Information about Huolongjing

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Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) musketeers in drill formation.
The Huolongjing (Wade-Giles: Huo Lung Ching; Traditional Chinese: 火龍經; English: Fire Drake Manual) is a 14th century military treatise that was compiled and edited by Jiao Yu and Liu Ji of the early Ming Dynasty (13681644 AD) in China. It outlined the use of various 'fire–weapons' involving the use of gunpowder.

The Huolongjing provided info for various gunpowder compositions, including 'magic gunpowder', 'poison gunpowder', or 'blinding and burning gunpowder'.[1] It had descriptions of the Chinese hollow cast iron grenade bomb, shrapnel bombs, and bombs with poisonious concoctions.[2] The book had descriptions of the 10th century Chinese fire arrow, a simple wooden arrow with a spherical soft casing attached to the arrow and filled with gunpowder, ignited by a fuse so that it was propelled forward (and provided a light explosion upon impact).[3] However, the book explained how this simple 'fire arrow' evolved into the metal-tube launched rocket.[3] The book provided descriptions of various rocket launchers that launched tons of rockets at a time,[4] the advent of the two stage rocket having a booster rocket igniting a swarm of smaller ones that were shot from the mouth of a missile shaped like a dragon,[5] and even fin–mounted winged rockets.[6] The book described the use of explosive land mines[7] and descriptions of explosive naval mines at sea and on the river; this incorporated the use of a complex trigger mechanism of falling weights, pins, and a steel wheellock to ignite the train of fuses.[8] The book described various proto–guns including the fire lance (a short-burst flamethrower that emitted a charge of shrapnel), multiple metal barrel handguns (with up to ten barrels),[9] and descriptions of handguns with possible serpentine locks, used as components in matchlock firearms.[10] The book provided descriptions of the early bombard and cannon,[11] including the use of hollow gunpowder–packed exploding cannonballs,[12] cannon barrels filled with tons of metal balls containing poisonous gunpowder solutions,[12] and cannons that were mounted on wheeled carriages so that they could be rotated in all directions.[12]

Although Jiao Yu did not provide the book's preface until the Nanyang publication of 1412 AD,[13] the book was previously published in the 14th century (written before Liu Ji died on May 16, 1375), and was a compilation of material written since the late 13th century.[14] From his own personal accounts Jiao Yu also described gunpowder weapons that were used since 1355 AD, with his involvement in the Red Turban Rebellion and revolt against Yuan Dynasty Mongol rule.[15]

By the 15th century, European innovations in firearms, cannons, and other gunpowder weapons began to surpass Chinese innovation that was made in the 14th century. This included the European breech–loading gun and culverin, the wheellock musket, and then the flintlock musket of the mid 17th century. By the late 16th century, the Chinese adopted Western-style muskets while employing Ottoman Turkish style firing positions.[15]

Gunpowder warfare and weapons

Firearms and flamethrowers

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The phalanx-charging fire-gourd, one of many fire lance types discharging lead pellets in the gunpowder blast, an illustration from the Huolongjing.
The military treatise of Jiao Yu and Liu Ji went into a great amount of detail on the gunpowder weapons of their time. The fire lance and fire tube (i.e. a combination of a firearm and flamethrower)[16] came in many different versions and were styled with many different names by the time Jiao Yu edited the Huolongjing.[17] The earliest of these were made of bamboo tubes, although the earliest transition to metal was made in the 12th century.[17] Others, according to description and illustrated pictures of the Huolongjing, emitted arrows called the 'lotus bunch' accompanied by a fiery blast.[18] Some of these low–nitrate gunpowder flamethrowers used poisonous mixtures, including arsenious oxide, and would blast a spray of porcelain bits as shrapnel.[19][20] The earliest depiction of a fire lance is dated c. 950 AD, a Chinese painting on a silk banner found at the Buddhist site of Dunhuang.[21] Furthermore, the oldest existent bronze handgun is from the Heilongjiang archeological excavation, dated to 1288 AD.[22] For that year, the Yuan Shi historical text describes the rebellion of the Christian Mongol prince Nayan and the Jurchen-born military commander Li Ting who, along with a Korean brigade conscripted by Kublai Khan, suppressed Nayan's rebellion by using foot soldiers armed with handguns and portable bombards.[23] The earliest metal barrel guns were not designed for high–nitrate gunpowder and a bore–filling projectile; rather, they were designed for the low–nitrate flamethrower fire lance that shot small co–viative missiles.[24] This was called the 'bandit–striking penetrating gun' (ji zei bian chong), and was illustrated in a drawing of the Huolongjing.[24] In the Islamic world the fire lance first appears in a book of 1280, written by Hasan al–Rammah, and again appears in a manuscript of 1320.[25] In Europe the first representation of the fire lance is of a horse–mounted knight wielding the weapon in a Latin manuscript illustration dated to 1396,[26] and also appeared in an illustration of Taccola's De Mechinis (1449). The Huolongjing also described and illustrated metal–barrel handguns as well, including guns with three barrels, five barrels, six barrels, and even up to ten barrels.[27] Furthermore, it described the use of a 'match–holding lance gun' (chi huo–sheng qiang), possibly an early serpentine matchlock.[10] Although a proper illustration for this one was not included, it described its arrangement as a match brought down to the touch hole of three gun barrels one after the other.[28] During the reign of the Yongle Emperor (14021424 AD), the Shenji Brigade was formed, with cavalry horses that were said to have tubes filled with flammable materials holstered to their sides, along with troops with firearms and light artillery on carriages.[29]

In addition to firearms and fire lances, the Huolongjing also illustrated the tall vertical mobile shield to hide and protect infantry gunmen, known as the 'mysteriously moving phalanx–breaking fierce–flame sword–shield'.[30] This large rectangular shield would have been mounted on wheels, with five rows of six circular holes each where the gun barrels could be placed, and the shield itself would have been accompanied by swordsmen on either side to protect the gunmen.[30]

Bombards and cannons

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The 'flying-cloud thunderclap-eruptor' cannon from the Huolongjing.
In China, the first cannon–barrel design portrayed in artwork was a stone sculpture dated to 1128 AD, found in Sichuan province,[31] although the oldest archeological discovery of a cannon is a bronze cannon of China inscribed with the date "2nd year of the Dade era, Yuan Dynasty" (1298 AD). The prototype to the metal barrel was of course one made of bamboo, which was recorded in use by a Chinese garrison commander at Anlu, Hubei province, in the year 1132.[32] One of the earliest references to the destructive force of a cannon in China was made by Zhang Xian in 1341, with his verse known as The Iron Cannon Affair.[33] Zhang wrote that its cannonball could "pierce the heart or belly when it strikes a man or horse, and can even transfix several persons at once."[33] Jiao Yu wrote that the cannon, called the 'eruptor', was cast in bronze, and had an average length of 4 ft and 5 in.[12] He wrote that some cannons were simply filled with 100 or so lead balls, but others had large rounds that produced a bursting charge upon impact, called the 'flying–cloud thunderclap eruptor' (飞云霹雳炮; feiyun pili pao).[12] He wrote of how the Chinese in his day had figured out how to pack hollow cast iron shells of cannonballs with gunpowder to create an explosive effect upon contact with enemy targets.[12] In perspective, exploding cannonball rounds were not discovered in Europe until the 16th century.[35] Furthermore, he noted the use of the 'poison–fog magic smoke eruptor', where 'blinding gunpowder' and 'poisonous gunpowder' were packed into the hollow cannonball shells, and were effective in burning the faces and eyes of enemies, along with choking them with a formidable spray of poisonous smoke.[12] He wrote that cannons were mounted on frames or on wheeled carriages, so that they could be rotated in all directions.[37]

Land mines and naval mines

The first recorded use of a land mine stated that the officer Lou Qianxia of the late Song Dynasty created them in order to kill invading Mongol troops in 1277 AD.[38] Jiao Yu wrote that land mines were spherical in shape, made of cast iron, and their fuses ignited by the enemy movement disturbing a trigger mechanism.[39] Although his book did not elaborate on the trigger mechanism, a late Ming Dynasty book of 1606 AD revealed that a complex system of a pin release, dropping weights, and chords and axles worked to rotate a spinning 'steel wheel' that acted as a flint to provide sparks that ignited the mines' fuses underground.[40] For the use of naval mines, he wrote of slowly burning joss sticks that were disguised and timed to explode against enemy ships floating nearby:

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In the later Tiangong Kaiwu ('The Exploitation of the Works of Nature') treatise, written by Song Yingxing in 1637 AD, the ox bladder described by Jiao Yu is replaced with a lacquer bag instead, along with a cord pulled from a hidden ambusher located on the nearby shore, which would release a flint steel–wheel firing mechanism to ignite the fuse of the naval mine.[40]

Gunpowder and explosives

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Suenaga facing Mongol arrows and gunpowder bombs during the Mongol invasions of Japan in 1281 AD, painting dated to 1293 AD.
There were several gunpowder compositions proposed by Jiao Yu, with additions to the standard formula of saltpetre, sulphur, and charcoal by adapting gunpowder weapons to early chemical warfare. He described the suitable uses of 'magic gunpowder', 'poison gunpowder', or 'blinding and burning gunpowder' in warfare, which displays the various amounts of compositions used in his time.[41] For the making of poisonous gunpowder in hand–lobbed or catapult–launched grenade bombs,[20] he advised that a mixture of tung oil, urine, sal ammoniac, feces, and scallion juice be heated and then coated upon dozens of tiny iron pellets and bits of broken porcelain.[42] For this, Jiao Yu wrote "even birds flying in the air cannot escape the effects of the explosion".[42] His book also outlined the use of the 'flying–sand magic bomb releasing ten thousand fires'. This included the use of a tube of gunpowder put into an earthenware pot that was previously filled with quicklime, resin, and alcoholic extracts of poisonous plants, which would be released in the explosion.[43] It is important to note that during the 14th century, Chinese gunpowder solutions had reached their maximum explosive potential, with levels of nitrate ranging from 12% to 91% and at least 6 formulas in use by the Chinese that were considered to have maximum explosive force.[44] This also came about due to the enrichment of sulfur from pyrite extracts during the earlier Song Dynasty period,[45] while Chinese gunpowder formulas by the late 12th century and at least by 1230 AD were potential enough for explosive detonations and bursting cast iron shells.[46] The root of all this was the Chinese military handbook written in 1044 AD, the Wujing Zongyao; it outlined the earliest use of formulas for gunpowder, employed in bombs hurled by catapults.[46][47] Later, Wei Xing (d. 1164) of the Song Dynasty was said to have created a gunpowder formula of saltpetre, sulphur, and willow charcoal for his projectile carriages launching 'fire–stones' up to 400 yards.[48]

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Earliest known representation of a gun (a fire lance) and a grenade (upper right), from the cave murals of Dunhuang, 10th century.
Although its destructive force was widely recognized even by the 11th century, the Chinese had earlier termed gunpowder as a 'fire–drug' (huo yao), due to Chinese beliefs in its pharmaceutical properties.[49] Its valuable use in festival entertainment could be seen in fireworks displays, such as the martial demonstration in 1110 AD to entertain the court of Emperor Huizong, with dancers in strange costumes moving through clouds of colored smoke.[49] Leading up to its 10th century use with Fire Arrows and in fuses for igniting flamethrowers shooting Greek Fire, Daoist alchemists had experimented with various blackpowder solutions in the Han Dynasty and Tang Dynasty.[50] After the Wujing Zongyao of 1044 had explicitly stated formulas for gunpowder, the Chinese government became frightened that its use could fall into the hands of surrounding enemies at the borders, and in 1076 enacted a strict governmental monopoly over the production and distribution of sulfur.[51] Although saltpetre was a central component of the 'fire–drug' and a flavor enhancer for food during the Tang and Song periods,[52] in 1067 the Song government banned the people of modern Shanxi and Hebei provinces to sell foreigners both sulfur and saltpetre in any form.[53] While engaged in a war with the Mongols, in the year 1259 the official Li Zengbo wrote in his Ko Zhai Za Gao, Xu Gao Hou that the city of Qingzhou was manufacturing one to two thousand strong iron-cased bomb shells a month, dispatching to Xiangyang and Yingzhou about ten to twenty thousand such bombs at a time.[54]

Fire arrows and rockets

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Model of a 16th century Korean hwacha, a two–wheeled cart rocket launcher that fires singijeons.
For the earliest fire arrows launched from bows (not rocket launchers), Jiao Yu had termed these "fiery pomegranate shot from a bow". The term pomegranate stemmed from the fact that the lump of gunpowder–filled paper wrapped round the arrow just below the metal arrow–head resembled the shape of a pomegranate.[55] He advised that a piece of hemp cloth should be used to strengthen the wad of paper, and then sealed fast with molten pine resin.[55] Although Jiao Yu described the fire arrow in great detail, it was mentioned by the much earlier Xia Shaozeng, when 20000 fire arrows were handed over to the Jurchen conquerors of Kaifeng City in 1126 AD.[55] An even earlier Chinese text of the Wujing Zongyao (武经总要, "Collection of the Most Important Military Techniques"), written in 1044 AD by the Song scholars Zeng Gongliang and Yang Weide, described the use of three spring or triple bow arcuballista that fired arrow bolts holding gunpowder.[55] Although written much later in 1630 (second edition in 1664), the Wulixiaoshi of Fang Yizhi asserted that fire arrows were presented to Emperor Taizu of Song in 960 AD.[57] Even after the rocket was invented in China the fire arrow continued in use; this could be seen in the Second Opium War, where Chinese used fire arrows against the French in 1860.[58]

By the time of Jiao Yu, the term 'fire arrow' had taken on a whole new meaning and incorporated what were the earliest rockets found in China.[3][20] The simple transition of this was to use a hollow tube (of bamboo or metal) instead of a bow or ballista firing gunpowder–impregnated fire arrows. The historian Joseph Needham asserts that this fundamental discovery came sometime before Jiao Yu, however, during the late Southern Song Dynasty (11271279 AD).[3] From the section of the oldest passages in the Huolongjing,[3] the text reads:

Insert the text of the quote here, without quotation marks.


In the late 14th century, the Chinese had figured out how to combine the rocket launching tube with the fire lance.[60] This involved three tubes attached to the same staff, and as the first rocket tube was fired, a charge was ignited in the leading tube which expelled a blinding lachrymatory powder at the enemy, and finally the second rocket was fired.[60] A depicted illustration of this was featured in the publication of the Huolongjing, where it described the effectiveness of this weapon to confuse the enemy of where the rockets were fired from.[60] Apart from these hand–held rocket launchers, the Huolongjing also provided description and illustration for two different kinds of mounted rocket launchers that featured the firing of multiple rockets.[61] There was a cylindrical basket–work rocket launcher called the 'Mr. Facing–both–ways rocket arrow firing basket', as well as an oblong–section rectangular box rocket launcher known as the 'magical rocket–arrow block'.[4] Rockets described in the Huolongjing weren't all in the shape of standard fire arrows, however, as there were some that had artificial wings attached.[63] An illustration of this was provided, showing that fins were clearly used to increase aerodynamic stability for the flight path of the rocket,[64] which according to Jiao Yu could rise hundreds of feet before landing at the designated enemy target.[65]

From an illustration and description in the Huolongjing is the oldest known multistage rocket; this was the 'fire–dragon issuing from the water' (huo long chu shui), used mostly by the Chinese navy.[66] It was a two–stage rocket that had carrier or booster rockets that would eventually burn out, yet before they did they automatically ignited a number of smaller rocket arrows that were shot out of the front end of the missile, which was shaped like a dragon's head with an open mouth.[66] This multi–stage rocket may be considered the ancestor to the modern exocet.[66] Needham points out that the written material and depicted illustration of this rocket come from the oldest stratum of the Huolongjing, which can be dated roughly 1300–1350 AD (from the book's part 1, chapter 3, page 23).[66]

Historical perspective

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Chinese handgun from the Yuan Dynasty era, 1279-1368.
Gunpowder warfare found its birthplace in medieval China, yet its technological and methodical perfection would occur outside of it. Although the inventions and written work of Jiao Yu and the Chinese 'fire–weapons' of his time revolutionized warfare in China, there wasn't an incredible amount of Chinese innovation in gunpowder weapons (i.e. firearms, cannons, etc.) during the 15th century onwards.[66] When the Portuguese arrived in China during the early 16th century, they were not very impressed with Chinese firearms in comparison to their own.[66] With the continual progression of the earliest European arquebus, to the matchlock, to the wheellock, and then the advent of the flintlock musket of the 17th century, they surpassed the level of earlier Chinese innovation.[68] The Chinese of the late Ming Dynasty would even adopt the Ottoman Turkish rifleman's kneeling position, while purchasing European firearms for their infantry riflemen.[69] Illustrations of Ottoman and European riflemen with detailed illustrations of their weapons appeared in Zhao Shizhen's book Shenqipu of 1598 AD.[15]

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Chinese Ming Dynasty (13681644 AD) era matchlock firearms featuring serpentine levers.
Although not perfected until the 19th century with the cartridge of Samuel Johannes Pauly in 1809, Johann Nikolaus von Dreyse's 'Needle Gun' in 1836, and the steel–cast Krupp cannon in the 1850s, the history of the European breech–loading gun spans back to the late 14th century, the earliest models found in Burgundy.[71] Before the improvements by those mentioned above, these early breech loading rifles and cannons were somewhat unsatisfactory due to serious loss of gas when firing, resulting in the decreased force of the propellant.[72] Nevertheless, the 16th century breech–loading model entered China after the Portuguese attempted to assault southern China from Tuen Mun and were expelled by the Ming Dynasty navy in 1521.[73] In 1523 the Chinese navy captured two Western ships with Portuguese breech–loading culverins aboard, which the Chinese called a fo–lang–ji (Frankish culverin). According to the Ming Shi, these cannons were soon presented to the Jiajing Emperor by Wang Hong, and their design was copied in 1529 AD.[73] The Frankish culverin was first illustarted in China in a drawing of a Chinese book published in 1562.[74] However, earlier Ming records indicate that it was actually the War Ministry official He Ru who first acquired these guns in 1522, while copies of them were made by two Westernized Chinese at Beijing, Yang San (Pedro Yang) and Dai Ming.[75] In an even earlier account of Wang Yangming (14721529), the philosopher and governor of Jiangxi, he intended to use fo–lang–ji cannons in suppressing the rebellion of Prince Zhu Chen–hao in 1519 AD.[75] In any case, the arrival of the breech loading rifle and cannon into China signified the beginning of continual European influence upon Chinese firearms and artillery.[75] However, in describing different metals used for cannons, it was Song Yingxing who wrote in his encyclopedia of 1637 that both foreign and uniquely native gunpowder weapons were employed:

Insert the text of the quote here, without quotation marks.

See also

Notes

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1. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 180–187.
2. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 183.
3. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 153–154.
4. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 489.
5. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 508.
6. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 498–502.
7. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 192–196.
8. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 203–205.
9. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 229.
10. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 459.
11. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 314–325.
12. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 264.
13. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 25.
14. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 24.
15. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 26.
16. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 232.
17. ^ Embree, 185.
18. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 241, 242, 244.
19. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 232–233.
20. ^ Cowley, 38.
21. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 224–225.
22. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 293.
23. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 293-294.
24. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 237.
25. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 259.
26. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 260.
27. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 459–463.
28. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 458–459.
29. ^ Partington, 239.
30. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 416.
31. ^ Embree, 852.
32. ^ Norris, 10.
33. ^ Norris, 11.
34. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 264.
35. ^ Cowley, 49.
36. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 267.
37. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 264–265.
38. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 192.
39. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 193.
40. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 199.
41. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 192–193.
42. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 180.
43. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 187.
44. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 345–346.
45. ^ Yunming, 489–490.
46. ^ Khan, 2.
47. ^ Ebrey, 138.
48. ^ Partington, 239–240.
49. ^ Kelly, 2.
50. ^ Kelly, 2–4.
51. ^ Yunming, 489.
52. ^ Kelly, 4.
53. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 126.
54. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 173-174.
55. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 154–155.
56. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 154.
57. ^ Partington, 240.
58. ^ Partington, 5.
59. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 477.
60. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 485–486.
61. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 486–489.
62. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 489.
63. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 498.
64. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 501–503.
65. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 502.
66. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 510.
67. ^ Khan, 4.
68. ^ Khan, 4–5.
69. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 449–452.
70. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 447–454.
71. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 366.
72. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 366–367.
73. ^ Needham Volume 5, Part 7, 369.
74. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 374.
75. ^ Needham, Volume 5, Part 7, 372.

References

  • Cowley, Robert (1996). The Reader's Companion to Military History. Boston: Houghton–Mifflin Company.
  • Ebrey, Patricia Buckley (1999). The Cambridge Illustrated History of China. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43519-6 (hardback); ISBN 0-521-66991-X (paperback).
  • Embree, Ainslie Thomas (1997). Asia in Western and World History: A Guide for Teaching. Armonk: ME Sharpe, Inc.
  • Kelly, Jack (2004). Gunpowder: Alchemy, Bombards, and Pyrotechnics: The History of the Explosive that Changed the World. New York: Basic Books, Perseus Books Group.
  • Khan, Iqtidar Alam (2004). Gunpowder and Firearms: Warfare in Medieval India. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Part 7, Military Technology; the Gunpowder Epic. Taipei: Caves Books Ltd.
  • Norris, John (2003). Early Gunpowder Artillery: 1300–1600. Marlborough: The Crowood Press, Ltd.
  • Partington, James Riddick (1998). A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder. The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-5954-9.
  • Song, Yingxing, translated with preface by E-Tu Zen Sun and Shiou-Chuan Sun (1966). T'ien-Kung K'ai-Wu: Chinese Technology in the Seventeenth Century. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press.
  • Yunming, Zhang (1986). Isis: The History of Science Society: Ancient Chinese Sulfur Manufacturing Processes. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

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Jiao Yu (Traditional and Simplified Chinese: 焦玉, Wade-Giles: Chiao Yü, Hanyu Pinyin: Jiāo Yù) was a Chinese military officer loyal to Zhu Yuanzhang (1328-1398 AD), the founder of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644 AD).
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Gunpowder is a pyrotechnic composition, an explosive mixture of sulfur, charcoal and potassium nitrate that burns rapidly, producing volumes of hot gas which can be used as a propellant in firearms and fireworks.
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Iron-Cementite meta-stable diagram.]] Cast iron usually refers to grey cast iron, but identifies a large group of ferrous alloys, which solidify with a eutectic.

Overview


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hand grenade is a small hand-held anti-personnel weapon designed to be thrown, which then explodes after a short time. The word "grenade" is derived from the Old French (pome) grenate
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Shrapnel is the term commonly used to describe the metal fragments and debris thrown out by any exploding object, be it a high explosive (HE) filled shell or a homemade bomb wrapped with nails or ball bearings.
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Fire Arrow is a projectile weapon that uses black powder. Many variations of this weapon were used in Asia, though it originated in China. The earliest reference to its use comes in the Collection of the Most Important Military Techniques written in 1044.
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The word fuse has several meanings:
  • Fuse (electrical), a device used in electrical systems to protect against excessive current.
  • Fuse (hydraulic), a device used in hydraulic systems to protect against sudden loss of fluid pressure

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rocket is a vehicle, missile or aircraft which obtains thrust by the reaction to the ejection of fast moving fluid from within a rocket engine.

The history of rockets goes back to at least the 13th century[1].
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Rocket launcher or missile launcher can mean:
  • Recoilless guns
  • Rocket propelled grenade launchers
  • Shoulder-launched missile weapon
  • Anti-tank guided missile

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multistage (or multi-stage) rocket is a rocket that uses two or more stages, each of which contains its own engines and propellant. A stacked stage is mounted on top of another stage; a parallel stage is attached next to another stage.
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In spaceflight, a booster rocket may be either:
  • an entire launch vehicle or "launcher" used to lift a spacecraft. Initially all boosters used for human spaceflight and most unmanned boosters used liquid propellant, at least for the core launch vehicle.

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Chinese dragon is a Chinese mythical creature, depicted as a long, scaled, snake-like creature with four claws. In contrast to the Western dragon which stands on four legs and which is usually portrayed as evil, Chinese dragon has long been a potent symbol of auspicious power in
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land mine is an explosive device designed to be placed on or in the ground to explode when triggered by an operator or the proximity of a vehicle, person or animal. The name originates from the practice of sapping, where tunnels were dug (much like mining) under enemy
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naval mine is a self-contained explosive device placed in water to destroy ships or submarines. Unlike depth charges, they are deposited and left to wait until they are triggered by the approach of or a contact with an enemy ship.
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Wheellock, wheel-lock or wheel lock, is a mechanism for firing a firearm. It was the next major development in firearms technology after the matchlock and the first self-igniting firearm.
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gun is a common name given to an object that fires high-velocity projectiles. The projectile is fired through a hollow tube known as the gun's barrel. The projectile's caliber is usually designated in fractions of an inch or in millimeters.
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fire lance (Traditional Chinese: 火槍; Simplified Chinese: 火枪; Pinyin: huǒ qiāng) or fire spear
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flamethrower is a mechanical device designed to project a long controllable stream of fire.

Some flamethrowers project a stream of ignited flammable liquid; some project a long gas flame.
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handgun is a firearm designed to be held in the hand when used. This characteristic differentiates handguns as a general class of firearms from their larger cousins: long guns such as rifles and shotguns, mounted weapons such as machine guns and autocannons, and larger weapons such
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The Matchlock was the first mechanism or "lock" invented to facilitate the firing of a hand-held firearm. This design removed the need to lower a lighted match into the flash pan by hand and made it possible to have both hands free to keep a firm grip on the weapon at the moment of
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Bombard may refer to:
  • Bombard (weapon), a type of late medieval siege weapon.
  • Bombard (music), a medieval instrument and forerunner of the bass oboe.
  • Alain Bombard, a French sailor who crossed the Atlantic on a rigid-hulled inflatable boat with no water or food.

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cannon is any large tubular firearm designed to fire a heavy projectile over a long distance. They were first used in China, and were the archetypal form of artillery. The first cannon in Europe probably appeared in Islamic and Christian Spain.
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Hollow may refer to:
  • a low, wooded area, such as a copse
  • a small valley
  • Tree hollow, a hollow in a branch or trunk, which form in old trees and may provide habitat for animals
Hollow in the arts:
  • Hollow (Bleach

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