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Chinese siege weapons

This is an overview of Chinese siege weapons.

Siege ladders

 
Modern reconstruction of a cloud ladder

Siege ladders were used starting from the Warring States period. A hinged folding ladder known as the "cloud ladder" was quite prominent. Originally it used a counterweight to unfold once within reach of the enemy walls, but the contraption proved to be too vulnerable, and switched to a simple pulling mechanism during the Song dynasty. The newer version had men pull on ropes from behind with the aid of a long pole to move the top ladder into position. Some ladders had a compartment built below it to house soldiers who provided covering fire with crossbows.[1]

Hook carts

Hook carts such as the fork and falcon carts were used to pull down parapets and the top part of walls to make it easier for ladders to access. Once attached, 50 to 100 men took hold of a rope and pulled until the wall came down. They were used as early as the Three Kingdoms period, as mentioned by Chen Lin:

The hook carts join the fray and the nine oxen turn and heave, bellowing like thunder, and furiously smash the towers and overturn the parapets... Then the flying ladders, movable overlooks, cloud pavilions and the buildings in the void are rolled forward into the breaches so that the attackers can swarm into the city.[2]

— Chen Lin
 
A fork cart
 
A hungry falcon cart

Assault cover

Various protective covers were used during a siege. The most typical were mobile screens and assault wagons. More complex contraptions such as plaited galleries were used for mining and filling in moats.[3]

Observation tower

 
Nest and watchtower carts.

Static observation towers such as the nest and watchtower carts were used to see into the city.[4] Static towers were also be used in close proximity to enemy walls to rain down projectiles on the defenders.[5]

Mobile siege tower

Mobile siege towers have been used in China since the 6th century BC. They were often called overlook carts, assault carts, or some combination of the two.[2] A typical mobile siege tower was five stories tall mounted on axles with two wheels on each side. The tower was pushed forward by men on the lowest storey or pulled by horses and oxen.[6]

The king of Wu mentioned it in a passage comparing land armies to the navy.

These days in training we use the (same) tactics of land armies for the best effect. Thus big wing ships correspond to the army's heavy chariots, small wing ships to their light chariots, stomach strikers to battering rams, castled ships to mobile assault towers and bridge ships to the light cavalry.[2]

— King of Wu (514 – 496 BC)

During the Tang dynasty, in the 783 siege of Fengtian, an assault cart 10 meters tall was constructed, protected by layers of cowhide and equipped with leather bags of water to douse fires. It was used in an attempt to breach the city. The defenders managed to dig a trench in front of the siege engine, which tipped it over, and they burnt it and had it destroyed.[2]

In 1132 the Jurchen Jin dynasty constructed assault carts called "sky bridges" during the Siege of De'an, but failed to reach the enemy walls due to the use of long beams to push them away.[7]

The last recorded use of assault carts was in 1851 by the Taiping rebels to besiege Guilin after their first attempt with ladders failed. They mounted cannons on it to bombard the Qing soldiers manning the walls, but the tower was destroyed by a combination of burning oil and long poles wrapped in incendiary material at the ends.[2]

Ram

 
Iron plated ram

The Chinese ram used an iron-plated head. After the introduction of gunpowder it added a cannon as well.[3]

Traction trebuchet

The traction trebuchet, also referred to as a mangonel in some sources, is an artillery weapon which derives from manpower its motive force, and was probably used by the Mohists starting from the 4th century BC. Descriptions of it can be found in the Mojing (compiled in the 4th century BC). It consisted of an arm and sling mounted on a wooden frame, sometimes with wheels. Attached to one end of the arm were pulling ropes for men to power the weapon.[8] In Chapter 14 of the Mojing, the traction trebuchet is described hurling hollowed out logs filled with burning charcoal at enemy troops.[2] Trebuchets mounted on wheels were said to have needed 200 men to pull each of them.[9]

By the Qin and Han dynasties, traction trebuchets were a common weapon used in both attack and defense. Later on in 617 Li Mi (Sui dynasty) constructed 300 trebuchets for his assault on Luoyang, in 621 Li Shimin did the same at Luoyang, and onward into the Song dynasty when in 1161, trebuchets operated by Song dynasty soldiers fired bombs of lime and sulphur against the ships of the Jin dynasty navy during the Battle of Caishi.[10]

"Whirlwind" and "four footed" trebuchets appeared during the Tang dynasty. The whirlwind trebuchet used a single vertical pole which could be rotated 360 degrees for increased versatility at the cost of projectile strength. The four footed trebuchets were essentially the same as the previous Warring States weapons, differentiated from the whirlwinds by specifying its stability and larger size.[11]

As defensive weapons, traction trebuchets were positioned behind city walls and guided by an "artillery observer" on the walls. Range was determined by the strength and number of men pulling. Increasing and decreasing range meant adding and removing men from the pulling ropes.[11]

The traction trebuchet continued to be used until the counterweight trebuchet was introduced in 1272 during the Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty.[11]

Wheel catapult

A military engineer of the Three Kingdoms period, Ma Jun, devised a device which threw large stones using a wheel. This device consisted of a drum wheel attached with a curved knife. When rotated, the stones which hung on the wheel would be cut loose by the knife and launched. It is not clear how well this device worked in practice. Successful tests with roof tiles instead of stones are mentioned, but according to Liang Jieming, this contraption never made it past the testing phase and could not have been possible with the available technology at the time.[2]

Counterweight trebuchet

 
A wheeled counterweight trebuchet.

The introduction of the counterweight trebuchet in China is usually attributed to Muslim engineers during the Battle of Xiangyang in 1273, but it is possible that it was independently invented earlier in 1232 by the Jurchen Jin commander Qiang Shen. Qiang Shen invented a device called the "Arresting Trebuchet" which only needed a few men to work it, and could hurl great stones more than a hundred paces, further than even the strongest traction trebuchet. However no details on the construction of the machine are given. Qiang died the following year and no further references to the Arresting Trebuchet appear.[2] Even earlier, a Song officer, Wei Sheng, had invented a trebuchet in 1176 that could hurl stones and gunpowder projectiles some 200 paces.[12]

Qiang Shen furthermore invented a trebuchet called the 'Arresting Trebuchct' [E Pao], which was used to prevent [the enemy] from overrunning [his positions]. Only a few men were needed to work it, yet (with this engine] great stones could be hurled more than 100 paces, and there was no target which it did not hit right in the middle.[13]

The counterweight trebuchet, known as the Muslim trebuchet (or Huihui Pao) in China, replaced the traction version after its introduction in the late 13th century. Its greater range was however, somewhat countered by the fact that it had to be constructed at the site of the siege unlike traction trebuchets, which were easier to take apart and put back together again where necessary.[14]

The counterweight trebuchet remained in use in China for roughly two centuries, at which point it was well on its way to obsolescence.[15]

Weapon Crew Projectile weight (kg) Range (m)
Whirlwind trebuchet 50 1.8 78
Crouching tiger trebuchet 70 7.25 78
Four footed (one arm) trebuchet 40 1.1 78
Four footed (two arm) trebuchet 100 11.3 120
Four footed (five arm) trebuchet 157 44.5 78
Four footed (seven arm) trebuchet 250 56.7 78
Counterweight trebuchet ? ~86 200–275

Mounted crossbow

 
A double bed crossbow
 
A triple bed crossbow
 
Large and small Qin crossbow bolts

Large crossbows called "bed crossbows" were mounted on rectangular frameworks, often wheeled. Bowstaves were also sometimes combined to increase tension and initial velocity of the bolt.[16]

Bed crossbow

Large mounted crossbows known as "bed crossbows" were used as early as the Warring States period. Mozi described them as defensive weapons placed on top the battlements. The Mohist siege crossbow was described as humongous device with frameworks taller than a man and shooting arrows with cords attached so that they could be pulled back. By the Han dynasty, crossbows were used as mobile field artillery and known as "Military Strong Carts".[2] Around the 5th century AD, multiple bows were combined to increase draw weight and length, thus creating the double and triple bow crossbows. Tang versions of this weapon are stated to have obtained a range of 1,160 yards, which is supported by Ata-Malik Juvayni on the use of similar weapons by the Mongols in 1256.[17] According Juvayni, Hulagu Khan brought with him 3,000 giant crossbows from China, for the siege of Nishapur, and a team of Chinese technicians to work a great 'ox bow' shooting large bolts a distance of 2,500 paces, which was used at the siege of Maymun Diz.[18] Constructing these weapons, especially the casting of the large triggers, and their operation required the highest order of technical expertise available at the time. They were primarily used from the 8th to 11th centuries.[19] The bed crossbow has been compared with the ballista elephant that can seen on the bas-relief of the 13th century Bayon in Cambodia.[20]

Joseph Needham on the range of the triple-bow crossbow:

This range seems credible only with difficulty, yet strangely enough there is a confirmation of it from a Persian source, namely the historian 'Alā'al-Dīn al-Juwainī, who wrote of what happened when one of the almost impregnable castles of the Assassins was taken by Hulagu Khan. Here, in +1256, the Chinese arcuballistae shot their projectiles 2500 (Arab) paces (1,100 yards) from a position on the top of some mountain... His actual words are: "and a kamān-i-gāu which had been constructed by Cathayan craftsmen, and which had a range of 2500 paces, was brought to bear on those fools, when no other remedy remained, and of the devil-like Heretics many soldiers were burnt by those meteoric shots". The castle in question was not Alamūt itself, but Maimūn-Diz, also in the Elburz range, and it was the strongest military base of the Assassins.[21]

— Joseph Needham

Multiple bolt crossbow

The multiple bolt crossbow appeared around the late 4th century BC. A passage dated to 320 BC states that it was mounted on a three-wheeled carriage and stationed on the ramparts. The crossbow was drawn using a treadle and shot 10 foot long arrows. Other drawing mechanisms such as winches and oxen were also used.[22] Later on pedal release triggers were also used.[23] Although this weapon was able to discharge multiple bolts, it was at the cost of reduced accuracy.[2] It had a maximum range of 500 yards.[24]

When Qin Shi Huang's magicians failed to get in touch with "spirits and immortals of the marvellous islands of the Eastern Sea", they excused themselves by saying large monsters blocked their way. Qin Shi Huang personally went out with a multiple bolt crossbow to see these monsters for himself. He found no monsters but killed a big fish.[25]

In 99 BC, they were used as field artillery against attacking nomadic cavalry.[2]

In 759 AD, Li Quan described a type of multiple bolt crossbow capable of destroying ramparts and city towers:

The arcuballista is a crossbow of a strength of 12 dan, mounted on a wheeled frame. A winch cable pulls on an iron hook; when the winch is turned round until the string catches on the trigger the crossbow is drawn. On the upper surface of the stock there are seven grooves, the centre carrying the largest arrow. This has a point 275 centimetres (108 in) long and 125 centimetres (49 in) round, with iron tail fins 125 cm round, and a total length of 91.5 cm. To left and right there are three arrows each steadily decreasing in size, all shot forth when the trigger is pulled. Within 700 paces (525 m) whatever is hit will collapse, even solid things like ramparts and city towers."[2]

— Li Quan

In 950 AD, Tao Gu described multiple crossbows connected by a single trigger:

The soldiers at the headquarters of the Xuan Wu army were exceedingly brave. They had crossbow catapults such that when one trigger was released, as many as 12 connected triggers would all go off simultaneously. They used large bolts like strings of pearls, and the range was very great. The Jin people were thoroughly frightened by these machines. Literary writers called them Ji Long Che (Rapid Dragon Carts).[2]

— Tao Gu

The weapon was considered obsolete by 1530.[23]

Handheld bows
Weapon Shots per minute Range (m)
Chinese composite bow 150
Manchu bow 180–230
Chinese crossbow 170–450
Cavalry crossbow 150–300
Repeating crossbow 28–48 73–180
Double shot repeating crossbow 56–96 73–180
Siege crossbows
Weapon Crew Shots per minute Range (m)
Mounted multi-bolt 6–12 365–460
Mounted single-bow 250–500
Mounted double-bow 4–7 350–520
Mounted triple-bow 20–30 1,060

Incendiaries

 
A Chinese flamethrower.
 
An 'igniter fire ball' and 'barbed fire ball' from the Wujing Zongyao.

Prior to the introduction of gunpowder, fire arrows used mineral oil and sulphur as incendiaries. They were most commonly used by defenders to burn enemy siege engines such as ladders and rams. They were also used to create fires in defending cities.[26]

Gunpowder

When gunpowder arrived in the 10th century, fire arrows switched to gunpowder incendiaries. Production of gunpowder and fire arrows heavily increased in the 11th century as the court centralized the production process, constructing large gunpowder production facilities, hiring artisans, carpenters, and tanners for the military production complex in the capital of Kaifeng. One surviving source circa 1023 lists all the artisans working in Kaifeng while another notes that in 1083 the imperial court sent 100,000 gunpowder arrows to one garrison and 250,000 to another.[27] When the Jin captured Kaifeng in 1126 they captured 20,000 fire arrows for their arsenal.[28]

Gunpowder was also used in fire balls launched by trebuchets. "Barbed fire balls" used a series of hooks to latch onto its target. A "molten metal bomb" also saw use during the Jin siege of Kaifeng in 1126. These were ceramic containers filled with molten metal kept in a mobile furnace.[29]

Fire birds were a form of live delivery system for incendiaries. A walnut sized piece of burning tinder was tied to the birds' neck or leg. The idea was that once released, they would settle on the roofs of the enemy city, setting fire to the thatch.[30]

The fire ox was another live delivery system. The ox was let loose with two spears attached to its sides and an incendiary tied to its behind. Later on a delayed-action bomb was also added.[31]

Greek fire entered the Chinese arsenal around the year 900. The flamethrower consisted of a brass container and a horizontal pump connected to the gunpowder ignition chamber. When pushed, the pump caused burning petrol to squirt out. It was recommended that these devices be placed on the walls so that when rolls of straw were thrown at siege engines, they would be ignited by the petrol fire. Flamethrowers were also used at sea, sometimes disastrously. In 975 the commander of Southern Tang's navy panicked when enemy ships assaulted them with a barrage of arrows. In desperation, he projected petrol from flamethrowers at the enemy, but a sudden northern wind blew the flames in the opposite direction, setting his entire fleet ablaze. The commander jumped into the fire and died.[32]

Chemical warfare

Gas bombs consisting of gunpowder mixed with various poisons wrapped in hemp and moxa were used as defensive weapons. These were said to cause great discomfort in the enemy, having effects such as bleeding from the mouth and nose. Other than poison, lime and excrement were also used for their noxious and blinding properties.[33]

Various defensive measures

References

  1. ^ Turnbull 2002, p. 40.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Liang 2006.
  3. ^ a b Turnbull 2002, p. 43.
  4. ^ Turnbull 2002, p. 38-39.
  5. ^ Needham 1994, p. 435.
  6. ^ Needham 1994, p. 439.
  7. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 36.
  8. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 18.
  9. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 18-19.
  10. ^ Needham 1986, p. 166.
  11. ^ a b c Turnbull 2001, p. 19.
  12. ^ Needham 1986, p. 157.
  13. ^ Needham 1994, p. 218.
  14. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 33.
  15. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 36.
  16. ^ Needham 1994, p. 185.
  17. ^ Turnbull 2002, p. 14.
  18. ^ Nicolle 2003, p. 23.
  19. ^ Needham 1994, p. 198.
  20. ^ Mus, Paul (1929). "Etudes indiennes et indochinoises, III. Les balistes du Bàyon" [Indian and Indochinese studies, III. Bayon Ballista Elephants]. Bulletin de l'École française d'Extrême-Orient (in French). 29 (1): 339. doi:10.3406/befeo.1929.3243.
  21. ^ Needham 1994, p. 177.
  22. ^ Needham 1994, p. 189-190.
  23. ^ a b Needham 1994, p. 192.
  24. ^ Needham 1994, p. 176.
  25. ^ Needham 1994, p. 188.
  26. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 37.
  27. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 32.
  28. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 35.
  29. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 38.
  30. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 39.
  31. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 40.
  32. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 41.
  33. ^ Turnbull 2001, p. 43.

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chinese, siege, weapons, this, overview, siege, tower, contents, siege, ladders, hook, carts, assault, cover, observation, tower, mobile, siege, tower, traction, trebuchet, wheel, catapult, counterweight, trebuchet, mounted, crossbow, crossbow, multiple, bolt,. This is an overview of Chinese siege weapons Siege tower Contents 1 Siege ladders 2 Hook carts 3 Assault cover 4 Observation tower 5 Mobile siege tower 6 Ram 7 Traction trebuchet 7 1 Wheel catapult 8 Counterweight trebuchet 9 Mounted crossbow 9 1 Bed crossbow 9 2 Multiple bolt crossbow 10 Incendiaries 10 1 Gunpowder 11 Chemical warfare 12 Various defensive measures 13 References 14 BibliographySiege ladders Edit Modern reconstruction of a cloud ladder Siege ladders were used starting from the Warring States period A hinged folding ladder known as the cloud ladder was quite prominent Originally it used a counterweight to unfold once within reach of the enemy walls but the contraption proved to be too vulnerable and switched to a simple pulling mechanism during the Song dynasty The newer version had men pull on ropes from behind with the aid of a long pole to move the top ladder into position Some ladders had a compartment built below it to house soldiers who provided covering fire with crossbows 1 A sky cart A scaling ladder A rake cart A double hook cart Cloud ladder Mobile moat crossing bridgeHook carts EditHook carts such as the fork and falcon carts were used to pull down parapets and the top part of walls to make it easier for ladders to access Once attached 50 to 100 men took hold of a rope and pulled until the wall came down They were used as early as the Three Kingdoms period as mentioned by Chen Lin The hook carts join the fray and the nine oxen turn and heave bellowing like thunder and furiously smash the towers and overturn the parapets Then the flying ladders movable overlooks cloud pavilions and the buildings in the void are rolled forward into the breaches so that the attackers can swarm into the city 2 Chen Lin A fork cart A hungry falcon cartAssault cover EditVarious protective covers were used during a siege The most typical were mobile screens and assault wagons More complex contraptions such as plaited galleries were used for mining and filling in moats 3 A wooden screen Assault cover Head cart Plated gallery Wagon and cart for filling in moatsObservation tower Edit Nest and watchtower carts Static observation towers such as the nest and watchtower carts were used to see into the city 4 Static towers were also be used in close proximity to enemy walls to rain down projectiles on the defenders 5 Mobile siege tower EditMobile siege towers have been used in China since the 6th century BC They were often called overlook carts assault carts or some combination of the two 2 A typical mobile siege tower was five stories tall mounted on axles with two wheels on each side The tower was pushed forward by men on the lowest storey or pulled by horses and oxen 6 The king of Wu mentioned it in a passage comparing land armies to the navy These days in training we use the same tactics of land armies for the best effect Thus big wing ships correspond to the army s heavy chariots small wing ships to their light chariots stomach strikers to battering rams castled ships to mobile assault towers and bridge ships to the light cavalry 2 King of Wu 514 496 BC During the Tang dynasty in the 783 siege of Fengtian an assault cart 10 meters tall was constructed protected by layers of cowhide and equipped with leather bags of water to douse fires It was used in an attempt to breach the city The defenders managed to dig a trench in front of the siege engine which tipped it over and they burnt it and had it destroyed 2 In 1132 the Jurchen Jin dynasty constructed assault carts called sky bridges during the Siege of De an but failed to reach the enemy walls due to the use of long beams to push them away 7 The last recorded use of assault carts was in 1851 by the Taiping rebels to besiege Guilin after their first attempt with ladders failed They mounted cannons on it to bombard the Qing soldiers manning the walls but the tower was destroyed by a combination of burning oil and long poles wrapped in incendiary material at the ends 2 Ram Edit Iron plated ram The Chinese ram used an iron plated head After the introduction of gunpowder it added a cannon as well 3 Traction trebuchet EditThe traction trebuchet also referred to as a mangonel in some sources is an artillery weapon which derives from manpower its motive force and was probably used by the Mohists starting from the 4th century BC Descriptions of it can be found in the Mojing compiled in the 4th century BC It consisted of an arm and sling mounted on a wooden frame sometimes with wheels Attached to one end of the arm were pulling ropes for men to power the weapon 8 In Chapter 14 of the Mojing the traction trebuchet is described hurling hollowed out logs filled with burning charcoal at enemy troops 2 Trebuchets mounted on wheels were said to have needed 200 men to pull each of them 9 By the Qin and Han dynasties traction trebuchets were a common weapon used in both attack and defense Later on in 617 Li Mi Sui dynasty constructed 300 trebuchets for his assault on Luoyang in 621 Li Shimin did the same at Luoyang and onward into the Song dynasty when in 1161 trebuchets operated by Song dynasty soldiers fired bombs of lime and sulphur against the ships of the Jin dynasty navy during the Battle of Caishi 10 Whirlwind and four footed trebuchets appeared during the Tang dynasty The whirlwind trebuchet used a single vertical pole which could be rotated 360 degrees for increased versatility at the cost of projectile strength The four footed trebuchets were essentially the same as the previous Warring States weapons differentiated from the whirlwinds by specifying its stability and larger size 11 As defensive weapons traction trebuchets were positioned behind city walls and guided by an artillery observer on the walls Range was determined by the strength and number of men pulling Increasing and decreasing range meant adding and removing men from the pulling ropes 11 The traction trebuchet continued to be used until the counterweight trebuchet was introduced in 1272 during the Mongol conquest of the Song dynasty 11 A crouching tiger trebuchet A whirlwind trebuchet Five whirlwind trebuchets A wheeled trebuchet A four footed seven component trebuchetWheel catapult Edit A military engineer of the Three Kingdoms period Ma Jun devised a device which threw large stones using a wheel This device consisted of a drum wheel attached with a curved knife When rotated the stones which hung on the wheel would be cut loose by the knife and launched It is not clear how well this device worked in practice Successful tests with roof tiles instead of stones are mentioned but according to Liang Jieming this contraption never made it past the testing phase and could not have been possible with the available technology at the time 2 Counterweight trebuchet Edit A wheeled counterweight trebuchet The introduction of the counterweight trebuchet in China is usually attributed to Muslim engineers during the Battle of Xiangyang in 1273 but it is possible that it was independently invented earlier in 1232 by the Jurchen Jin commander Qiang Shen Qiang Shen invented a device called the Arresting Trebuchet which only needed a few men to work it and could hurl great stones more than a hundred paces further than even the strongest traction trebuchet However no details on the construction of the machine are given Qiang died the following year and no further references to the Arresting Trebuchet appear 2 Even earlier a Song officer Wei Sheng had invented a trebuchet in 1176 that could hurl stones and gunpowder projectiles some 200 paces 12 Qiang Shen furthermore invented a trebuchet called the Arresting Trebuchct E Pao which was used to prevent the enemy from overrunning his positions Only a few men were needed to work it yet with this engine great stones could be hurled more than 100 paces and there was no target which it did not hit right in the middle 13 History of Jin The counterweight trebuchet known as the Muslim trebuchet or Huihui Pao in China replaced the traction version after its introduction in the late 13th century Its greater range was however somewhat countered by the fact that it had to be constructed at the site of the siege unlike traction trebuchets which were easier to take apart and put back together again where necessary 14 The counterweight trebuchet remained in use in China for roughly two centuries at which point it was well on its way to obsolescence 15 Weapon Crew Projectile weight kg Range m Whirlwind trebuchet 50 1 8 78Crouching tiger trebuchet 70 7 25 78Four footed one arm trebuchet 40 1 1 78Four footed two arm trebuchet 100 11 3 120Four footed five arm trebuchet 157 44 5 78Four footed seven arm trebuchet 250 56 7 78Counterweight trebuchet 86 200 275Mounted crossbow Edit A double bed crossbow A triple bed crossbow Large and small Qin crossbow bolts Large crossbows called bed crossbows were mounted on rectangular frameworks often wheeled Bowstaves were also sometimes combined to increase tension and initial velocity of the bolt 16 Bed crossbow Edit Large mounted crossbows known as bed crossbows were used as early as the Warring States period Mozi described them as defensive weapons placed on top the battlements The Mohist siege crossbow was described as humongous device with frameworks taller than a man and shooting arrows with cords attached so that they could be pulled back By the Han dynasty crossbows were used as mobile field artillery and known as Military Strong Carts 2 Around the 5th century AD multiple bows were combined to increase draw weight and length thus creating the double and triple bow crossbows Tang versions of this weapon are stated to have obtained a range of 1 160 yards which is supported by Ata Malik Juvayni on the use of similar weapons by the Mongols in 1256 17 According Juvayni Hulagu Khan brought with him 3 000 giant crossbows from China for the siege of Nishapur and a team of Chinese technicians to work a great ox bow shooting large bolts a distance of 2 500 paces which was used at the siege of Maymun Diz 18 Constructing these weapons especially the casting of the large triggers and their operation required the highest order of technical expertise available at the time They were primarily used from the 8th to 11th centuries 19 The bed crossbow has been compared with the ballista elephant that can seen on the bas relief of the 13th century Bayon in Cambodia 20 Joseph Needham on the range of the triple bow crossbow This range seems credible only with difficulty yet strangely enough there is a confirmation of it from a Persian source namely the historian Ala al Din al Juwaini who wrote of what happened when one of the almost impregnable castles of the Assassins was taken by Hulagu Khan Here in 1256 the Chinese arcuballistae shot their projectiles 2500 Arab paces 1 100 yards from a position on the top of some mountain His actual words are and a kaman i gau which had been constructed by Cathayan craftsmen and which had a range of 2500 paces was brought to bear on those fools when no other remedy remained and of the devil like Heretics many soldiers were burnt by those meteoric shots The castle in question was not Alamut itself but Maimun Diz also in the Elburz range and it was the strongest military base of the Assassins 21 Joseph Needham Multiple bolt crossbow Edit The multiple bolt crossbow appeared around the late 4th century BC A passage dated to 320 BC states that it was mounted on a three wheeled carriage and stationed on the ramparts The crossbow was drawn using a treadle and shot 10 foot long arrows Other drawing mechanisms such as winches and oxen were also used 22 Later on pedal release triggers were also used 23 Although this weapon was able to discharge multiple bolts it was at the cost of reduced accuracy 2 It had a maximum range of 500 yards 24 When Qin Shi Huang s magicians failed to get in touch with spirits and immortals of the marvellous islands of the Eastern Sea they excused themselves by saying large monsters blocked their way Qin Shi Huang personally went out with a multiple bolt crossbow to see these monsters for himself He found no monsters but killed a big fish 25 In 99 BC they were used as field artillery against attacking nomadic cavalry 2 In 759 AD Li Quan described a type of multiple bolt crossbow capable of destroying ramparts and city towers The arcuballista is a crossbow of a strength of 12 dan mounted on a wheeled frame A winch cable pulls on an iron hook when the winch is turned round until the string catches on the trigger the crossbow is drawn On the upper surface of the stock there are seven grooves the centre carrying the largest arrow This has a point 275 centimetres 108 in long and 125 centimetres 49 in round with iron tail fins 125 cm round and a total length of 91 5 cm To left and right there are three arrows each steadily decreasing in size all shot forth when the trigger is pulled Within 700 paces 525 m whatever is hit will collapse even solid things like ramparts and city towers 2 Li Quan In 950 AD Tao Gu described multiple crossbows connected by a single trigger The soldiers at the headquarters of the Xuan Wu army were exceedingly brave They had crossbow catapults such that when one trigger was released as many as 12 connected triggers would all go off simultaneously They used large bolts like strings of pearls and the range was very great The Jin people were thoroughly frightened by these machines Literary writers called them Ji Long Che Rapid Dragon Carts 2 Tao Gu The weapon was considered obsolete by 1530 23 Handheld bows Weapon Shots per minute Range m Chinese composite bow 150Manchu bow 180 230Chinese crossbow 170 450Cavalry crossbow 150 300Repeating crossbow 28 48 73 180Double shot repeating crossbow 56 96 73 180Siege crossbows Weapon Crew Shots per minute Range m Mounted multi bolt 6 12 365 460Mounted single bow 250 500Mounted double bow 4 7 350 520Mounted triple bow 20 30 1 060Incendiaries Edit A Chinese flamethrower An igniter fire ball and barbed fire ball from the Wujing Zongyao Prior to the introduction of gunpowder fire arrows used mineral oil and sulphur as incendiaries They were most commonly used by defenders to burn enemy siege engines such as ladders and rams They were also used to create fires in defending cities 26 Gunpowder Edit See also History of gunpowder and Gunpowder weapons in the Ming dynasty When gunpowder arrived in the 10th century fire arrows switched to gunpowder incendiaries Production of gunpowder and fire arrows heavily increased in the 11th century as the court centralized the production process constructing large gunpowder production facilities hiring artisans carpenters and tanners for the military production complex in the capital of Kaifeng One surviving source circa 1023 lists all the artisans working in Kaifeng while another notes that in 1083 the imperial court sent 100 000 gunpowder arrows to one garrison and 250 000 to another 27 When the Jin captured Kaifeng in 1126 they captured 20 000 fire arrows for their arsenal 28 Gunpowder was also used in fire balls launched by trebuchets Barbed fire balls used a series of hooks to latch onto its target A molten metal bomb also saw use during the Jin siege of Kaifeng in 1126 These were ceramic containers filled with molten metal kept in a mobile furnace 29 Fire birds were a form of live delivery system for incendiaries A walnut sized piece of burning tinder was tied to the birds neck or leg The idea was that once released they would settle on the roofs of the enemy city setting fire to the thatch 30 The fire ox was another live delivery system The ox was let loose with two spears attached to its sides and an incendiary tied to its behind Later on a delayed action bomb was also added 31 Greek fire entered the Chinese arsenal around the year 900 The flamethrower consisted of a brass container and a horizontal pump connected to the gunpowder ignition chamber When pushed the pump caused burning petrol to squirt out It was recommended that these devices be placed on the walls so that when rolls of straw were thrown at siege engines they would be ignited by the petrol fire Flamethrowers were also used at sea sometimes disastrously In 975 the commander of Southern Tang s navy panicked when enemy ships assaulted them with a barrage of arrows In desperation he projected petrol from flamethrowers at the enemy but a sudden northern wind blew the flames in the opposite direction setting his entire fleet ablaze The commander jumped into the fire and died 32 Chemical warfare EditGas bombs consisting of gunpowder mixed with various poisons wrapped in hemp and moxa were used as defensive weapons These were said to cause great discomfort in the enemy having effects such as bleeding from the mouth and nose Other than poison lime and excrement were also used for their noxious and blinding properties 33 A fire arrow A fire ox an ox with spears attached to its sides and its tail set on fire A fire ox with a bomb attached A fire ox with a shrapnel bomb containing numerous blades The enemy of a thousand a poisonous vapor bomb thrown at besieging invadersVarious defensive measures Edit Gate blocking knife cart Modern reconstruction of the gate blocking knife cart Cheval de frise Hoof grasper and iron waterchestnuts Deerhorn wood earth stopper and iron caltrop Night prong thunderstick Flying hook and wolf s tooth striking board Wandering fire cauldronReferences Edit Turnbull 2002 p 40 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Liang 2006 a b Turnbull 2002 p 43 Turnbull 2002 p 38 39 Needham 1994 p 435 Needham 1994 p 439 Andrade 2016 p 36 Turnbull 2001 p 18 Turnbull 2001 p 18 19 Needham 1986 p 166 a b c Turnbull 2001 p 19 Needham 1986 p 157 Needham 1994 p 218 Turnbull 2001 p 33 Turnbull 2001 p 36 Needham 1994 p 185 Turnbull 2002 p 14 Nicolle 2003 p 23 Needham 1994 p 198 Mus Paul 1929 Etudes indiennes et indochinoises III Les balistes du Bayon Indian and Indochinese studies III Bayon Ballista Elephants Bulletin de l Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient in French 29 1 339 doi 10 3406 befeo 1929 3243 Needham 1994 p 177 Needham 1994 p 189 190 a b Needham 1994 p 192 Needham 1994 p 176 Needham 1994 p 188 Turnbull 2001 p 37 Andrade 2016 p 32 Andrade 2016 p 35 Turnbull 2001 p 38 Turnbull 2001 p 39 Turnbull 2001 p 40 Turnbull 2001 p 41 Turnbull 2001 p 43 Bibliography EditAdle Chahryar 2003 History of Civilizations of Central Asia Development in Contrast from the Sixteenth to the Mid Nineteenth Century Agoston Gabor 2005 Guns for the Sultan Military Power and the Weapons Industry in the Ottoman Empire Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 60391 9 Agrawal Jai Prakash 2010 High Energy Materials Propellants Explosives and Pyrotechnics Wiley VCH Andrade Tonio 2016 The Gunpowder Age China Military Innovation and the Rise of the West in World History Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13597 7 Arnold Thomas 2001 The Renaissance at War Cassell amp Co ISBN 0 304 35270 5 Benton Captain James G 1862 A Course of Instruction in Ordnance and Gunnery 2 ed West Point New York Thomas Publications ISBN 1 57747 079 6 Brown G I 1998 The Big Bang A History of Explosives Sutton Publishing ISBN 0 7509 1878 0 Buchanan Brenda J ed 2006 Gunpowder Explosives and the State A Technological History Aldershot Ashgate ISBN 0 7546 5259 9 Chase Kenneth 2003 Firearms A Global History to 1700 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 82274 2 Cocroft Wayne 2000 Dangerous Energy The archaeology of gunpowder and military explosives manufacture Swindon English Heritage ISBN 1 85074 718 0 Cook Haruko Taya 2000 Japan At War An Oral History Phoenix Press Cowley Robert 1993 Experience of War Laurel Cressy David 2013 Saltpeter The Mother of Gunpowder Oxford University Press Crosby Alfred W 2002 Throwing Fire Projectile Technology Through History Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 79158 8 Curtis W S 2014 Long Range Shooting A Historical Perspective WeldenOwen Earl Brian 1978 Cornish Explosives Cornwall The Trevithick Society ISBN 0 904040 13 5 Easton S C 1952 Roger Bacon and His Search for a Universal Science A Reconsideration of the Life and Work of Roger Bacon in the Light of His Own Stated Purposes Basil Blackwell Ebrey Patricia B 1999 The Cambridge Illustrated History of China Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 43519 6 Grant R G 2011 Battle at Sea 3 000 Years of Naval Warfare DK Publishing Hadden R Lee 2005 Confederate Boys and Peter Monkeys Armchair General January 2005 Adapted from a talk given to the Geological Society of America on March 25 2004 Harding Richard 1999 Seapower and Naval Warfare 1650 1830 UCL Press Limited al Hassan Ahmad Y 2001 Potassium Nitrate in Arabic and Latin Sources History of Science and Technology in Islam retrieved 23 July 2007 Hobson John M 2004 The Eastern Origins of Western Civilisation Cambridge University Press Johnson Norman Gardner explosive Encyclopaedia Britannica Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Kelly Jack 2004 Gunpowder Alchemy Bombards amp Pyrotechnics The History of the Explosive that Changed the World Basic Books ISBN 0 465 03718 6 Khan Iqtidar Alam 1996 Coming of Gunpowder to the Islamic World and North India Spotlight on the Role of the Mongols Journal of Asian History 30 41 5 Khan Iqtidar Alam 2004 Gunpowder and Firearms Warfare in Medieval India Oxford University Press Khan Iqtidar Alam 2008 Historical Dictionary of Medieval India The Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0 8108 5503 8 Kinard Jeff 2007 Artillery An Illustrated History of its Impact Konstam Angus 2002 Renaissance War Galley 1470 1590 Osprey Publisher Ltd Liang Jieming 2006 Chinese Siege Warfare Mechanical Artillery amp Siege Weapons of Antiquity Singapore Republic of Singapore Leong Kit Meng ISBN 981 05 5380 3 Lidin Olaf G 2002 Tanegashima The Arrival of Europe in Japan Nordic Inst of Asian Studies ISBN 8791114128 Lorge Peter A 2008 The Asian Military Revolution from Gunpowder to the Bomb Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60954 8 Lu Gwei Djen 1988 The Oldest Representation of a Bombard Technology and Culture 29 594 605 doi 10 2307 3105275 JSTOR 3105275 May Timothy 2012 The Mongol Conquests in World History Reaktion Books McLahlan Sean 2010 Medieval Handgonnes McNeill William Hardy 1992 The Rise of the West A History of the Human Community University of Chicago Press Morillo Stephen 2008 War in World History Society Technology and War from Ancient Times to the Present Volume 1 To 1500 McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 052584 9 Needham Joseph 1971 Science and Civilization in China Volume 4 Part 3 Cambridge At The University Press Needham Joseph 1980 Science amp Civilisation in China vol 5 pt 4 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 08573 X Needham Joseph 1986 Science amp Civilisation in China vol V 7 The Gunpowder Epic Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 30358 3 Needham Joseph 1994 Science and Civilization in China Volume 5 Part 6 Cambridge University Press Nicolle David 1990 The Mongol Warlords Genghis Khan Kublai Khan Hulegu Tamerlane Nicolle David 11 March 2003 Medieval Siege Weapons 2 Byzantium the Islamic World amp India AD 476 1526 Bloomsbury USA ISBN 978 1 84176 459 7 Nolan Cathal J 2006 The Age of Wars of Religion 1000 1650 an Encyclopedia of Global Warfare and Civilization Vol 1 A K vol 1 Westport amp London Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 33733 0 Norris John 2003 Early Gunpowder Artillery 1300 1600 Marlborough The Crowood Press Partington J R 1960 A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder Cambridge UK W Heffer amp Sons Partington J R 1999 A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 5954 9 Patrick John Merton 1961 Artillery and warfare during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries Utah State University Press Pauly Roger 2004 Firearms The Life Story of a Technology Greenwood Publishing Group Perrin Noel 1979 Giving up the Gun Japan s reversion to the Sword 1543 1879 Boston David R Godine ISBN 0 87923 773 2 Petzal David E 2014 The Total Gun Manual Canadian edition WeldonOwen Phillips Henry Prataps 2016 The History and Chronology of Gunpowder and Gunpowder Weapons c 1000 to 1850 Notion Press Purton Peter 2010 A History of the Late Medieval Siege 1200 1500 Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 449 6 Robins Benjamin 1742 New Principles of Gunnery Rose Susan 2002 Medieval Naval Warfare 1000 1500 Routledge Roy Kaushik 2015 Warfare in Pre British India Routledge Schmidtchen Volker 1977a Riesengeschutze des 15 Jahrhunderts Technische Hochstleistungen ihrer Zeit Technikgeschichte 44 2 153 173 153 157 Schmidtchen Volker 1977b Riesengeschutze des 15 Jahrhunderts Technische Hochstleistungen ihrer Zeit Technikgeschichte 44 3 213 237 226 228 Tran Nhung Tuyet 2006 Viet Nam Borderless Histories University of Wisconsin Press Turnbull Stephen 2001 Siege Weapons of the Far East 1 AD 612 1300 Osprey Publishing Turnbull Stephen 2002 Siege Weapons of the Far East 2 AD 960 1644 Osprey Publishing Turnbull Stephen 2003 Fighting Ships Far East 2 Japan and Korea Ad 612 1639 Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 478 7 Urbanski Tadeusz 1967 Chemistry and Technology of Explosives vol III New York Pergamon Press Villalon L J Andrew 2008 The Hundred Years War part II Different Vistas Brill Academic Pub ISBN 978 90 04 16821 3 Wagner John A 2006 The Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War Westport amp London Greenwood Press ISBN 0 313 32736 X Watson Peter 2006 Ideas A History of Thought and Invention from Fire to Freud Harper Perennial 2006 ISBN 0 06 093564 2 Wilkinson Philip 9 September 1997 Castles Dorling Kindersley ISBN 978 0 7894 2047 3 Wilkinson Latham Robert 1975 Napoleon s Artillery France Osprey Publishing ISBN 0 85045 247 3 Willbanks James H 2004 Machine guns an illustrated history of their impact ABC CLIO Inc Williams Anthony G 2000 Rapid Fire Shrewsbury Airlife Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 84037 435 7 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chinese siege weapons amp oldid 1138218771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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