List of siege engines

This is a list of siege engines invented through history. A siege engine is a weapon used to destroy fortifications such as defensive walls, castles, bunkers and fortified gates.

By age, oldest to newest

Name Image Date Location Notes
Siege tower 9th Century BCE Assyria A giant mobile tower, often constructed at location.
Battering ram 9th Century BCE Assyria First siege engine recorded to be used, soon adopted by Sparta.[1]
Catapult 500 BCE India A signature siege engine, used until World War I.[2]
Ballista 400 BCE Syracuse, Sicily A very large and powerful crossbow. Could be mounted on carts. Similar weapons mounted on elephants were used by the Khmer Empire.[3]
Onager 353 BCE Rome The Onager was a Roman torsion powered siege engine. It is commonly depicted as a catapult with a bowl, bucket, or sling at the end of its throwing arm.
Trebuchet 4th Century BCE China Similar to the catapult, but uses a swinging arm to launch projectiles. It is usually considered to be stronger than the catapult.[4]
Helepolis 305 BCE Rhodes Roman siege tower first used in Rhodes.[5]
Siege hook 2nd Century BCE Rome A siege hook is a weapon used to pull stones from a wall during a siege. The method used was to penetrate the protective wall with the hook and then retract it, pulling away some of the wall with it.
Sambuca 213 BCE Sicily Roman seaborne siege engine build on two ships.
Scorpio 52 BCE Gaul Similar to the ballista, but smaller. Was sometimes mounted on a mule-drawn cart.[6]
Mangonel 6th Century CE China A type of trebuchet which used traction.
Springald 11th century Byzantium An inward shooting piece of siege equipment.[7]
Artillery First seen in 14th century, only called artillery around the 15th and 16th century [8] China After the invention of gunpowder in China, the ability to create firearms and siege artillery was open, siege technology advanced from here but, under the artillery category. There is fewer use for this kind of technology today after the invention of rockets and high grade explosives.[9]

Further reading

References

  1. "The Battering Ram - lordsandladies". Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  2. Baintighearn Aimiliona Tevnane CW. "Catapult History and Modern Day Construction - midrealm". Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  3. "Ballista - lordsandladies". Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  4. "Trebuchet - lordsandladies". Retrieved 24 May 2017.
  5. Article by James Yates, M.A., F.R.S. (6 August 2012). "Helepolis - A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, John Murray, London, 1875". Retrieved 25 May 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. Vegetius, De re militari, II, 25.
  7. Nicolle, pp. 173–174, the espringal is depicted, in the form of a fairly detailed diagram, in an 11th-century Byzantine manuscript
  8. Andrew Knighton (25 November 2015). "12 Key Moments in the History of Artillery". Retrieved 21 October 2017.
  9. Ian Vernon Hogg (28 December 2011). "Artillery". Retrieved 21 October 2017.
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