but only 3 pounds of gunpowder).[44] The Battle of Crécy in 1346 was one of the first in Europe where cannons were used.[46] In 1350, only four years later, Petrarch wrote that the presence of cannons on the battlefield was 'as common and familiar as other kinds of arms'.[47]

References to gunnis cum telar (guns with handles) were recorded in 1350, and by 1411 it was recorded that John the Good, Duke of Burgundy, had 4000 handguns stored in his armory.[48] However, musketeers and musket-wielding infantrymen were despised in society by the traditional feudal knights, even until the time of Cervantes (1547-1616 AD).[38] At first even Christian authorities made vehement remarks against the use of gunpowder weapons, calling them blasphemous and part of the 'Black Arts'.[49] By the mid 14th century, however, even the army of the Pope would be armed with artillery and gunpowder weapons.[49]

Around the late 14th century, European powdermakers began adding liquid to the constituents of gunpowder to reduce dust and with it the risk of explosion. The powdermakers would then shape the resulting paste of moistened gunpowder—known as mill cake—into "corns," or granules, to dry. Not only did "corned" powder keep better because of its reduced surface area, gunners also found that it was more powerful and easier to load into guns. The main advantage of corning is that each corn contains the ideal proportion of the three gunpowder components. Prior to corning, gunpowder would gradually demix into its constitutive components and was too unreliable for effective use in guns [50]. The same granulation process is used nowadays in the pharmaceutical industry to ensure that each tablet contains the same proportion of active ingredient. Before long, powdermakers standardized the process by forcing mill cake through sieves instead of corning powder by hand.[51]

The 15th through 17th century saw widespread development in gunpowder technology mainly in Europe. Advances in metallurgy led to portable weapons and the development of hand-held firearms such as muskets. Cannon technology in Europe gradually outpaced that of China and these technological improvements transferred back to China through Jesuit missionaries who were put in charge of cannon manufacture by the late Ming and early Qing emperors.

Shot and gunpowder for military purposes were made by skilled military tradesmen, who later were called firemakers, and who also were required to make fireworks for celebrations of victory or peace. During the Renaissance, two European schools of pyrotechnic thought emerged, one in Italy and the other at Nürnberg, Germany. The Italian school of pyrotechnics emphasized elaborate fireworks, and the German school stressed scientific advancement. Both schools added significantly to further development of pyrotechnics, and by the mid-17th century fireworks were used for entertainment on an unprecedented scale in Europe, being popular even at resorts and public gardens.[52]

[edit] Civil engineering

[edit] Mining

Until the invention of explosives, large rocks could only be broken up by hard labour, or heating with large fires followed by rapid quenching. Black powder was used in civil engineering and mining as early as the 15th century.[33] The earliest surviving record for the use of gunpowder in mines comes from Hungary in 1627.[33] It was introduced to Britain in 1638 by German miners, after which records are numerous.[53] Until the invention of the safety fuse by William Bickford in 1831, the practice was extremely dangerous.[54][55] Another reason for danger was the dense fumes given off and the risk of igniting flammable gas when used in coal mines.

[edit] Canals

The first time gunpowder was used on a large scale in civil engineering was in the construction of the Canal du Midi in Southern France.[55] It was completed in 1681 and linked the Mediterranean sea with the Bay of Biscay with 240 km of canal and 100 locks. Another noteworthy consumer of blackpowder was the Erie canal in New York, which was 585 km long and took eight years to complete, starting in 1817.[55]

[edit] Tunnel construction

Black powder was also extensively used in railway construction. At first railways followed the contours of the land, or crossed low ground by means of bridges and viaducts; but later railways made extensive use of cuttings and tunnels. One 800-metre stretch of the 3.3 km Box Tunnel on the Great Western Railway line between London and Bristol consumed a tonne of gunpowder per week for over two years.[55] The 12.9 km long Mont Cenis Tunnel was completed in 13 years starting in 1857, but even with black powder progress was only 25 cm a day until the invention of pneumatic drills sped up the work.

The latter half of the 19th Century saw the invention of nitroglycerin, nitrocellulose and smokeless powders, which soon replaced black powder in many applications.

[edit] India

A 17th century forge-welded iron cannon, at Thanjavur's eastern entrance (India).
A 17th century forge-welded iron cannon, at Thanjavur's eastern entrance (India).

Gunpowder arrived in India by the mid-1300s, but could have been introduced by the Mongols perhaps as early as the mid-1200s.[56]

It was written in the Tarikh-i Firishta (1606-1607) that the envoy of the Mongol ruler Hulegu Khan was presented with a dazzling pyrotechnics display upon his arrival in Delhi in 1258 AD.[57] As a part of an embassy to India by Timurid leader Shah Rukh (1405-1447), 'Abd al-Razzaq mentioned naphtha-throwers mounted on elephants and a variety of pyrotechnics put on display.[58] Firearms known as top-o-tufak also existed in the Vijayanagara Empire of India by as early as 1366 AD.[57] From then on the employment of gunpowder warfare in India was prevalent, with events such as the siege of Belgaum in 1473 AD by the Sultan Muhammad Shah Bahmani.[59]

In A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder, James Riddick Partington describes Indian rockets, mines and other means of gunpowder warfare:[60]

The Indian war rockets were formidable weapons before such rockets were used in Europe. They had bam-boo rods, a rocket-body lashed to the rod, and iron points. They were directed at the target and fired by lighting the fuse, but the trajectory was rather erratic. The use of mines and counter-mines with explosive charges of gunpowder is mentioned for the times of Akbar and Jahāngir.

An illustration from the Akbarnama written by Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak (1551-1602) depicts a gun in Akbar's court (bottom center).
An illustration from the Akbarnama written by Abu'l-Fazl ibn Mubarak (1551-1602) depicts a gun in Akbar's court (bottom center).

By the 16th century, Indians were manufacturing a diverse variety of firearms; large guns in particular, became visible in Tanjore, Dacca, Bijapur and Murshidabad.[61] Guns made of bronze were recovered from Calicut (1504) and Diu (1533).[62] Gujarāt supplied Europe saltpeter for use in gunpowder warfare during the 17th century.[63] Bengal and Mālwa participated in saltpeter production.[63] The Dutch, French, Portuguese, and English used Chāpra as a center of saltpeter refining.[64]

In Encyclopedia Britannica (2008), Stephen Oliver Fought & John F. Guilmartin, Jr. describe the gunpowder technology in 18th century India:[65]

Hyder Ali, prince of Mysore, developed war rockets with an important change: the use of metal cylinders to contain the combustion powder. Although the hammered soft iron he used was crude, the bursting strength of the container of black powder was much higher than the earlier paper construction. Thus a greater internal pressure was possible, with a resultant greater thrust of the propulsive jet. The rocket body was lashed with leather thongs to a long bamboo stick. Range was perhaps up to three-quarters of a mile (more than a kilometre). Although individually these rockets were not accurate, dispersion error became less important when large numbers were fired rapidly in mass attacks. They were particularly effective against cavalry and were hurled into the air, after lighting, or skimmed along the hard dry ground. Hyder Ali's son, Tippu Sultan, continued to develop and expand the use of rocket weapons, reportedly increasing the number of rocket troops from 1,200 to a corps of 5,000. In battles at Seringapatam in 1792 and 1799 these rockets were used with considerable effect against the British.

The news of the successful use of rockets spread through Europe. In England Sir William Congreve began to experiment privately. First, he experimented with a number of black-powder formulas and set down standard specifications of composition. He also standardized construction details and used improved production techniques. Also, his designs made it possible to choose either an explosive (ball charge) or incendiary warhead.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "The Genius of China", Robert Temple
  2. ^ Bhattacharya (in Buchanan 2006, p. 42) acknowledges that "most sources credit the Chinese with the discovery of gunpowder" though he himself disagrees.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Chase 2003:31–32
  4. ^ Buchanan. "Editor's Introduction: Setting the Context", in Buchanan 2006.
  5. ^ Kelly 2004:4
  6. ^ Gernet, Jacques (1996). A History of Chinese Civilization, Trans. J. R. Foster & Charles Hartman, 2nd, Cambridge University Press, p. 311. “The discovery originated from the alchemical researches made in the Taoist circles of the T'ang age, but was soon put to military use in the years 904–6. It was a matter at that time of incendiary projectiles called 'flying fires' (fei-huo).” 
  7. ^ Feng 1954:15-16
  8. ^ Zhong 1995:60
  9. ^ Needham 1986:220–262
  10. ^ Lu, Needham & Phan 1988
  11. ^ Chase 2003:31-32
  12. ^ Needham 1986:290
  13. ^ Zhong 1995:193-194
  14. ^ Wang 1991:50-58
  15. ^ Kelly 2004:10
  16. ^ Xu 1986:29
  17. ^ Feng 1991:461
  18. ^ a b Needham 1986:345
  19. ^ Needham 1986:347
  20. ^ Liu 2004:47-50
  21. ^ a b Needham 1986:126
  22. ^ Crosby 2002:100–103
  23. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 510.
  24. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 192–199.
  25. ^ a b Needham 1986:209–210
  26. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 173-174.
  27. ^ Liu 2004:46-47
  28. ^ Ebrey, 138.
  29. ^ Wang 1991:48
  30. ^ Kelly 2004:17
  31. ^ Wang 1991: 103-115
  32. ^ Kelly 2004:23–25
  33. ^ a b c Urbanski 1967, Chapter III: Blackpowder
  34. ^ Ahmad Y Hassan, Gunpowder Composition for Rockets and Cannon in Arabic Military Treatises In Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries, History of Science and Technology in Islam.
  35. ^ Ahmad Y Hassan, Technology Transfer in the Chemical Industries, History of Science and Technology in Islam.
  36. ^ Arslan Terzioglu (2007). "The First Attempts of Flight, Automatic Machines, Submarines and Rocket Technology in Turkish History", The Turks (ed. H. C. Guzel), p. 804-810.
  37. ^ Islamset (in Arabic)
  38. ^ a b c Khan 2004:6
  39. ^ Norris 2003:11
  40. ^ a b c Chase 2003:58
  41. ^ "The Eastern Origins of Western Civilization", John M.Hobson, p186, ISBN 0521547245
  42. ^ Kelly 2004:25
  43. ^ Kelly 2004:23
  44. ^ a b c Kelly 2004:29
  45. ^ Crosby 2002:120
  46. ^ Kelly 2004:19–37
  47. ^ Norris 2003:19
  48. ^ Norris 2003:8
  49. ^ a b Norris 2003:12
  50. ^ Molerus, Otto. "History of Civilization in the Western Hemisphere from the Point of View of Particulate Technology, Part 2," Advanced Powder Technology 7 (1996): 161-66
  51. ^ Kelly 2004:60–63
  52. ^ "Fireworks," Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2007 © 1997-2007 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
  53. ^ Earl 1978, Chapter 2: The Development of Gunpowder
  54. ^ Earl, (1978). Chapter 1: Introduction
  55. ^ a b c d Brown (1998), Chapter 6: Mining and Civil Engineering
  56. ^ Chase 2003:130
  57. ^ a b Khan 2004:9-10
  58. ^ Partington (Johns Hopkins University Press edition, 1999), 217
  59. ^ Khan 2004:10
  60. ^ Partington, 226 (Johns Hopkins University Press edition, 1999)
  61. ^ Partington (Johns Hopkins University Press edition, 1999), 225
  62. ^ Partington (Johns Hopkins University Press edition, 1999), 226
  63. ^ a b "India." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2008.
  64. ^ "Chāpra." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2008.
  65. ^ "rocket and missile system." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2008.

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