I'm just curious if anyone has any information on how often fire arrows were actually used in field battles and how effective they really were.
I'm just curious if anyone has any information on how often fire arrows were actually used in field battles and how effective they really were.
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
"Hi, Billy Mays Here!" 1958-2009
They were effective, but mainly fire arrows used in pillage missions to burn down houses, farms, etc.
for accuracy I do not think that generals favoured it. but in siege battles mainly to demotivate the defenders and also defenders used it to burn enemy's siege machines.
though it may be a fiction or a myth but there is a record that Syracusians used some unknown war machine that burned roman navy, I think they used mirrors to reflect the sunlight to burn the sails after sails burned so the navy was burned.
In roman records it is recorded like that but in the end they managed to capture the city.
but I think boiling oil must be more devastating effect on morale than fire arrows.
the famous general must be Edward, the Black Prince who was infamous for his "The Great Raid of 1355" on the Aquitaine–Languedoc Front, which crippled southern France economically, and provoked resentment of the French throne among French peasantry.
Last edited by Atraphoenix; 06-22-2009 at 13:37.
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I've read that too, and they're called "Fire Mirrors" or something. Supposedly, the mechanism itself was just a collection of various mirrors encircling a big centered one in such a way, that all sun beams that reflected upon the smaller ones concentrated on the central and the concentrated beam hit the enemy ships and set them on fire... I don't really know, but this sounds way too much Sci-Fi to me. I don't even know if that is scientifically possible. I know that, according to the Physics part at least, in order to concentrate sunlight into a beam powerful enough to actually cause damage would require a series of very powerful (and preferably of parabolic shape) lenses that would in turn have to be placed in very specific places in order to get the desired effect.
That leaves me with no option other than dismiss the probability of that story actually holding any truth at all, since AFAIK the Greeks were not as advanced in Geometric Optics as we are today. Not only that, but even if they were they wouldn't be able to burn a ship of more than a few meters away. Why is that, you ask? Because even laser beams aren't as devastating as we believe from a long distance. This is why there can be no laser guns, and that is why the whole "Fire Mirror" story cannot possibly be correct. And why is that exactly? Because even if you concentrate a ray of photons for example (in the case of sunlight), it stays "compact" only for a few meters. After that, the small particles that make up the "beam" will go in different directions and so the energy delivered to a target will not cause any considerable damage like setting it on fire.
Maion
Last edited by Maion Maroneios; 06-22-2009 at 18:39.
~Maion
Another story from the Syracuse siege was a giant wooden machine who threw a giant "arm" to the sea and smashed roman ships. Another invention of Archimedes, who was later killed when the romans stormed the city.
Why too Sci fi? I think the romans credited archimedes with this invention, and he had a great mind....so why shouldn't he have? but to make it work would probably have been very expensive and precise work.... If the syrakusans managed to build a working one i doubt it would have been duplicated. too unique and complicated to accurately replicate... not too mention very, very costly
Last edited by Reality=Chaos; 06-22-2009 at 19:48.
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From what I read it was an a long mechanical arm that tipped the ships over. Basically hit them on their side, right where the deck ends, and it destabilised the ship to the point where it simply flipped. Or as other sources state, the arm flipped them by acting as a lever, pushing from the bottom of the ship; or the keel.
Maybe the Syrakousans start their mirror burning as incidental, having created a concave mirror and accidentally burn some linens... no wonder, they start creating larger version for war...
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They did a test of thet myth on a popular show called "Mythbuster" They said it was fake but they tested it very wrong. First they made a plywood boat, then a replitcation of the mirror. It heated the boat up to about three hundred degreess, but it only melted the tar on the boat. My problem with this is that they burnt the sails of the vessels, not the boats themselves. Plus the plywood obsorbed a ton of water and they couldn't even get it to lightafter they were done with testing. They need to to revisit that myth and test it correctly.
Oh Christ. The Archimedes Death Ray. DO NOT WANT
Weirdo crane to mess up ships that wander too close, though, is certainly credible. And wouldn't even be close to the strangest contraptions people have came up with over the millenia in siege warfare...
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Even more impressive is that aleged steam powered cannon conceptulized by Archimedes.
I think it were some MIT students who succefully built a steam gun that fired a bullet at sonic speed from one. They kept the blueprints for themselves for being too dangerous.
Last edited by Caveira; 06-22-2009 at 20:54.
Like said before fire arrows were used primearly during raids or sieges.
I can remember a tail that while a large group of Hungarian warriors/raiders besieged the city of Augsburg they used burning arrows as a form of "greating" the besieged - they fired burning arrows into the town and many buildings went ablaze. It is also claimed that during this siege the Hungarians first tried using some form of siege equipment, but couldn't use it because they were defeated by Otto the Great and his relief army of heavely armoured knights....
If we have already mentioned the Siege of Syracusa and archemideses inventions, does anyone of you have any information on the "claw" - another mechanism used agaisnt the romans (I don't know much about it..)
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Last edited by Celtic_Punk; 06-22-2009 at 21:55.
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Screw the Death Ray. Its crap. It would have been integrated into other coastal defense systems. There were tons of guys around that would have been able to use the idea sincei t wasn't that difficult. Archimedes didn't have a monopoly on intellegence back then you know. That being said, its not umpossible.
The claw is actually more plausible though. Mesopotamian cultures used large cranes to move ships around channels. If anything it was some sort of improvisation.
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
"Hi, Billy Mays Here!" 1958-2009
Not dissimilar "hoists" were fairly widely used to foil rams, back in the day, and at least the Chinese and Medieval Europeans had a small one used to snatch individual soldiers...
"Let us remember that there are multiple theories of Intelligent Design. I and many others around the world are of the strong belief that the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster. --- Proof of the existence of the FSM, if needed, can be found in the recent uptick of global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. Apparently His Pastaness is to be worshipped in full pirate regalia. The decline in worldwide pirate population over the past 200 years directly corresponds with the increase in global temperature. Here is a graph to illustrate the point."
-Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster
There are some references to the use of flaming arrows here.
I'll see if I can find some actual historical sources.
I'm really struggling to find any ancient Roman source which is definite about the use of flaming arrows.
Two web articles refer to the Romans using flaming arrows against elephants (a) at the battle of Beneventum against Pyrrhus, and (b) at the battle of Panormus against Hasdrubal, but when I checked the ancient sources I couldn't find any reference to flaming arrows at those battle.
I haven't checked the Greek sources.
Did anyone else find any ancient sources?
Is it possible that its just a myth. It certainly looks to be the (vary rare) exception rather than, as in TW, the rule.
I read that during Beneventum the velites used flaming javelins (vertum).No mention of flaming arrows. From a very trusted and renowned (in Russia) encyclopaedia.
What are the ancient sources the encyclopaedia relies on?
The only references to flaming "implements" used against Pyrrhus, that I could find, are these:
1. From Dionysius of Halicarnassus, XX, 1:6-7:
"Outside the line they stationed the light-armed troops and the waggons, three hundred in number, which they had got ready for the battle against the elephants. These waggons had upright beams on which were mounted movable traverse poles that could be swung round as quick as thought in any direction one might wish, and on the ends of the poles there were either tridents or swordlike spikes or scythes all of iron; or again they had cranes that hurled down heavy grappling-irons. Many of the poles had attached to them and projecting in front of the waggons fire-bearing grapnels wrapped in tow that had been liberally daubed with pitch, which men standing on the waggons were to set afire as soon as they came near the elephants and then rain blows with them upon the trunks and faces of the beasts."
2. From Cassius Dio / Zonoras, Book 10
The Romans, among other preparations, made ready, as a measure against the elephants, iron-pointed beams, mounted on waggons, and bristling in all directions. From these they intended to shoot fire and various missiles, in order to check the beasts.
(Nb. I have no idea why both translations spell wagon with a double 'g').
"Waggon" is a perfectly valid, if rather archaic, word for the vehicle.
"Let us remember that there are multiple theories of Intelligent Design. I and many others around the world are of the strong belief that the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster. --- Proof of the existence of the FSM, if needed, can be found in the recent uptick of global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. Apparently His Pastaness is to be worshipped in full pirate regalia. The decline in worldwide pirate population over the past 200 years directly corresponds with the increase in global temperature. Here is a graph to illustrate the point."
-Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster
I finally found what looks like a reference to fire arrows, from Plutarch's life of Sulla, 9:6, concerning Sulla's entry into Rome with his army:
But by this time Sulla was at hand, and seeing what was going on, shouted orders to set fire to the houses, and seizing a blazing torch, led the way himself, and ordered his archers to use their fire-bolts and shoot them up at the roofs.
I can't read Greek so I have no idea whether the original Greek actually refers to fire-arrows, but the translation sounds like fire arrows.
Any other examples?
Also this, from Herodotus 8:52 (pre-EB period)
So the Persians taking their post upon the rising ground opposite the Acropolis, which the Athenians call the Hill of Ares, proceeded to besiege them in this fashion, that is they put tow round about their arrows and lighted it, and then shot them against the palisade.
I think there is something in the Aeneid, Book 10, Lines 130-132.
Overall conclusion: Arrows are mentioned regularly in the ancient sources. Fire arrows are the very rare exception.
Should this affect the way fire arrows are used in EB?
...don't use them ?
"Let us remember that there are multiple theories of Intelligent Design. I and many others around the world are of the strong belief that the universe was created by a Flying Spaghetti Monster. --- Proof of the existence of the FSM, if needed, can be found in the recent uptick of global warming, earthquakes, hurricanes, and other natural disasters. Apparently His Pastaness is to be worshipped in full pirate regalia. The decline in worldwide pirate population over the past 200 years directly corresponds with the increase in global temperature. Here is a graph to illustrate the point."
-Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster
I thought it was a large chunk of wood on a canoe or on land @ 300ft.
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
"Hi, Billy Mays Here!" 1958-2009
As for the use of fire arrows in battle we have to look at Holywood for the answer. Take the battle scene in "Gladiator", the Romans use fire arrows and to light them they have handy little trenches full of oil to start the ball rolling.
Problem 1; Things go horribly wrong oil goes everywhere and you have cremated archer auxilia.
Problem 2; It rains
Problem 3; The enemy turn up some where else or late and your fire goes out.
Problem 4; The enemy have archers don't use flamming arrows that reduce range and accuracy and shoot your archers to pieces.
Problem 5; You have a Steppe army.
Conclusion; Fire arrows look great and may be useful in attacking flammable buildings but in the fluid world of battle they are a not an easy light BBQ
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That's not the most stupid or plainly inaccurate feature of that battle, though.
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