Artillery: Difference between revisions
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But again, there were exceptions. The Greek Polybolos is a chain-operated siege engine that wasn't technically a crossbow, but was still accurate enough with its bolts to snipe defenders, and with a rate of fire far beyond anything else of the time. The Romans also had the Scorpio, which was less complicated. The Chinese also had a variety of siege engines, which weren't supplanted by Gunpowder Cannons until much later, because Gunpowder tech was perfected by others. | But again, there were exceptions. The Greek Polybolos is a chain-operated siege engine that wasn't technically a crossbow, but was still accurate enough with its bolts to snipe defenders, and with a rate of fire far beyond anything else of the time. The Romans also had the Scorpio, which was less complicated. The Chinese also had a variety of siege engines, which weren't supplanted by Gunpowder Cannons until much later, because Gunpowder tech was perfected by others. | ||
Arguably, the most famous of those siege engines was the almighty catapult! The romans used it, the greeks used it, and oh-so-many lords and knights used it during the Middle-Ages. It wasn't the most precise weapon on the planet, but we'd lie to you if we didn't say that it as beautiful to see a flock of rocks raining on a heavily guarded castle like it's judgement day. Catapults were generally some of the simplest siege engines around. You could use to basically throw anything more-or-less heavy with it; Boulders, would-be cannon balls, humans, barrels, literal sacks of shit (Yes, this did happen). And it was one of the easiest to build. Of course, it wasn't the most effective thing on the planet at destroying things, but the point of sieges was to capture a castle, not raze one. Why pass on the opportunity of getting a free castle? The best way to penetrate it was to simply injure the people inside. | |||
But when the need to [[Exterminatus|eradicate the infidels, burn their houses, slaughter their families, destroy their unholy temples and autels of doom]] came around, Europeans perfected of destroying shit really hard by inventing the next big thing in siege engineering; the motherfucking trebuchet. Ten to Eighteen tons of a massive wooden tower made out of "Fucketh thee, I farteth ast thoust general direction". The Chinese technically invented it, but it consisted of using <s>slaves</s> very brave and loyal soldiers to pull the projectile down and then releasing it. And then, reusing the design, engineers added a counterweight that would drop down with the force of a thousand suns to flung the heaviest of projectiles directly at the enemy at incredible speeds. A technological miracle of the XIIth Century to be sure. Started a trend among technicians and engineers to come up with new tools of warfare, most notably Da Vinci who made a whole bunch of sketches of a multitude of possible war engines that were all kinds of wonky. We will not mention the ancestors of the Trebuchet, for they were all more-or-less smaller versions of itself. Albeit, used for different purposes and/or on much more humbler battles. | |||
Of course, there were also the infamous ballistas. Take a crossbow, make it bigger. [[Dakka|Literally medieval dakka]]. Okay, they existed since the Classical period, but still! Initially used to throw small round projectiles, they would eventually change into massive crossbows fit for battlefields. | |||
Of course not all siege engines ''were'' artillery. Such as the infamous battering ram that would frighten any man defending a castle, or the sorry guy who will have the repair the door once the siege is over. These were used to bust the last thing that protects the people inside fortifications, namely doors. And they were pretty effective at it. So much so that cannons had to be perfected in order to match the sheer penetrating power of the ram. Besides that, there were also siege-towers (and siege-bridges, technically). Big towers used to just completely dismiss the thick ass walls protecting the people inside. They weren't always used during sieges, but goddamn did they make an impression. | |||
==Cannons and Early Gunpowder weapons== | ==Cannons and Early Gunpowder weapons== |
Revision as of 17:27, 8 May 2023
"I took ballistics in school. Fascinating subject! Things go up, things go down!"
- – Company of Heroes
"Artillery is the god of modern war."
- – Joseph Stalin
"In peace the cry is for mobility, in war for weight of shell."
- – Alan Brooke
If you were to ask any neckbeard into military history what they liked most about it, you'd get a few different answers. Some would tell you it's all about stories of regular humans going beyond their limits to beat back impossible odds, others are more interested in the organization and logistics needed to feed and move thousands of people.
But for the elegan/tg/entlemen among us, it's all about the big guns that go boom. Even before the advent of gunpowder and Cannons, humanity has long looked for ways to fling shit at their enemies from a safe distance, preferably outside of their opponent's ability to shoot back, and ideally, outside of line-of-sight.
Nowadays, Artillery refers to Cannons and Cannon-accessiories, like Rockets and Missiles, but we apply the label to any weapon that launches munitions far beyond the range of man-portable weapons (that being said, Mortars are still man-portable, so don't take anything an anon says to be definitive)
Siege Engines
Siege Engines are mechanical devices are weapons used to breakthrough walls and other fortifications. Weapons like the Onager, Ballista, and the Trebuchet (which could launch a 90kg projectile over 300m) could be considered the first forms of Artillery.
Unlike what vidya and certain tabletop wargames will tell you, most of these weapons were too unwieldy and generally inaccurate to use against mobile targets. They were also too complicated and fragile to transport over long distances and had to be built at the site of conflict, which is why Siege Engineers were their own specialization.
But again, there were exceptions. The Greek Polybolos is a chain-operated siege engine that wasn't technically a crossbow, but was still accurate enough with its bolts to snipe defenders, and with a rate of fire far beyond anything else of the time. The Romans also had the Scorpio, which was less complicated. The Chinese also had a variety of siege engines, which weren't supplanted by Gunpowder Cannons until much later, because Gunpowder tech was perfected by others.
Arguably, the most famous of those siege engines was the almighty catapult! The romans used it, the greeks used it, and oh-so-many lords and knights used it during the Middle-Ages. It wasn't the most precise weapon on the planet, but we'd lie to you if we didn't say that it as beautiful to see a flock of rocks raining on a heavily guarded castle like it's judgement day. Catapults were generally some of the simplest siege engines around. You could use to basically throw anything more-or-less heavy with it; Boulders, would-be cannon balls, humans, barrels, literal sacks of shit (Yes, this did happen). And it was one of the easiest to build. Of course, it wasn't the most effective thing on the planet at destroying things, but the point of sieges was to capture a castle, not raze one. Why pass on the opportunity of getting a free castle? The best way to penetrate it was to simply injure the people inside.
But when the need to eradicate the infidels, burn their houses, slaughter their families, destroy their unholy temples and autels of doom came around, Europeans perfected of destroying shit really hard by inventing the next big thing in siege engineering; the motherfucking trebuchet. Ten to Eighteen tons of a massive wooden tower made out of "Fucketh thee, I farteth ast thoust general direction". The Chinese technically invented it, but it consisted of using slaves very brave and loyal soldiers to pull the projectile down and then releasing it. And then, reusing the design, engineers added a counterweight that would drop down with the force of a thousand suns to flung the heaviest of projectiles directly at the enemy at incredible speeds. A technological miracle of the XIIth Century to be sure. Started a trend among technicians and engineers to come up with new tools of warfare, most notably Da Vinci who made a whole bunch of sketches of a multitude of possible war engines that were all kinds of wonky. We will not mention the ancestors of the Trebuchet, for they were all more-or-less smaller versions of itself. Albeit, used for different purposes and/or on much more humbler battles.
Of course, there were also the infamous ballistas. Take a crossbow, make it bigger. Literally medieval dakka. Okay, they existed since the Classical period, but still! Initially used to throw small round projectiles, they would eventually change into massive crossbows fit for battlefields.
Of course not all siege engines were artillery. Such as the infamous battering ram that would frighten any man defending a castle, or the sorry guy who will have the repair the door once the siege is over. These were used to bust the last thing that protects the people inside fortifications, namely doors. And they were pretty effective at it. So much so that cannons had to be perfected in order to match the sheer penetrating power of the ram. Besides that, there were also siege-towers (and siege-bridges, technically). Big towers used to just completely dismiss the thick ass walls protecting the people inside. They weren't always used during sieges, but goddamn did they make an impression.
Cannons and Early Gunpowder weapons
As mentioned, the Chinese had various experimentations with Gunpowder. They had weapons like exploding lances and basic rockets, but it wasn't until Gunpowder reached the Middle East/Europe that the tech really started to find its niche.
The three Gunpowder Empires (Ottomans, Safavids, and the Mughals) were credited with perfecting Cannons, but that theory has since been criticized. The three empires quickly adopted Gunpowder into their armies and even used them to devastating effect against their gun-less neighbors (Romeaboos will forever cope and seethe about how Constantinople was taken down by a big ass gun), but these developments would never have been made without European metallurgy (back to the Fall of Constantinople: the siege of Constantinople took a long time and the Ottomans only had so many cannons; there is an anecdote that even though the Ottoman cannons were very good at breaking down the double-walls, they weren't great at it; the rubble caused by the collapsing walls couldn't be cleared, so the besiegers had to keep shooting at the breach until the rubble was removed)
In contrast, European artillery started out as large weapons, but eventually became smaller and more manageable, becoming Field Guns that could be quickly repositioned by horse, because multiple cannons enfilading the enemy army was much more useful than a single gun that couldn't even be aimed properly, or that would blow up after ten shots.
Modern Era
World war 1 World War 2 Cold war Drones and MLRS today