Trebuchet Page |
Welcome to The Grey Company Trebuchet page. Here you'll find a lot of pictures and a few words about these amazing pieces of "leverage artillery" - strange machines referred to variously as trebuchets, traction trebuchets, perriers, petrarias, war wolves, coulliards, bricoles or even "the witch from whose head the ropes hang like hair". Some of the page is devoted to providing background information into how trebuchets were used "in anger" in times past - while other parts of the page celebrate the joy of using them today as a wonderful sporting toy. I hope you enjoy it all... |
Counter-weight Trebuchets | Traction Trebuchets | Grey Co's Siege Engines | Simulators | Historical Reconstructions |
Tiny Siege Engines | Historical Asides | Cartoons | Links | "Odds and Ends" |
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Historical Counterweight Trebuchet Pictures |
This is a page of illustrations of trebuchets from 14th to 16th century sources. These are not modern reconstructions but drawings made when the machines were in use. Brief notes and opinions accompany each picture. |
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How Do Trebuchet's Work? |
Something to get you started ... a little simplified information to
give you an idea of how a trebuchet works and what the various parts
are for. This page will be expanded soon to provide the more advanced trebuchet fan with a little "real world" refinement to the original "Getting Started" approximations. |
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Trebuchet Triggers |
A look at a bit of a mystery - how were trebuchets triggered?. We look at some of the pictures from the Grey Co Trebuchet collection of trebuchet images - hunting for clues as to how the medieval siege engineers made machines weighing tens of tonnes loose their missiles on command. |
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Traction Trebuchet Spotting | Visit
the "Traction Trebuchet Spotters Page" - an introduction and guide to
the various parts, workings and types of historical traction
trebuchets.
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Historical Traction Trebuchet Pictures | This
is a page of illustrations of traction trebuchets - the human-powered
siege engines that appeared before the weight-powered ones. The
traction trebuchet is also known as perrier, petraria and petrobole
(all meaning "rock thrower"). As above, these pictures are not modern reconstructions but drawings made when the machines were in use. Brief notes and opinions accompany each picture.
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Grey Company's Artillery |
Welcome to "The Treb Files", the nearly-complete record of Grey Company's own little Artillery Section. This collection of pages shows photos of our experiments, successes and, yes, our many embarrassing failures. The Artillery pages cover our traction trebuchets, counter-weight trebuchets, slings plus the little models and prototypes. As other machines get finished, or at least photographed, they will join the existing rogues in the gallery. |
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Trebuchet Simulators |
Mathematical models for Virtual Hurling. There are some very good computer simulations out there that allow the would-be trebuchet builder to avoid many of the worst trial-and-error pitfalls. Here are a few links to some of the world's best virtual trebuchets. |
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Denmark's Medieval Centre |
Photographs supplied by the Danish Medieval Centre showcase their
inspiringly big and beautifully reconstructed siege engines... plus a
link to their own home page. |
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Tabletop Trebuchets | Now part of the "Grey Company's Artillery" section, this page contains photos of half-a-dozen of the little machines.. Cheesechucker, Son of Cheesechucker, Tiny, Magog base, Wonager and Tea-trolley. | |
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Cortez's Trebuchet? | Have
you heard about the attempt by Cortez's conquistadores to use a
catapult against the Aztecs? Was it a trebuchet? How much do we know
and how effective was it? Read a soldier's account written by someone who was there - Bernal Díaz - plus get a reference to read his whole story on paper. |
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Robert the Bruce's Trebuchet |
Not all trebuchets were "all conquering"... and not all sieges were of epic proportions. Read about the siege of Carlisle in 1315 - a tale of unrewarded effort. |
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Cheesechucking Crusaders |
A very brief comment in a 13th century history of a king and saint
reveals that French knights were not above amusing themselves with a
little tabletop artillery. Odd humour in a medieval military camp from
Joinville's "History of Saint Louis".
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Trebuchets in the 6th Century | Byzantine
accounts of stolen state secrets and of traction trebuchets used by
Avar and Avaro-Slavic forces at the sieges of Appiareia in the year 587
and Thessaloniki in 597.
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Artillery at the Siege of Acre (1191) | Snippets from Crusader and "Saracen" descriptions of the besieging Crusaders' artillery - and the effective counter-bombardment by the city's defenders - at the siege of Acre in 1191. | |
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Siege Engine Cartoons??? |
What you get when you combine an interest in siegecraft with an inclination towards odd visual humour |
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The Links Page |
A comprehensive and sorted links list with short reviews of most of the trebuchet and catapult activity on the web. This site is frequently up-dated - often from readers' suggestions. |
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Britannica Search |
Search the on-line Encyclopaedia Britannica reference. |
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Leonardo da Vinci's Hurling Machines | Leonardo
turned his hand to investigating, sketching, designing, inventing or
improving just about everything. Among his military studies are, as you
might expect, a number of machines for throwing things. Here are a few... |
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Slings |
This is a look at slings and staff-slings using both modern and
historic images. In it you'll see the close family resemblance between
the staff-sling and the traction trebuchet - and find out how people
have used something as simple as two strings and a pouch as a weapon of
war... Not implemented yet. |
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To return to the top of the page... | ||
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See the Home Page
of Russell, this site's author (Don't you just love armour - from scrawny wimp to no-neck thug in one easy step... shame about the weight...)
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Contact Russell (email, of course)
(Generally friendly, occasionally helpful, usually talkative...) |
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Visit
The Grey Company's web page (See the club that harbours people as odd as trebuchet builders - all in farthest, deepest, brightest, sunniest Perth, Western Australia) |
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This page was last edited April 2004 |