A notable example of a bombard is
Mons Meg, built around 1449 and used by King
James II of Scotland. It was very powerful and used for bringing down castle walls. The origins of Mons Meg are not fully known but according to
Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy, it was his idea. It was ordered around 1449 and had similar construction to a typical bombard. However, it was seldom used because of several factors. Mons Meg was capable of firing shots and was one of the largest bombards of its time. It is now housed on public display at
Edinburgh Castle. A bombard with a bore of approximately was found when the moat of
Bodiam Castle, Kent, was drained. A muzzle-loader of hoop-and-stave construction, it is believed to be the oldest piece found in England and may be late 14th or very early 15th century. It was possibly dumped in the moat following an abortive siege at the castle during the Wars of the Roses. The original is now at the Royal Artillery Museum at Woolwich, but a copy has been on show at the castle for many years. The Star Gun Company has built a Bodiam Bombard replica while local newspapers report a replica was being fired at the castle for visitors during 2012. Other known 15th-century very
large-calibre guns include the wrought-iron
Pumhart von Steyr and
Dulle Griet as well as the cast-bronze
Faule Mette,
Faule Grete, and
Grose Bochse. The
Tsar Cannon is a late 16th-century show-piece. The
Dardanelles Gun, built in the
Ottoman Empire in 1464 by Munir Ali, with a weight of and a length of , was capable of firing stone balls of up to diameter.
Henry VIII reportedly had a set of 12, named after the
Twelve Apostles, which were deployed at the sieges of
Thérouanne and
Tournai during his 1513 campaign in
France. The
Tsar Cannon, built in 1586 and today located on the grounds of the
Moscow Kremlin, is the largest bombard ever built. Eventually bombards were superseded by weapons using smaller
calibre iron projectiles fired from longer barrels with more powerful
gunpowder. == Gallery ==