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"PIERIERS VULGARLY CALLED PATTEREROS,"
from Francis Grose, Military "Antiquities, 1796.
THE ERA OF ARTILLERY
Looking at an old-time cannon, most people are
sure of just one thing: the shot came out of the front end. For that reason
these pages are written; people are curious about the fascinating
weapon that so prodigiously and powerfully lengthened the warrior's arm.
And theirs is a justifiable curiosity, because the gunner and his "art"
played a significant role in our history.
THE ANCIENT ENGINES OF WAR
To compare a Roman catapult with a modern trench
mortar seems absurd. Yet the only basic difference is the kind of energy
that Sends the projectile on its way.
In the dawn of history, war engines were performing
the function of artillery (which may be loosely defined as a means of
hurling missiles too heavy to be thrown by hand), and with these crude
weapons the basic principles of artillery were laid down. The Scriptures
record the use of ingenious machines on the walls of Jerusalem eight
centuries B. C.machines that were probably predecessors of the
catapult and ballista, getting power from twisted ropes made of hair,
hide or sinew. The ballista had horizontal arms like a bow. The arms
were set in rope; a cord, fastened to the arms like a bowstring, fired
arrows, darts, and stones. Like a modern field gun, the ballista shot
low and directly toward the enemy.

FIGURE 1BALLISTA. Caesar covered his
landing in Britain with fire from catapults and ballistas.
The catapult was the howitzer, or mortar, of its day
and could throw a hundred-pound stone 600 yards in a high arc to strike
the enemy behind his wall or batter down his defenses. "In the middle of
the ropes a wooden arm rises like a chariot pole," wrote the historian
Marcellinus. "At the top of the arm hangs a sling. When battle is
commenced, a round stone is set in the sling. Four soldiers on each side
of the engine wind the arm down until it is almost level with the
ground. When the arm is set free, it springs up and hurls the stone
forth from its sling." In early times the weapon was called a
"scorpion," for like this dreaded insect it bore its "sting" erect.

FIGURE 2CATAPULT.
The trebuchet was another war machine used
extensively during the Middle Ages. Essentially, it was a seesaw.
Weights on the short arm swung the long throwing arm.

FIGURE 3TREBUCHET. A heavy trebuchet could throw
a 300-pound stone 300 yards.
These weapons could be used with telling effect, as
the Romans learned from Archimedes in the siege of Syracuse (214-212
B.C.). As Plutarch relates, "Archimedes soon began to play his engines
upon the Romans and their ships, and shot stones of such an enormous
size and with so incredible a noise and velocity that nothing could
stand before them. At length the Romans were so terrified that, if they
saw but a rope or a beam projecting over the walls of Syracuse, they
cried out that Archimedes was leveling some machine at them, and turned
their backs and fled."
Long after the introduction of gunpowder, the old
engines of war continued in use. Often they were side by side with cannon.
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