Monday, April 6, 2020
Medieval Weapons Essays - Projectile Weapons, Medieval Warfare
  Medieval Weapons    Medieval Weapons were (are) very dangerous. They    Can kill, puncture, wound, hurt, or anything else. All weapons    From the Middle Ages were looked upon as frightening and crucial    Tools to kill. From a small dagger to a large cannon; all weapons    Would kill, no doubt about it.    A lot, in fact most of the weapons were used for siege and    Defense against castles. Castles were the most integral part of the    Middle Ages. They held the king, the servants and anyone else    Important. If you wanted land or money, a castle was the perfect    Place to hit.    Movable Towers were just one thing used to lay siege on    These castles. Not necessarily a weapon itself, it held    Weapons...knights and peasants.    Knights and (or) peasants carried many weapons depending    On what specialty they had. Some carried bows-and-arrows, others    Maces, some swords, some knifes, etc.    A mace was a metal ball with metal spikes welded on the    Ball. A chain was attached to a wood stick onto the ball. The    Mace would not kill only torture.    Other siege weapons included the ballista, a HUGE    Crossbow- like slingshot that could send a huge tree trunk 3 football fields    Long. The ballasta was manly for breaking down castle walls, or for  scattering    A heavily guarded area.    The most commonly used weapon was the sword. It was a long metal    Object that was very sharp on both sides. The sword could actually cut the    Sheet metal on modern day cars. Imagine this power through your neck!    Next to the sword, the "soldiers" held a small dagger in a pouch on    Their belt. This was used to finish people off, as a last resort, or sometimes    Even suicide missions.    Trebuchet, the name strikes fear in people's eyes, a HUMONGOUS    Slingshot that could send a big monkeys boulder 2 football fields. This    Weapon could be used to demolish castle walls, or could even be used to kill    Hundreds of people on the battlefield. Anyway used, it was a big dangerous    Weapon.    Medieval Warfare and Weaponry    In the Middle Ages, the nobility of many cultures had large fortifications built to house a small town as well as themselves. These fortification were called castles, and they were so well defended that some historians have called it the most formidable weapon of medieval warfare (Hull 1). As one can imagine, conquering such a colossal structure cost much money, even more time, and many lives.    There were three main ways to infiltrate a castle; each no more common than the other two. The first way to conquer to castle is known as the siege. In a siege, an army would bar passageways into the castle, and continue to pound away at the castle's defenses until it was vulnerable to a final attack. In this form of assault, the attacking party did not have to approach the castle, as was required in a storm, the second way to attack a castle. In a siege, large projectiles from catapults often bombarded the ramparts of the castle. Hunger, plague, or actual weapons such as Greek fire arrows killed off the defenders of the castle. Greek fire was a mixture comprised of highly flammable substances that was agonizingly hot. Bits of cloth were dipped into the Greek fire compound and wrapped it behind the head of an arrow, and then lit on fire. Yet another common tactic in the siege was undermining. Undermining was the digging of tunnels underneath towers. However, the purposes of such subt   erranean activity were not for passage, but to create instability in the towers and in the end cause their disintegration.    The second, more certain form of attack upon a castle was the blockade. To blockade a place was to preclude all entry and departure from the site. In doing so to a castle, one limited their food supply, for a castle, unlike a manor, could not survive unless contact with the outer world could be attained. However, starving a castle out was costly in both money and especially time. For a long while an army waited for the castle to deplete their resources, the army itself had to continue to supply themselves with such resources and the soldiers were to be paid for their vigilant act.    Although it was costly and lengthy, blockade did work. Richard the Lionhearted's stronghold, the Chateau-Gaillard, which was built in only a year along the Seine River, was sacked on March 6, 1204 by    
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