and
Loulon on the
Cilician Gates •
Counterweight trebuchet: The earliest written record of the
counterweight trebuchet, a vastly more powerful design than the simple traction trebuchet, appears in the work of the 12th-century historian
Niketas Choniates. Niketas describes a stone projector used by future emperor
Andronikos I Komnenos at I 1165. This was equipped with a
windlass, an apparatus required neither for the traction nor hybrid trebuchet to launch missiles. Chevedden hypothesizes that the new artillery type was introduced at the
1097 Siege of Nicaea when emperor
Alexios I Komnenos, an ally of the besieging
crusaders, was reported to have invented new pieces of heavy artillery which deviated from the conventional design and made a deep impression on everyone. •
Beacon system:In the 10th century, during the
Arab–Byzantine wars, the
Byzantine Empire used a
beacon system to transmit messages from the border with the
Abbasid Caliphate, across
Anatolia to the
imperial palace in the Byzantine capital,
Constantinople. It was devised by
Leo the Mathematician for Emperor
Theophilos, but either abolished or radically curtailed by Theophilos' son and successor,
Michael III. Beacons were later used in Greece as well, while the surviving parts of the beacon system in Anatolia seem to have been reactivated in the 12th century by Emperor
Manuel I Komnenos. •
Greek fire: The invention and military employment of
Greek fire played a crucial role in the defense of the empire against the
early onslaught of the Muslim Arabs. Brought to Constantinople by a refugee from Syria by the name of Kallinikos, the incendiary weapon came just in time to save the capital from the Muslim sieges of
674–678 and
717–718, which might have otherwise proven fatal to the Byzantine state. :Greek fire, referred to by Byzantine chroniclers as "sea fire" or "liquid fire", was primarily a naval weapon, used in ship-to-ship battle against enemy
galleys. The exact composition was a well-guarded state secret, to the point that modern scholars continue to debate its ingredients, but the main method of projection is fairly clear, indicating effectively a flame-thrower: The liquid mixture, heated in a
brazier and pressurized by means of a pump, was ejected by an operator through a
siphon in any direction against the enemy Alternatively, it could be poured down from swivel
cranes or hurled in pottery grenades. :Greek fire held a fearsome reputation among Byzantium's numerous enemies who began to field – probably differently composed – combustibles of their own. It was, however, no wonder weapon, but dependent on favourable conditions such as a calm sea and wind coming from behind. When and how the use of Greek fire was discontinued is not exactly known. According to one theory, the Byzantines lost the secret due to over-compartmentalization long before the
1204 sack of Constantinople. •
Incendiary grenade:
Grenades appeared not long after the reign of
Leo III (717–741), when Byzantine soldiers learned that Greek fire could not only be projected by flamethrowers, but also be thrown in stone and ceramic jars. Larger containers were hurled by
catapults or trebuchets at the enemy, either ignited before release or set alight by fire arrows after impact. Grenades were later adopted for use by
Muslim armies: Vessels of the characteristic spheroconical shape which many authors identify as grenade shells were found over much of the Islamic world, and a possible workshop for grenade production from the 13th century was excavated at the Syrian city of
Hama. •
Flamethrower: for ship-borne
flamethrowers, see Greek fire above. Portable hand-siphons were used in land warfare. File:Trebuchet1.png|Modern drawing of a
counterweight trebuchet being prepared for shooting File:Greekfire-madridskylitzes1.jpg|Byzantine ship employing
Greek fire in the late 11th century File:Liquid fire granades Chania.jpg|Clay
grenades that were filled with Greek fire (10th–12th centuries) File:Hand-siphon for Greek fire, medieval illumination (detail).jpg|Hand-siphon, a portable
flamethrower == Science and daily life ==