Fire-arrows!

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 9 чер 2016
  • Fire-arrows - did archers really use them in battles? We see them in the movies, so presumably not.
    Support me on Patreon: / lindybeige
    In Search of Hannibal Kickstarter page:
    www.kickstarter.com/projects/...
    This is the most-anticipated video of all for this channel, which naturally makes me a bit nervous. Will people be hideously disappointed? I mentioned two and a half years ago that I would make a video on this topic, and this video shows that I am as good as my word, and not over-hasty either.
    My thanks to the three people who pointed out quite correctly that when I said 'Francis Bacon' (1561-1626) I meant Roger Bacon (1219-1292).
    Buy the music - the music played at the end of my videos is now available here: lindybeige.bandcamp.com/track...
    Bowmen photographs by Peter Macdiarmid.
    More weapons and armour videos here: • Weapons and armour
    Lindybeige: a channel of archaeology, ancient and medieval warfare, rants, swing dance, travelogues, evolution, and whatever else occurs to me to make.
    ▼ Follow me...
    Twitter: / lindybeige I may have some drivel to contribute to the Twittersphere, plus you get notice of uploads.
    Facebook: / lindybeige (it's a 'page' and now seems to be working).
    Google+: "google.com/+lindybeige"
    website: www.LloydianAspects.co.uk
    / user "Lindybeige"

КОМЕНТАРІ • 8 тис.

  • @krisonair
    @krisonair 4 роки тому +3667

    As a frenchman I can say that the extra long, extra thick fire arrows are much better choice for English archers.

    • @italiancountryball865
      @italiancountryball865 4 роки тому +120

      oh lewd

    • @simonhanley218
      @simonhanley218 4 роки тому +28

      Je suis francais moi aussi

    • @HM-hk8he
      @HM-hk8he 4 роки тому +65

      with very bad bows made of grass. and stone arrow heads made of soft sandstone. And the british archers should be on their side of the channel, then they will win any battle with the french.

    • @JecePlays
      @JecePlays 4 роки тому +8

      For some reason as I read your comment I heard a frenchman in my head

    • @simonhanley218
      @simonhanley218 4 роки тому +5

      I dunno why, maybe the accent

  • @dagothur76839
    @dagothur76839 4 роки тому +4593

    Why didnt they enchant thier bows with flame lol

    • @allofthiswasanexperimentlo9641
      @allofthiswasanexperimentlo9641 4 роки тому +145

      Ikr such nubs

    • @dagothur76839
      @dagothur76839 4 роки тому +80

      @@allofthiswasanexperimentlo9641 so cringe

    • @allofthiswasanexperimentlo9641
      @allofthiswasanexperimentlo9641 4 роки тому +48

      @@dagothur76839 ikr, i crigedd zoo hard wen dey lit the arros insted of enchting them hahahahahahehehehahahahhohohaha

    • @dagothur76839
      @dagothur76839 4 роки тому +76

      @@allofthiswasanexperimentlo9641 like bro shoot ur arrows thro lava with a automatic dispensir lol so cring

    • @dELTA13579111315
      @dELTA13579111315 4 роки тому +37

      >not just making a rocket launcher by firing rockets from a crossbow

  • @BrazenBard
    @BrazenBard 4 роки тому +3658

    "Archers! Prepare the Napalm arrows!"
    "Sire, this is the Battle of Agincourt! Napalm won't be invented for another 527 years!"
    "Bugger. Well, use the regular Frenchman-penetrating arrows instead, then."
    "Yes, my lord!"

    • @jakefitzsimmons1213
      @jakefitzsimmons1213 4 роки тому +87

      Greek fire

    • @bloodangel19
      @bloodangel19 4 роки тому +58

      @@jakefitzsimmons1213 Ancient napalm *

    • @bloodangel19
      @bloodangel19 4 роки тому +11

      @Khaki Shorts You mean the natives that lived like cavemen for 50000 + years without any evolution 🤔?

    • @ln7929
      @ln7929 4 роки тому +40

      @@bloodangel19 yeah because ancient Americans totally weren't capable of building pyramids, mathematics,and astronomy

    • @bloodangel19
      @bloodangel19 4 роки тому +7

      @@ln7929 Yes

  • @biggiecheddar8815
    @biggiecheddar8815 4 роки тому +1938

    Bro why penetrate armor
    W H E N Y O U C A N
    P E N E T R A T E
    F R E N C H M E N

    • @bebanxd1074
      @bebanxd1074 4 роки тому +3

      would have wrote it if you wouldnt have already done so, :)

    • @IsraelCountryCube
      @IsraelCountryCube 4 роки тому +5

      @@bebanxd1074 yes because that’s
      FUCKING UNORIGINAL AND COPIYING COMMENTS! :)

    • @bebanxd1074
      @bebanxd1074 4 роки тому +3

      @@IsraelCountryCube indeed.

    • @nopnopnopnopnopnopnop
      @nopnopnopnopnopnopnop 4 роки тому +20

      And that's how Canada was born

    • @beniaminpalgan2501
      @beniaminpalgan2501 4 роки тому +17

      why penetrate frenchman when you can
      P E N E T R A T E S T E P S I S

  • @yoloswaggins2161
    @yoloswaggins2161 7 років тому +1849

    If fire arrows don't work surely their polar opposite ice arrows must be awesome!

    • @susanzimmerman6211
      @susanzimmerman6211 7 років тому +54

      Yolo Swaggins freezin doze breastplates

    • @mysteryshrimp
      @mysteryshrimp 7 років тому +170

      That's an additional D6 of frost damage.

    • @billaros1000
      @billaros1000 7 років тому +126

      Ice arrows, melt inside the victim's body to leave no trace

    • @nofanfelani6924
      @nofanfelani6924 7 років тому +114

      of course, it's for movement speed -60% effect
      pretty effective!

    • @PennyTheGoblin
      @PennyTheGoblin 7 років тому +145

      "Polar opposite, ice arrows"
      That was a cool pun.

  • @FakeSugarVillain
    @FakeSugarVillain 5 років тому +2038

    Okay, fire-arrows are a stupid idea, but what about a really strong young lad with a torch that runs to the enemy walls and throws the torch over the walls and then runs back to pick another torch?

    • @cooorsbanq4226
      @cooorsbanq4226 5 років тому +246

      they might shoot him with arrows

    • @FakeSugarVillain
      @FakeSugarVillain 5 років тому +707

      @@cooorsbanq4226 But you don't get it... This is a really strong and agile young lad

    • @benjaminmarks8765
      @benjaminmarks8765 5 років тому +483

      Is he strong and agile enough to penetrate the Frenchman?

    • @FakeSugarVillain
      @FakeSugarVillain 5 років тому +315

      @@benjaminmarks8765 He is indeed my friend, this lad is at least! Twice stronger and more agile than the most strong and agile frenchman

    • @FakeSugarVillain
      @FakeSugarVillain 5 років тому +138

      @Ma Boi Scotty My good sir! He is the youngest lad I have seen in ny entire life

  • @5eddie5
    @5eddie5 4 роки тому +729

    "Terrific range arrows, and they're so penetrating! They penetrate into the Frenchmen and do them in. And that's what we like about arrows." -someone at Agincourt 1415

    • @brandonden795
      @brandonden795 3 роки тому +14

      The best arrows, really the greatest, it's amazing really how great they are, possibly the greatest ever, I'm not sure

    • @QuckHead
      @QuckHead 3 роки тому +2

      4444 1414 Trump?

  • @williamthefloridano
    @williamthefloridano 4 роки тому +388

    *”What have the French ever done to you?”*
    “How long have you got?”
    *”A hundred years.”*

    • @xcalixus
      @xcalixus 3 роки тому

      Hmm?

    • @knightofsvea604
      @knightofsvea604 3 роки тому +5

      Yeah It was kind of the British to blame for that One. They just started to own everything, which the french King didnt like.. so yeah...

    • @DneilB007
      @DneilB007 3 роки тому +7

      One of my favourite “Mock the Week” bits was ‘The answer is 45 years, what is the question?’ ‘At what point in the 100 Years War did the generals say, “Buck up lads, nearly halfway there!” ‘

  • @endrankluvsda4loko172
    @endrankluvsda4loko172 5 років тому +855

    I much prefer water arrows. Though not as impressive, if you enemy stays outside for too long after getting hit in the hair, according to my mom, they will catch a cold. Then the siege can begin!
    Disclaimer: Might not work on the hair impaired.

    • @nugasred4484
      @nugasred4484 5 років тому +32

      Will not work on bald dudes.

    • @veyd3lveyeel520
      @veyd3lveyeel520 4 роки тому +44

      @@nugasred4484 bald dudes are op

    • @edinfific2576
      @edinfific2576 4 роки тому +21

      @WaluigiShrek Or if they start WEARING towels?

    • @blauespony1013
      @blauespony1013 4 роки тому +16

      Well, you might not have won the siege, but you killed a nice German lady who was reading this comments while eating dinner - she had to laugh so hard that she choked (might not be true though - Germans don't have any humor).

    • @diomepa2100
      @diomepa2100 4 роки тому +4

      @@veyd3lveyeel520 That's why Julius Caesar was so successful.

  • @venturoes1912
    @venturoes1912 5 років тому +2110

    1000 degree arrow vs frenchmen

  • @rakangashgari8356
    @rakangashgari8356 4 роки тому +58

    This guy speaks incredibly fluently without any editing or stoppage. Salute

  • @vexil5971
    @vexil5971 4 роки тому +169

    I think the concept of fire arrow more so fits as a “tool” rather then a weapon. Most roofs were thatched during medical times and putting fire to most buildings in the lower Bailey in a siege could cause a lot of chaos and ending up being a perfect opportunity to begin an attack or even against tents, etc.

    • @ericmcconnaughey2782
      @ericmcconnaughey2782 3 роки тому +6

      Medieval, not medical.

    • @MontChevalier
      @MontChevalier 2 роки тому +6

      ... medical times?

    • @LordAurix
      @LordAurix Рік тому +4

      Ah, yes, i love studying medical times, Dr Henry V was amazing

    • @inisipisTV
      @inisipisTV Рік тому +2

      To 3 yr post. Most of the time the defenders would already wetted all thatched roofing in case of it catching fires. A lot of battlements and casement have wooden roofs, railings and wooden shields (All rotted away from any surviving castles so people today think that bare stone castles is what it looks like before. Forgetting also most castle walls are plastered white so the enemy can't use the cracks of the stones to climb it, and it protects the wall from the weather.)

  • @rurushu8094
    @rurushu8094 6 років тому +2416

    I wanna see what kind of crazy depictions of WWII they're gonna come up with 500 years from now

    • @ArtietheArchon
      @ArtietheArchon 6 років тому +907

      "It turned out to be a poor idea to build the Sherman tank out of wood, because the German lasers would immediately ignite them."

    • @Danquebec01
      @Danquebec01 5 років тому +534

      “In the 20th century, you see, bazookas were really awesome, commanders would make sure to arm their elite troops with bazookas because bazookas make an awful lot of damage when you fire them at the enemy soldiers, right, right?”

    • @thergmtk
      @thergmtk 5 років тому +443

      "You see, the most popular bombs used in WW2 were small sized Nukes."

    • @nacht6747
      @nacht6747 5 років тому +38

      Panzerkampfwagen III Ausfhürung L Ah there you are Kommandant, I was wondering where you were during Barbarossa

    • @jameson1239
      @jameson1239 5 років тому +5

      That would be fun

  • @gloeibrood
    @gloeibrood 4 роки тому +714

    When he did the 'phhhh' on the candle, I was expecting the candle to explode. I was very surprised by the results!

    • @allofthiswasanexperimentlo9641
      @allofthiswasanexperimentlo9641 4 роки тому +41

      I was expecting the fire to phhhh him back, or tell him that blowing it without consent is offensive...

    • @bel8122
      @bel8122 4 роки тому +6

      precious

    • @casadilla111
      @casadilla111 4 роки тому +11

      Physicists hate him! Click here to find out why!

  • @BobMarley-yq3wi
    @BobMarley-yq3wi 3 роки тому +56

    I fear you’ve neglected to mention most medieval warriors fought dowsed in petroleum. Fire arrows were devastating, like a scene from zoolander.

    • @striker8961
      @striker8961 5 місяців тому +2

      Legit people don’t know how difficult it is to start fires until they’ve tried to and wait like 10 minutes with candles lit under a piece of wood for it to final spread around enough to show a flame.
      Then in films people just spontaneously combust.

    • @balrogthane
      @balrogthane 28 днів тому +1

      Don't make jokes about that. It's so tragic to lose your friends in a freak gasoline-fight accident. It could happen to anyone!

  • @sike2399
    @sike2399 4 роки тому +139

    Yeah, yeah. It's all fun and Frenchmen until they start flinging cows from the battlements.

  • @Randomstuffs261
    @Randomstuffs261 8 років тому +506

    I was at the Battle of Agincourt and we all used katanas and fire arrows mate

    • @rykehuss3435
      @rykehuss3435 8 років тому +80

      we had fire katanas at the battle of Crécy

    • @mongislort6440
      @mongislort6440 8 років тому +66

      I used fire armor

    • @GeorgePerakis
      @GeorgePerakis 8 років тому +21

      I was at the 7h Battle of the Isonzo and I can confirm that all of our guns fired flaming pommels and our sidearms were katanas and buster swords.

    • @Randomstuffs261
      @Randomstuffs261 8 років тому +14

      George Perakis the 7h was the nastiest one. All those flaming pommels were merciless.

    • @darkness4063
      @darkness4063 8 років тому +3

      Katanas? Fire arrows? What scrappy weapons! At the second Battle of Stampford Brige us vikings used drunkjards with picnic baskets! ^^
      (It should be said that one of our guys held your entire army at bay for half an hour...)

  • @EndlessVacuum
    @EndlessVacuum 8 років тому +866

    Well okay.
    What about water arrows?

    • @panjul-g9h
      @panjul-g9h 8 років тому +19

      avatar-arrows?

    • @MannyNamiro
      @MannyNamiro 8 років тому +121

      Moss arrows are more useful.

    • @omarma7815
      @omarma7815 8 років тому +90

      I prefer lightning arrows

    • @Sheol02
      @Sheol02 8 років тому +133

      Or rope arrows! Immagine, if you use them offensively against Frenchmen, you can tie the entire army!

    • @joeyverliesharen
      @joeyverliesharen 8 років тому +15

      Air arrows?
      Oh wait, all arrows went through air. O well.

  • @idrilzorc8789
    @idrilzorc8789 4 роки тому +88

    "Sir I got a great idea, lets put gunpowder to arrows!"
    Commender who's cleaning his musket: "What?!"

  • @eri9986
    @eri9986 4 роки тому +780

    *"Sir sir sir!"*
    What is it?
    "I got a new form of arrow that can not only go straight but also more Lethal"
    Oh? Then what is it? We've always admire a brilliant Craftsman!
    *_"iTs CaLlEd A bUlLeT"_*

    • @Markus-8Muireg
      @Markus-8Muireg 4 роки тому +16

      But bullets don't go straight

    • @arianas0714
      @arianas0714 4 роки тому +71

      @@Markus-8Muireg BuT bULLeTs DoN't Go StRaiGhT
      You just had to be a smartass, didn't you?

    • @Markus-8Muireg
      @Markus-8Muireg 4 роки тому +18

      @@arianas0714 :)

    • @jordray5823
      @jordray5823 4 роки тому +35

      "Now then Sir, how do we use these bullets?"
      "uhhhh...."
      "Jenkins?"
      "Well about that sir... just give it a few... decades?"

    • @saqlainalvi5485
      @saqlainalvi5485 4 роки тому +5

      @@jordray5823 how about a few centuries

  • @The_Butler_Did_It
    @The_Butler_Did_It 5 років тому +1412

    "Fire arrows..... they must have used them right? Right? RIGHT???....No!"..................."here's a reconstruction of a fire arrow"

    • @paulbenedict1289
      @paulbenedict1289 4 роки тому +153

      The Butler Did It
      He said, that they must have used them *in battles* like they always do in movies, which they didn't.

    • @myyoutube945
      @myyoutube945 4 роки тому +54

      @@paulbenedict1289
      Ok, but did Vikings use them to set floating pyres on fire?

    • @spartacus17.
      @spartacus17. 4 роки тому +21

      @@paulbenedict1289 Battle of Pressburg.

    • @paulbenedict1289
      @paulbenedict1289 4 роки тому +21

      Shane Wolfe
      Very unlikely.

    • @ariko5254
      @ariko5254 4 роки тому +10

      I thought they just set the boat on fire like with their hands when it was in front of them instead of using an arrow

  • @ezert_13
    @ezert_13 5 років тому +325

    Playing RPG with this guy as DM must be fantastic.

    • @vontheevil
      @vontheevil 4 роки тому +25

      ...but in the book says that fire arrows do +1 dmg

    • @legioncxvii
      @legioncxvii 4 роки тому +36

      @@vontheevil but by his rules it would be +1 dmg if the arrow is still lit by the time it hits lmao

    • @The482075
      @The482075 3 роки тому

      Magic items exist in fantasy RPG's.

    • @ColdHawk
      @ColdHawk 3 роки тому +4

      After an hour long dissertation about why it’s unrealistic and you can’t set the structure on fire with fire arrows:
      “Ok, ok. Scratch that. We are going to cast fireball....”

  • @javidg96
    @javidg96 4 роки тому +79

    It's written in the chronicles that in the Kingdom of Asturias, soldiers would shoot fire arrows at Viking raider boats in order to sink them. The northmen would cover the hull of their ships with fresh pelts to avoid catching on fire so easily.
    But yeah I couldn't agree more that the way they use them in Hollywood movies is pretty stupid

    • @alnoso
      @alnoso 4 роки тому +1

      yes, but that was likely at shorter ranges than in an open field battle, meaning you could have an arrow that burns really hot with a big blaze of pitch even for like 30 seconds and it'd still probably set fire to something. I can imagine 30 arrows like that getting hammered into the mast and throwing the pitch inside them all over the sails from the force of impact would be disastrous.

    • @mariosebastiani3214
      @mariosebastiani3214 4 роки тому +7

      Also, a fire blazing on ship's bridge is quite easily dealt with (you just need some buckets with ropes tied to the handles); a fire blazing on the sails, on the other hand...

  • @fotisst8886
    @fotisst8886 4 роки тому +274

    The byzantines used catapults to throw containers with greek fire to the enemy and that's the closests that it gets

    • @alibryant8588
      @alibryant8588 3 роки тому +4

      Roman scorpions could light their bolts

    • @kingstormysky3978
      @kingstormysky3978 3 роки тому +40

      ​@@alibryant8588 are you quoting Age of Empires right now?

    • @BaconMaken
      @BaconMaken 3 роки тому +17

      They also used Greek fire in their navy. Setting enemy ships ablaze.

    • @MCshadr217
      @MCshadr217 3 роки тому +17

      @@alibryant8588 Romans had arrows, scorpion and ballistae bolts, all designed with setting things on fire in mind. And it worked, seeing as they used them consistently.
      Basically, people should do some historical research, or at least a little reading, before believing they were a hoax, where only movies used them. I mean, for gods sake, half of Romes war paintings have literal fire arrows in them.

    • @alibryant8588
      @alibryant8588 3 роки тому

      @@kingstormysky3978 you are dumb

  • @Stayawhileandlistentothis
    @Stayawhileandlistentothis 5 років тому +1992

    It is my dream that one day we English will invent a bow which can let fly an arrow capable of penetrating a Frenchman from across the English Channel.

    • @MultiDEVILMAYCRY123
      @MultiDEVILMAYCRY123 5 років тому +78

      yeah it will be called the railgun crossbow.

    • @andreniki8864
      @andreniki8864 5 років тому +6

      so your dream is shooting and killing people? woah, cringe

    • @daddymememaster5432
      @daddymememaster5432 5 років тому +146

      @@andreniki8864 it's a joke dummy

    • @KarolLeP
      @KarolLeP 5 років тому +16

      V-3 cannon but the shot came from a different direction ;)

    • @gtrob1
      @gtrob1 5 років тому +46

      As an American, we already have that capability.
      If you can call an ICBM an arrow.

  • @rasputin2750
    @rasputin2750 7 років тому +354

    5:48 1000 degree arrow challenge Vs. Frenchmen

    • @naggash5348
      @naggash5348 6 років тому +9

      I'm french and i volunteer.

  • @RydalS
    @RydalS 4 роки тому +133

    I always thought fire arrows were used exclusively for shooting over city, fortress walls and lighting fields or houses on fire.

    • @CDStoner
      @CDStoner 4 роки тому +10

      That's the point of this whole video, didn't you even watch it?

    • @RydalS
      @RydalS 4 роки тому +18

      @@CDStoner yeah and I learned a lot.

    • @brianlam5847
      @brianlam5847 3 роки тому +11

      They were also used in naval warfare a lot

    • @dannydevito7584
      @dannydevito7584 2 роки тому

      @@brianlam5847 which I don’t understand for like you could just pour water on the sails or whatever and there is no point in shooting a soggy boat

    • @brianlam5847
      @brianlam5847 2 роки тому +7

      @@dannydevito7584First of all, chinese "fire arrows" are actually arrows with a gunpowder payload that activates when it hits the hull of the ship, and unlike these fire arrows, have their own oxygen supply which allows them to create a fire on deck much easier. Even a lucky hit could put a fire onto a spot where sailors couldn't actually reach and put out, and sink a ship by itself. Also, you can't just put salt water on every surface of a sail, since the junk boats of china had big sails with no good way to douse the sails effectively, since only a small part of the sails could be doused before combat, since the sails were too big and too hard to get on top of to douse them with water. It would take multiple trips with a bucket to get a quarter of it doused lightly, and even if, a gunpowder arrow could easily spark a fire in a lightly doused sail near the base where the water can't reach easily.

  • @Tyraeleon
    @Tyraeleon 4 роки тому +42

    "A little surprise for the French.. NIGHT ARROWS!"

  • @MMYLDZ
    @MMYLDZ 8 років тому +551

    They needed pommel arrows. To end them rightly of course

    • @Lobster_Lars
      @Lobster_Lars 8 років тому +10

      The "end them rightly" jokes are getting really old man.

    • @capnclawhammer3024
      @capnclawhammer3024 8 років тому +64

      Perhaps we should end the rightly jokes rightly...

    • @Lobster_Lars
      @Lobster_Lars 8 років тому +6

      Capn Clawhammer
      Oh god, shoot me now.

    • @capnclawhammer3024
      @capnclawhammer3024 8 років тому +34

      I wonder if anyone was ever ended...leftly?

    • @vroomkaboom108
      @vroomkaboom108 7 років тому +3

      +Rebypox Fuck no they aren't.
      Best thing in a bladed weapon review out there is to find a pommel joke in the comnent. Literally one of the few things in a comnent section that make me laugh

  • @Feminismisfornobody
    @Feminismisfornobody 8 років тому +379

    BRACE YOURSELVES, IT ACTUALLY HAPPENED

  • @bradymenting5120
    @bradymenting5120 3 роки тому +16

    I'm a little disappointed that he didn't open with the beginning of Robin Hood: Men in Tights.

  • @smallstudiodesign
    @smallstudiodesign 3 роки тому +6

    I love how worked up he gets. I had a professor in university like him ... it was a joy paying thousands of dollars in tuition to hear-watch his passionate dramatic performances (aka lectures).

  • @sevenproxies4255
    @sevenproxies4255 5 років тому +754

    Apparently they put smoldering pieces of coal inside those cages. And it was almost always for sieges and naval warfare.
    It doesn't matter if only 2 percent of the arrows set fire to something. Also many buildings in medieval and ancient times had straw roofing. If an arrow with a piece of smoldering coal landed on such a roof, it would likely set fire to it.

    • @ambrose788
      @ambrose788 5 років тому +97

      It's amazing how disconnected from fire we are. I heat my house with a wood burner. Coals are stubborn as hell.

    • @BlueRaven893
      @BlueRaven893 5 років тому +15

      @@ambrose788
      Why does that matter in the slightest?

    • @ambrose788
      @ambrose788 5 років тому +102

      @@BlueRaven893 well this whole video is about how ineffective fire is, but if you actually live with fire you find out it's different properties. Like how a hot coal can smolder for days (in certain circumstances) and start a fire when you put wood on it.

    • @BlueRaven893
      @BlueRaven893 5 років тому +4

      @@ambrose788
      Yes, but I don't think it's about having a connection. You can utilize it every-so-often and experience nearly all it has to offer in a adequate time frame.

    • @ambrose788
      @ambrose788 5 років тому +45

      @@BlueRaven893 there are diminishing returns. I just think this video misses because of inexperience. There's something to be said about a woodsman who can get a fire going under nearly any circumstances and I don't think there's many alive today who could rig and make sail like an expert ship of the line crew in 1800. Experience has value.

  • @ShadowKick32
    @ShadowKick32 5 років тому +186

    "Haha we're gonna set them on fire with fire arrows !"
    "sir, it rained 3 days ago."
    "darn."

  • @funkybassguy68
    @funkybassguy68 4 роки тому +18

    Watching Lindy is like a combination of the history channel and Monthy Python. Very entertaining. Keep it up!! Cheers ol chap!!!!

  • @filipdragicevic4732
    @filipdragicevic4732 4 роки тому +2

    i just love the specific and completly simplifeid pointers on this man + the sarcasm is hilarius XD

  • @BerndThomasSchuller
    @BerndThomasSchuller 8 років тому +1113

    WHAT?? No fire arrows? Next you will tell us the Katana is NOT the bestest sword ever!

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige  8 років тому +424

      Ah, yes about that...

    • @janf9809
      @janf9809 8 років тому +150

      But my grandpas uncle had a barber, whos grandfathers friend fought in WW2 against japan and said all Katanas cut though hardened diamonds like butter!!!!

    • @RedVodka69
      @RedVodka69 8 років тому +52

      It'll be nice to not just dismiss the katana has being overhyped/mediocre. Did the katana make sense given how the Japanese fought? Why did the Japanese fight the way they did (limited resources, geography, etc.)?Every weapon you talk about is always going to be obsolete or inferior in a different context. It's stupid to talk about weapons being the best or worst. It's more interesting to talk about the context.I think it's sad that you basically have two groups of people praising and dismissing the katana about being the "best", and neither really just talk about what it actually was.

    • @Askorti
      @Askorti 8 років тому +10

      Or that the Spandau was not the best MG in WWII! :P

    • @MrHws5mp
      @MrHws5mp 8 років тому +10

      That's a really good point actually: technically superior weapons can almost always be defeated by some combination of skill/circumstances and/or user error. Most people will tell you that the Spitfire was a brilliant fighter aircraft, and it was, under favourable circumstances. Ask a squadron of Spitfires to escort your bombers to Berlin and back however, and you're going to have a lonely and very dangerous flight. That's what Mustangs are for....

  • @jonathaneddy
    @jonathaneddy 8 років тому +284

    "I want arrows that go a long way and penetrate Frenchmen"
    what, arrows that work like German soldiers?

    • @MrPulversson
      @MrPulversson 8 років тому +55

      You dont get the point, the ultimate arrow *_IS_* a german soldier

    • @jonathaneddy
      @jonathaneddy 8 років тому +9

      Given your name, I'm surprised at that comment. lol.

    • @husk2491
      @husk2491 8 років тому +19

      +Stalins moustache We need bows that fire Germans then now. I'd pay to see that.

    • @MrPulversson
      @MrPulversson 8 років тому +14

      Jonathan E It's about killing two birds with one stone.

    • @beaconrider
      @beaconrider 8 років тому +1

      Back in the day these weapons were used there was no Germany, so wouldn't it make it somewhat difficult to find many Germans?

  • @JJPSB23
    @JJPSB23 4 роки тому +1

    It's 2020 and you've just shattered my dreams. Subscribed.

  • @v-fr7558
    @v-fr7558 4 роки тому +2

    I love getting baked and watching Lindybeige videos

  • @NotTheCIA1961
    @NotTheCIA1961 7 років тому +675

    I definitely don't get the point of fire arrows against humans (the human body is surprisingly resistant to fire), but in any sort of siege I see them being practical. I also vaguely remember reading up on something where fire arrows (or maybe it was fire ballistae) were shot into castles, villages, etc in sieges. It'd definitely easily light up thatch roofing, which would act as good kindling for spreading the fire even more.

    • @Rammstein0963
      @Rammstein0963 7 років тому +58

      THAT is the idea, look at the episode "profit and loss" of Vikings where the boats are hit with jars of pitch then shot with flammable arrows...with predictable result.

    • @durdasim
      @durdasim 7 років тому +75

      They do work as a good way to demoralize the enemy forces: When you're already shitting bricks because you have a cloud of arrows flying towards you, them being on fire adds a nice fear factor.

    • @revanruler6404
      @revanruler6404 7 років тому +21

      yes but at this distance they can just throw a torch so...

    • @demilung
      @demilung 7 років тому +76

      It's almost like he talked about that at the end of the video.

    • @Zamolxes77
      @Zamolxes77 7 років тому +51

      Instead of an fire arrow, is much more effective in lobbing a projectile, like a pot filled with thick oil, or tar. The speed of the projectile is lower, so chances of the fire getting put out by the woosh are significantly lower and on the other end, the projectile shatters, spilling its contents and catching fire - much more harder to contain.
      So yes, historically, most fire projectiles were things lobbed over, not arrows.

  • @rollindutchy7916
    @rollindutchy7916 8 років тому +256

    Hey Lindy, could you do a video on battering rams/ways to penetrate defenses?

    • @Sharnoy1
      @Sharnoy1 8 років тому +114

      More penetration, eh?

    • @valhar2000
      @valhar2000 8 років тому +97

      No-one does penetrating analyses like Lindy.

    • @evilmorpheus
      @evilmorpheus 8 років тому +1

      lmao, that bait. I'm impressed you managed to change the subject with such ease, though.

    • @Mynameismegalex
      @Mynameismegalex 8 років тому

      Regardless of what I think about the refugees/(whatever you want to call them) this comment was absolutely hilarious, my good sir.

    • @ScienceDiscoverer
      @ScienceDiscoverer 8 років тому +5

      Also, boobs analyses!

  • @NithinJune
    @NithinJune 3 роки тому +7

    you got to do the bollywood movie strategy: use trebuchets to throw tarps on your enemies then use fire arrows to burn them to death

  • @TheOrigamiGuru
    @TheOrigamiGuru 4 роки тому +1

    Very sad that I've only now found your videos! Very informative!

  • @Joseph_yy
    @Joseph_yy 5 років тому +347

    I thought the main reason to shoot fire arrows is to light the enemy’s fortress or house on fire instead of enemies themselves?

    • @SanarySeggnete
      @SanarySeggnete 5 років тому +36

      yep , and you need to get very close to the target to do that , the fire arrow in history could be listed as siege and anti siege ammunition instead of anti personal ammunition. How close ? just somewhere right under the castle wall where enemy could turn you into a human porcupine even with all the shield unit to protect you ... ofcourse you can try to set the siege ram on fire in the case of anti siege ... if the enemy forgot to cover their battering ram with fresh skinned hides
      And ofcourse , none fired them when trying to seige a castle at night like tons of hollywood films did
      The fire arrow were an important tactic used in a siege. As important as the need of water buckets , firefighter team and inflammable materials to counter it (ofcourse , they were used to counter lots of other weapon , not only fire arrow)

    • @Joseph_yy
      @Joseph_yy 5 років тому +12

      Olga Kost yeah I always see the fire arrows as a longer range torch, more like a tool than a weapon imo

    • @SergeyPRKL
      @SergeyPRKL 5 років тому +21

      Romans used to throw with catapults clay balls filled with oil and "greek fire" and they did not lit it by the catapult because they broke many times, and mostly snuffed out in the start. They threw them into the enemy and then after that (or just seconds before) they shot the fire arrows that ignited the oils planted there by catapults. Was quite terrifying in a forest when it hit high up in trees and sprayed on a large area. As seen in gladiator. Except they lit them at the catapult in the movies. and that is just wrong.

    • @diskeyes
      @diskeyes 5 років тому +2

      Yen the smiling dinosaur but even then the things he listed like the fire being blown out and the logistics of it cancel it out as being even a somewhat useful tool

    • @sheepieworks4974
      @sheepieworks4974 5 років тому +7

      @@diskeyes i've seen people saying they put burning lumps of coal in the arrow head. that would make sense. it doesn't have an actual flame because most coals smolder. look at a bbq for example. and flying through the air won't "put it out" because there is no flame. it just has a lot of heat.

  • @bigbengamer
    @bigbengamer 5 років тому +385

    “Sometimes cotton, tow, or the like substance, previously mixed with pitch, rosin, oil, or naphtha, was wrapped on the end of an Arrow, in the form of a ball”.“Which ball, when in use, was fired, and the Arrow directed towards the wooden towers and engines of the enemy; where sticking firmly, communicated a flame to every part near it. This was used with great success in naval expeditions”
    -Walter Moseley, _An essay on Archery_ ,1792

    • @JC-om7nr
      @JC-om7nr 4 роки тому +15

      Nice 👍

    • @TurtlosaurNO
      @TurtlosaurNO 4 роки тому +17

      Excactly what I thought too!!

    • @waylonk2453
      @waylonk2453 4 роки тому +8

      Thanks for bringing this up

    • @charlescalthrop2535
      @charlescalthrop2535 3 роки тому +34

      Okay, this from memory and I can’t exactly remember the source so bear with me. I once saw an illustration of a fire arrow design, it was supposedly also effective against infantry, but particularly at setting fire to buildings and ships. So it had no metal head, instead there was a small ceramic jar at the head, about 2-3 inches in diameter. This would then be half filled or full filled with oil. At the front of the jar there was a little compartment with a lid (separate from the main jar) where a small bit of oil would be lit. The lid would be put on and then the arrow would be fired. So it worked something like a molotov cocktail. It had less range than a normal arrow but apparently it was highly effective at attack large bodies of infantry as the jar would create a small explosion at whatever it hit. It would also have been highly effective at killing morale, I would think. Say you were an infantry man standing in line with your fellow soldiers, when the guy next to you is hit by an arrow and suddenly bursts into flames. Then you see a barrage of these arrows bearing down on your position. Then small fiery explosions erupt across the field before you, on the men behind you.
      So don’t ask me for a source, I just remember seeing it somewhere, an illustration with a description. Apparently it was used sparingly in conflicts (in Ancient China I think).

    • @MCshadr217
      @MCshadr217 3 роки тому +18

      Exactly. What Lindy is failing to understand, is that there is such a thing as shifting your aim for the added weight. Any competent archer can shoot 2 different arrows in weight, close to each other. It's a simple process of, oh I dunno, aiming slightly more up? Whilst he's right, it wasn't used to kill, like the movies portray, there have been recorded instances of them being used to not only set alight siege equipment and other fortifications and buildings, but to lower the morale of the infantry. I'd be more scared, seeing a volley of fire come flying down at you, than regular arrows.

  • @mouserat2545
    @mouserat2545 4 роки тому +5

    I never thought I'd hear someone describing the use of fire arrows as "rather nice of you" lmao

  • @_Mad_Max__
    @_Mad_Max__ 4 роки тому +2

    You are speaking so perfectly clear english, that my undertitle translate everything in perfect german

  • @funny-video-YouTube-channel
    @funny-video-YouTube-channel 8 років тому +32

    Maybe not in battles, but in sieges, the fire arrow were used a lot. Mongols were constantly using fire arrows, to burn cities, because they did not care about owning them. The conquest wars usually do no use fire, if you want to take a city and have it more or less in good shape, but the motivation of the Mongols was different, they were OK to own territory without owning a city.

    • @st8sis
      @st8sis 8 років тому +16

      He apparently confused their specific uses as some challenge to arrows generally, like they were in competition. His whole improvisational bit about the inventor of the fire arrow easily demonstrates this flawed fanboy rewrite of history. Because it doesn't seem to *him* that the flaming arrow is "better" than a regular arrow, he skipped the part where he bothered to look it up on Wikipedia and realize that they were of great use. In fact, specifically in the way he keeps snarking about. They were like laser beams. In times when simply throwing fire around was terrifyingly hellish already. The psychological effect is half the utility....alongside the more obvious part where everyone's houses were firetraps.
      This video amounts to a person in the year 3000 announcing that handheld weaponry was never used in the 21st century because bombs obviously kill better. It's just a very narrow definition of logic, applied to events that actually happened as if they're a single scene from a movie.
      But hey, random youtube commenter: keep representin' reality on random chunks of internet with me. It's kinda fun-furiating :-D

    • @livedandletdie
      @livedandletdie 8 років тому +4

      A. You're wrong, 2, he already mentioned their uses, Γ, who cares about bombs, 四, regular arrows are very efficient and scary enough. Especially when there are 2000 of them in the air at any point in time.

    • @Firestormlover
      @Firestormlover 8 років тому

      You are absolutely right and I was about to make the same comment, but then I remembered what this video was from, which was that horrendous movie about Troy, and how they used fire arrows mid-battle. The problem is that he only glancingly mentions the movie, in fact if you had not seen the first video than you wouldn't have much of an idea what he was talking about.. It isn't until 9:48 that he finally does mention sieges, when he says they would be very effective.

    • @aigryz
      @aigryz 8 років тому +2

      that's exactly what he said in the video

    • @GutsLikesItInTheAss
      @GutsLikesItInTheAss 7 років тому +2

      i doubt this guy even knows or at least wants to admit the Mongols dominated mid Medieval age. even in his Horse archery is useless video, he doesnt mention how the Mongols totally didnt conquer half the world with such a useless technique such as mounted archery.

  • @fifervonpiper6707
    @fifervonpiper6707 5 років тому +282

    Ha, just stick a fire.jpeg image on the tip of an arrow.

    • @ImPoPzzZ
      @ImPoPzzZ 4 роки тому +8

      Lol you thought this was a fire arrow

    • @ImPoPzzZ
      @ImPoPzzZ 4 роки тому +7

      But it was me

    • @ImPoPzzZ
      @ImPoPzzZ 4 роки тому +8

      Dio

    • @EricSon_akuma
      @EricSon_akuma 4 роки тому +5

      I'll beat your static fire.jpg arrow with an actively burning fire.gif arrow!

    • @Kjajo
      @Kjajo 4 роки тому +6

      @@EricSon_akuma You fool! I posted a flame gif on Pornhub then put it onto the arrow, which improves its penetration

  • @theprancingprussian
    @theprancingprussian 2 дні тому +1

    Tod made some of the high - late medieval fire arrows with the oxidisers, one thing that stood out was the smoke, nasty and can force people from the walls or from a chunk of a ship, choking and blinding sometimes laced eith arsenic and other nasty stuff like potentialy lime
    Also in a town the straw or fodder is going to be very flammable, can get started fast and spread, even if it doesn't spread it burns supplies in which defenders are in short supply of, in genral it causes loads of little problems even once the big ones are taken care of

  • @JollyMyMan
    @JollyMyMan 4 роки тому +8

    Why do we like arrows?
    Because they
    P E N E T R A T E T H E F R E N C H M A N

  • @bubble8829
    @bubble8829 5 років тому +280

    Just came across this while doing some research.
    From the report on the siege of Rhodes, 1480, by the Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller of St John at the time, Pierre D’Aubusson, translated in John Taaffe, The History of the Holy, Military, Sovereign Order of St. John of Jerusalem, Vol 3, Hope and Co, London, 1852, pp. 59-60:
    "The enemy made use too of another sort of horror - globes of fire, and fiery arrows thrown from the cross-bow or sent off whirling from catapultas, that the houses may be set on fire. We on the other hand, whose duty it was to save the city, chose consulters from persons of the art [experienced in the art of fighting fires], to remain most attentive; and they, as soon as ever the incendiary matter fell, applied themselves with the fleetest caution to extinguish the flames. By such remedies we were able to preserve the Rhodians from many mishaps."

    • @TheGloriousLobsterEmperor
      @TheGloriousLobsterEmperor 5 років тому +17

      So, they didn't even do their job well?

    • @mchomelessful
      @mchomelessful 5 років тому +74

      The way he describes the fire department kills me

    • @fish4225
      @fish4225 5 років тому +62

      @@TheGloriousLobsterEmperor It seems in this particular attack they weren't successful because the city had good firefighters, now imagine that wasn't the case.

    • @Arqane
      @Arqane 4 роки тому +30

      Yeah, even today, what portion of the population do you think actually understand the difference between putting out a wood fire and a grease fire? They might get lucky and use the right fire extinguisher. But if they don't have a fire extinguisher, you'd be amazed how many people would end up just letting (or making) the fire get out of hand. Even with all the access we have, that's still an issue. Imagine back then when almost no one had that access, apart from word of mouth if something happened nearby.

    • @MCshadr217
      @MCshadr217 4 роки тому +53

      Yes, this is what frustrates me. So many people are quick to say "Oh but physics and science and such!" for their reasoning as to why it won't work. But they did. Except that they were never used to kill, only to lower morale and set fire to buildings and anything made of wood. That's why you really only hear about them during sieges. They did use them, just not for firing at the infantry.

  • @sbeckett91
    @sbeckett91 8 років тому +242

    Would studded leather armour be sufficient to stop fire arrows?

    • @KohuGaly
      @KohuGaly 8 років тому +39

      a common wool jacket would probably be enough...

    • @KohuGaly
      @KohuGaly 8 років тому +37

      Tristen Snyder I did, but my response is not that funny, now that I read it second time :-/

    • @Bitemis
      @Bitemis 8 років тому +37

      The wool jacket isn't enough. The key to the defense is a beige shirt with the corners of the collar rounded off.

    • @beaconrider
      @beaconrider 8 років тому +7

      Only if it's beige.

    • @PsylomeAlpha
      @PsylomeAlpha 8 років тому +3

      @bitemis
      I assume lindy used an angle grinder to round the corners of his collar.

  • @Evilanious
    @Evilanious 4 роки тому +12

    8:03 that would be Roger Bacon, not Francis Bacon who lived 400 years later.

  • @TESkyrimizer
    @TESkyrimizer 4 роки тому +1

    I still remember the day this video came out like it was yesterday. Cant believe it was releaser in 2016 a whole 3 years ago

  • @getfreur2458
    @getfreur2458 8 років тому +270

    Lyndybeige make a video about naval warfare in medieval era.

    • @TheExiledTexan
      @TheExiledTexan 8 років тому +69

      THIS. Pre-gunpowder/cannon days.

    • @mrspidey80
      @mrspidey80 8 років тому +8

      But that's just regular melee on ship decks...

    • @ryanmcallen8713
      @ryanmcallen8713 8 років тому +3

      The basics are pretty simple. You'd fire projectiles such as arrows, javelins or stones, and maybe have a ballista if you were lucky. Alternatively you would try and hook the ship, pull them close and engage physically or ram them. Obviously there is more to it than that on a strategic level, but that's the gist.

    • @getfreur2458
      @getfreur2458 8 років тому

      Ryan McAllen like the fire arrows in the movies?

    • @Dregoro
      @Dregoro 8 років тому +2

      Yes that would be great! Pirates of baltic and mediterenian sea! Pre-gunpowder era!

  • @khaorix2667
    @khaorix2667 8 років тому +194

    I'm a Frenchman and I was triggered by that ending pannel. #GetLloydreplacedbyatransgenderblackwoman.

    • @Lobster_Lars
      @Lobster_Lars 8 років тому

      lol

    • @capnclawhammer3024
      @capnclawhammer3024 8 років тому +9

      I'm triggered by all these people triggering each other with their triggering...

    • @Altrantis
      @Altrantis 8 років тому +1

      Don't worry. Whike the english certainly shot the french a lot with arrows in the 100 years war, the french responded by shooting the english to pieces with cannons at Castillon. Which I'd argue is significativelly more unpleastant.

    • @capnclawhammer3024
      @capnclawhammer3024 8 років тому +5

      Were they loaded with katanas or pommels?

    • @Altrantis
      @Altrantis 8 років тому +10

      Capn Clawhammer
      It is highly unlikelly they were loaded with katanas, but I can't prove it wasn't pommels.

  • @davidsabillon5182
    @davidsabillon5182 3 роки тому +4

    I feel like I was just told there is no Santa Claus 😳

  • @esk5646
    @esk5646 3 роки тому +1

    Scientists: Air resistance
    Lindybeige: [blowing sounds]

  • @TheSchuetzeP
    @TheSchuetzeP 8 років тому +78

    ...You always shoot the frenchmen...
    Which brings me to the question: Could you shoot a baguette using a bow? How would it fly?

    • @michaelsark1570
      @michaelsark1570 8 років тому +1

      If you attached it to an arrowhead, sure. The weight would be a problem though and it isn't aerodynamic either

    • @paununs8719
      @paununs8719 8 років тому +29

      You can't, but you can make huge baguettes and use them as lances.

    • @Dynahazzar3
      @Dynahazzar3 8 років тому +3

      Baguettes are also very useful against watermelons barrage and can be suitable throwing weapons.

    • @Garith000
      @Garith000 8 років тому +1

      should rather shoot it from a bren gun, its better you know

    • @ianfindlay865
      @ianfindlay865 8 років тому +1

      It's more efficient to shoot a baguette with a Colt .45 or a Luger or any side arm for that matter. Quicker and cleaner and you still eat the baguette.

  • @antagonizerr
    @antagonizerr 8 років тому +206

    A few points;
    1 fire arrows weren't for 'killing frenchmen'. They were for setting terrain, such as grass, on fire causing confusion with your enemy and hopefully setting war machines ablaze. Imagine trying to fight in a flaming field...
    2 Most buildings were thatched with reeds...dry flammable reeds. Do the math.
    3 Arrows were not heat treated anyway. Far too expensive for something you throw away and were generally mild steel as they were pointed (bodkin), but rarely sharpened, except for hunting which is entirely different.
    4 The fire was made with pitch and gum soaked canvas that acted more like napalm than fire so that when it hit, it threw flaming stickyness at whatever it hit.
    5 (optional) Ship sails, being made of sun bleached dry linen or canvas burn quite well. Again, do the math.

    • @Deadly0Night
      @Deadly0Night 8 років тому +27

      1 Yes that sounds very difficult to do for either side.
      2 yes... 2% ignition rate when shot into dry flammable things...
      Warning, sarcasm alert, sarcasm incoming
      3 ... yeah it's not like there were large groups of people re-collecting them or anything and it is just so expensive to heat something up and then cool it down again.
      4 because stuff like that doesn't go out when shot at high speeds.
      5 sails that arrows would 100% not go through.

    • @Arikayx13
      @Arikayx13 8 років тому +5

      Math /= real world.
      To take one of your points, Thatch, which was often laid very thick, not what you see in movies, this thickness reduces the amount of oxygen available and penetration depth so it would be like shooting fire arrows at solid wood.
      Maybe take less physics lessons from DnD.
      Watch more Lindybeige!

    • @antagonizerr
      @antagonizerr 8 років тому +39

      Ari Lunarium
      No it isn't and it's obvious you've never seen it up close. Thatching burns, hence why when Museums of Canada restored the 'huts' in Upper Canada Village, there was a debate about replacing them with modern building materials, or spraying with fire retardant on a schedule. They replaced them BTW, in 2002. Big news in the Seaway Valley which is what they call the St. Lawrence area where I live.
      It's funny, but even as Deadly0Night (another armchair historian) figures that setting fire to grass is a 2% ignition rate, (a number pulled from deep within his arse), farmers all over the continent are clearing scrub with nothing but a book of matches. Imagine that.
      As for the pitch/gum going out...mix some and light it, then throw water on it. Better still, take the leaf blower to it at full tilt. After your yard burns away you can tell me how long it took to go out.
      Or research greek fire, which is what they were trying to recreate, but instead were making a rudimentary form of napalm which doesn't suffer the same failings as a lit hanky.

    • @Arikayx13
      @Arikayx13 8 років тому +2

      antagonizerr So they shot flaming arrows at the huts? Of course thatch burns, but not as easily as you might think.
      So pitch/gum can easily be applied to the end of an arrow without causing weight or flight problems?
      I have cleared scrub with a flame thrower, grass often burns at a low temperature, not enough to light most trees. Hotter burning brush is what is worried about, and I doubt they would just leave it laying against their buildings. It's not just it burns or it doesn't, composition matters a lot.
      How many LindyBeige videos have you watched? It seems like you don't know that he travels, visits historical sites and participates in reenactments.

    • @antagonizerr
      @antagonizerr 8 років тому +17

      Ari Lunarium
      I think you severely underestimate the potential of a scrub fire. I also think you underestimate the flammability of a sun baked and dry thatched roof. It's just bundled reeds that are years, if not decades old. Damn right it burns, and burns well.
      I like LindyBeige, and have seen all his vids, but I don't consider him to be the consummate pro on all things iron age. This just happens to be one of those things he got wrong.
      You seem to be concerned about weight but how much does a bit of tar and canvas weigh? You don't need a massive arrow for the job either as I highly doubt these arrows were held fast for more than a minute before being fired. I doubt anyone was worried about the shaft burning up as fueled fires don't burn that way. You must have played with lighter fluid in your life, right? You know you can hold it a long time without being burned?
      I'm not going to claim pro status here, too many people try and do that, but if you want my resume, look me up. Tho I don't make vids I do post to instructables under the same name. I'm what I like to call a lithic artist. If you're curious where I learned it, just ask, but I don't want to be 'that guy' that claims crap without proof.

  • @rafale1981
    @rafale1981 3 роки тому

    Lindybeige really channeling graham chapman here. Love it!

  • @lindafarnes486
    @lindafarnes486 2 місяці тому +1

    We have surviving fire arrows. The biggest collection was amongst the weaponry on the Mary Rose when it sunk. There are recipes for the flaming arrow mixtures from different periods going way back . But there is a very interesting demo of what happens when a proper flaming arrow is fired into a chunk of pork, on another youtube channel. Lots of sizzle. I didn't stick around to see if you got to the dense smoke that drove people out into the open.

  • @mattdobz
    @mattdobz 6 років тому +200

    fire arrows at night = thanks for revealing their location and trajectory

    • @Sanroxem
      @Sanroxem 6 років тому +3

      ... Why does it matter? You're going to catch them?

    • @renookami4651
      @renookami4651 5 років тому +3

      That's actually a good idea. Free ammunitions to shoot back, even if crappy ones.

    • @cinquine1
      @cinquine1 5 років тому +11

      @@Sanroxem If both sides have archers (a reasonable assumption in a pitched battle) then it matters quite a bit. Of course it's a silly situation to begin with, standing armies would never engage in pitched battles at night.

    • @Aapaatsanski
      @Aapaatsanski 5 років тому

      Like tracers from assault rifles. At first fire arrows make sense, then you think about it long enough and it not practical. If you think even deeper though fire arrows could have their benefits.

    • @tinyspacepeople9384
      @tinyspacepeople9384 5 років тому +1

      if you're talking a medieval battle, it's not gonna matter a whole lot if their position is revealed, unless they're planning an ambush

  • @VoyagerLife826
    @VoyagerLife826 8 років тому +237

    fire pommels

    • @schmojo33
      @schmojo33 8 років тому +99

      To burn him rightly.

    • @VoyagerLife826
      @VoyagerLife826 8 років тому +44

      and end him justly

    • @zerozeroone4424
      @zerozeroone4424 8 років тому +15

      do thou even pommel bretheren ?

    • @T0rrente18
      @T0rrente18 8 років тому +17

      belt fed, spandau's fire pommels

    • @FarremShamist
      @FarremShamist 8 років тому +5

      Made of GLORIOUS NIPPON STEEL!

  • @castellanofangmartaurion7295
    @castellanofangmartaurion7295 5 днів тому +1

    For those of you coming to this video after Tod's Fire Arrow video, keep in mind that this was filmed 8 years ago when most people thought fire arrows were dumb and or very niche, and the fire arrows that Tod made didn't behave like the ones we see in media.

  • @jonslg240
    @jonslg240 4 роки тому

    This video is way different than I was expecting ..and twice as good =p

  • @thomasjenkins5727
    @thomasjenkins5727 8 років тому +299

    Flaming katana spandau ammo.

    • @yourleftnostril835
      @yourleftnostril835 8 років тому +9

      Oh my.. MAY THE GODS HELP US AGAINST THIS UNSTOPPABLE MAN!

    • @PaltryPete
      @PaltryPete 8 років тому +2

      Someone has to make an illustration of this

    • @kyleflanagan963
      @kyleflanagan963 8 років тому +11

      Only if you use the reverse grip.

    • @armvex
      @armvex 8 років тому +1

      god we .........

    • @Valsorayu
      @Valsorayu 8 років тому +11

      Here: plus.google.com/u/0/photos/+ValsorayGaming/albums/6294535605251810641/6294535604397921554?pid=6294535604397921554&oid=104098625645551528978

  • @theoriginaldylangreene
    @theoriginaldylangreene 7 років тому +84

    I think this is also a bit of the "Total War" effect. Shooting fire arrows in open battle in those games had very little penalty, but would often set fire to the enemy AI in a glorious fireball. Strangely you could never really use fire arrows during sieges to set fire to buildings. It could have been an interesting game mechanic to force the defender to use units to extinguish burning buildings, or risk the settlement burning to the ground. Their only use was to the defender in setting fire to the battering rams and siege towers.
    Anyone know of a mod for any of the Total War games that re-balances arrows? Maybe ups the firing rate for normal arrows, or gives a huge penalty to fire arrows?

    • @Gr8humanilation9TV
      @Gr8humanilation9TV 7 років тому +16

      Well they are far more inaccurate than normal arrows and takes longer to reload. So no, they actually have pretty big penalty. The upside was that they give moral loss to the enemy and as far i can tell does more damage. So i mostly use fire arrows to heavily armored enemies. Light units: normal arrows ftw.

    • @theoriginaldylangreene
      @theoriginaldylangreene 7 років тому

      Gr8humanilation9TV The inaccuracy thing worked both ways though, as it took 2 or more arrow hits to put down even mildly armoured units, but one shot with a bow seemed to make everyone burst into flames. I didn't really notice a reload penalty, it's a few seconds if at all.

    • @Gr8humanilation9TV
      @Gr8humanilation9TV 7 років тому +1

      The accuracy of the unit makes a huge difference for sure. Also what total war we are talking about. Like in Rome you might want to use fire arrows but like in shogun 2 normal arrows kills in 1-2 shots so using flaming arrows is not as useful.(talking about light infantry). The most important thing about fire arrows for me is the moral penalty AND that is they point of them. The strategy part of them. Risk and reward. Do less damage (in general) but lessen moral. Its great. Btw favorite Total War?

    • @theoriginaldylangreene
      @theoriginaldylangreene 7 років тому +1

      Gr8humanilation9TV It's mainly Rome and Medieval 2 that I've noticed it in. As for favourite, I think it has to be original Rome. On steam alone I have about 400 hours in it and I bought it on disk when it first came out. I can't get on with the newer ones, I don't know what they did to them, but I hate my cavalry being stopped by skirmishers like their brick walls, or units glitching 500 feet through terrain to perform one of their finishing moves.
      What about you? I've never gotten into the Shogun's, they seemed far more complicated than "build army- smash!" with the whoring of the daughters and the political backstabbing.

    • @Gr8humanilation9TV
      @Gr8humanilation9TV 7 років тому +1

      Original Rome and Medieval 2 here too but i prefer rome because the time period. Far more interesting for me. I had it on disk too. Just because the fucking awesome hand to hand combat. Its perfect. The moment when you flank enemy infantry and just charge to them. The hit of the charge is just awesome or just charging head to head with infantry and no fucking kill moves... Its killing the hand to hand combat and killing the series. Like you said "hitting a brick wall". Yup that's how it is in the new ones. There is simply no unit collision. It's so ugly and i know... its on shogun 2 but the polish on that game is the best of all of them. Played all of the total wars expect the newest one.

  • @nicolag5254
    @nicolag5254 4 роки тому

    Funnier than a comedy night and more informative than the history channel....well that’s quite a nice work!

  • @nizamdamanhuri933
    @nizamdamanhuri933 Місяць тому +2

    Just saw the Tods Workshop video that debunks this debunking video - youtube has gobe full circle and it just took about half a decade

  • @Slayerlord0
    @Slayerlord0 6 років тому +163

    "There must be a better way of doing the credits."
    "Every time they make a Robin Hood movie, they burn our village down!"
    "Leave us alone, Mel Brooks!"

  • @willgilbert3018
    @willgilbert3018 8 років тому +44

    Just a thing about the start of the video with the large line of archers in Kingdom of heaven, I could think of an ancient tech that communicates faster than any known method to date, light, have two becaons at each end of the firing line, one man lights the flame on one end, the other sees this, lights his and the whole line can see that now is the time to light it. It even seems that way somewhat as the two ends of the line appear much sooner than the majority, this might not have been what happened but its just a thought.

    • @willgilbert3018
      @willgilbert3018 8 років тому +2

      Love the jumper btw

    • @Dadecorban
      @Dadecorban 8 років тому +4

      Not so fast. There a lot of ways this can go wrong or not go at all. First of all, signaling to loose fire arrows with....fire could be problematic. The means to light both is...in fact fire. So you can imagine how a bunch of dudes are looking around at night for someone to light a fire to signal them....all it takes is someone kicking over a fire source, or a bellow lighting up a fire source more than usual and it looks like a signal. At night its going to be difficult to know exactly where the ends of the line are. Somebody fucks up 1/4 of the way from the end of the lines and its just as good as the end of the line to someone waiting for a fire to be lit in the dark.
      That is without talking about how chaotic, and nerve racked a bunch of peasant archers will be during a night attack. That's without talking about how much training and drilling has gone into night fire arrow signaling. That's without talking about how rare night battles have been because of all these reasons. That's without talking about how rare good training was for Medieval soldiers, let alone for night fighting (non-existent).
      Not to mention, most Medieval armies were utter shit at signaling in general. As far as I understand, pretty much no European military during the middle ages was able to develop and maintain the art of signaling to anything resembling what the Romans were doing hundreds of years before them.
      Hypothetically though...it's not inconceivable to do what you are talking about. You could drill it into soldiers, practice light discipline at night, and then pray for no errant horseman or bumbling archer to knock over a fire source prior to the first volley. But there would have to be a pretty good reason to want to make your fire arrow volley happen instantaneously rather than take 20 seconds for everyone to get on the same page. I'm sure if i sit here long enough I can think of a hypothetical reason for this...maybe.
      (I'm not saying English archers weren't well trained archers, because they were pretty good at putting arrows in the air, especially when you had veteran mercenary companies selling themselves across Europe during the Hundred Years War, but in general, archers were peasants with little prior training or experience. Peace time English longbow training was also ambiguous with varied enforcement when it was legally required. There's target practice and then there is application of archery on a battlefield.)

    • @Alex-lf1cl
      @Alex-lf1cl 8 років тому

      your telling me that waiting around and looking for a signal fire is better than having a signal transmit to your phone/watch that tells it to vibrate? As soon as you feel the vibration, you fire. That seems way faster than looking for a signal fire that is adequate at best and extremely misleading at worst? I don't think so

    • @tananari47
      @tananari47 7 років тому +2

      Militaries used drums to send loud rhythmic signals for miles at the speed of sound. Which actually works *faster* than radio communication for such short ranges. Not because the radio's slower, of course, but because humans are very good at quickly recognizing rhythmic drumbeats, so we respond faster instinctively, and it improves with training.

    • @GamePhysics
      @GamePhysics 7 років тому

      Good point. But they still wouldn't have zippo's or matches to light their arrows.

  • @BrianStylesx
    @BrianStylesx 2 роки тому +1

    Sick turn

  • @joshuajackson7091
    @joshuajackson7091 3 роки тому +3

    I have a design, an arrow with several holes thru it in a manner that allows you to braid (plat) oil soaked string. Then you plays a torch in front of it and and shoot the arrow thru the flame... lower the torch so you don't hit it, that would make it explode.

    • @Redsky973
      @Redsky973 2 роки тому

      That arrow would just snap at launch

  • @zanderrose
    @zanderrose 8 років тому +121

    In the siege of Jerusalem in 1099 the defenders used flaming arrows to destroy one of the siege towers

    • @lindybeige
      @lindybeige  8 років тому +137

      Yes, and siege towers normally had defences against fire on them and in them. Fire arrows were used in sieges.

    • @RedVodka69
      @RedVodka69 8 років тому +12

      How were siege defenders able to overcome the problems you mentioned in the video? Did they probably use method #1 (big end, low penetration/range/etc.)?

    • @killerhellhound
      @killerhellhound 8 років тому +9

      well the arrow he is holding an fire arrow used in seiges to try and burn down siege weapons or burn houses behind walls

    • @jacobweisth7180
      @jacobweisth7180 8 років тому +13

      Probably they just didn't draw the arrow fully. Shot from a warbow at a 28" draw, even a 32" burning arrow will go a considerable distance. The range and lower penetrating power will still be be worse than a standard arrow though....

    • @chihuanglin
      @chihuanglin 8 років тому

      +Red Vodka Make roofs with tiles. Not gonna burn.

  • @TheBurg229
    @TheBurg229 7 років тому +277

    Fire arrows on ships were often used to catch sails on fire. Hard to put those fires out and you immobilize a ship for boarding.

    • @HeadPats-vi7jm
      @HeadPats-vi7jm 7 років тому +1

      Capt Char
      That's what I was thinking.

    • @BonDieu617
      @BonDieu617 7 років тому +13

      Weren't sails often treated with flammable oils? And the decks had loads of tar/pitch to plug any leaks. So yeah.

    • @ozzymandias1682
      @ozzymandias1682 7 років тому +9

      BonDieu617 Depends on the time period with sails. Either way they would be damp. And would probably be so thick they'd glance off. They kept pitch in barrels of some kind. They wouldn't have pitch all over their deck because its a huge safety hazard, especially considering how slippery it would be.

    • @BonDieu617
      @BonDieu617 7 років тому +3

      Max Anthony Not all over the deck of course, but they used it to plug leaks and holes as well as ridges between planks. It wasn't _everywhere_ of course, but there was a lot of it.

    • @SinerAthin
      @SinerAthin 7 років тому +7

      Probably depends a helluva lot on the circumstance as well.
      A designate battleship who are ready & have chance to prepare themselves vs fire arrows using specially crafted sails could probably shrug them off.
      A civilian, commercial or lower quality ship on a sunny day however might be very vulnerable to fire arrows.

  • @GenerationWhyMe
    @GenerationWhyMe 4 роки тому +4

    It is worth pointing out that during a siege trenches would be dug before the walls of the enemy, allowing arches to have cover at closer ranges. At a short distance it would not be necessary to have a bow with a high draw and thus fast projectile speed, allowing for the arrows to be fired over the wall without the air they travel through extinguishing the flame.
    Reckon that other types of weapons would also be employed to throw flammable liquids that would spread out on impact covering the structures inside. Since the main method of fighting fires would be chains of people lugging buckets of water, to perform successful damage control in such situations would require quite a bit of manpower. It then stands to reason many people would be employed in the effort.
    Now imagine trying to fight the following day after a night of tensely waiting to extinguish any fires that started, whereas your opponent would be comparatively well rested.Consider the consequences of this going on for weeks - you have barely slept the entire time. In such circumstances a niche weapon finds its place.

  • @charlottewalnut3118
    @charlottewalnut3118 3 роки тому +1

    I read in the art of war the way the Chinese would use fire arrows is by preparing an area first they were soaking and sesame oil and use the arrows to light the oil that’s what made them effective because bizarrely enough no one wants to be in an area that’s on fire it would also scare animals like horses and elephants

  • @eddy-currents
    @eddy-currents 8 років тому +159

    GREEK FIRE DONT MELT SIEGE TOWERS

  • @ianmills9266
    @ianmills9266 7 років тому +19

    the benefit of fire arrows during a seige would be the simple fact that most stuctures has thatched roofs, they burn rather nicely

    • @whiteknightcat
      @whiteknightcat 7 років тому +1

      Thank you!

    • @ianmills9266
      @ianmills9266 7 років тому +2

      anouther one i recently thought of would be defencive. Armys were rather large and quite obvious. Sow the land around the walls with pitch wate for the attack to happen......toasty attackers

    • @whiteknightcat
      @whiteknightcat 7 років тому

      Ian Mills
      A true "scorched earth" policy!

    • @ianmills9266
      @ianmills9266 7 років тому +2

      *****
      only the pessants.

    • @ceoofwarcrimes4600
      @ceoofwarcrimes4600 6 років тому

      Ian Mills late as fuck comment but Aldo burning enemy camps

  • @Thibaut_Guerquin
    @Thibaut_Guerquin Рік тому

    I do not know why Bron from Game of Thrones is teaching me about fire arrows, but man, I'm in for it !
    Awesome video !

  • @adoginacowboyhat8196
    @adoginacowboyhat8196 4 роки тому +4

    So I guess you can say this video, pierced, my recommendations

  • @avocado_circle
    @avocado_circle 7 років тому +48

    Maybe a pyrophoric chemical would work. Such a chemical could be contained in a glass arrow head that would shatter on impact exposing the chemical to air allowing it to self ignite. However, manufacturing such a system would be extremely difficult even with todays technology, and totally impossible during the middle ages.

    • @Snyde91
      @Snyde91 7 років тому +6

      So what your saying is it's unrealistic and irrelevant? Lol.

    • @Ksorkrax
      @Ksorkrax 7 років тому +9

      Well, that is essentially the concept of a naphtha grenade, which was actually used in the middle ages. That said, one would not use it in an arrow since you need it to spread all over you target. As Lindybeige said, there is no merit in the arrow burning if not used against structures. Not going to incinerate any people who get hit.

    • @DisegnoSb
      @DisegnoSb 7 років тому

      actually, it wouldnt be that hard to make, but you cant get too much fire out of it... a cool thing would be to put an arrow drenched in some thick oil or tar that burns slowly and put a criystal tip with phosforus inside... so it will break and ignite the oil that will splatter arround... at least some oil would still be there for sure...

    • @The_Bird_Bird_Harder
      @The_Bird_Bird_Harder 7 років тому +1

      promatt5 Wow imagine all the Frenchmen we could penetrate.

    • @atk9989
      @atk9989 6 років тому

      Gerben van Straaten. because an arrow is easier to aim. and id say 1,000 arrows will make more small fires then the few dozen moderate to large fires the catapult or scorpio make. or for maximum effect you do both and make sure you burn shit down.

  • @charliecrome207
    @charliecrome207 7 років тому +294

    Molotov arrows?

    • @Knights_of_the_Nine
      @Knights_of_the_Nine 6 років тому +14

      Charlie Crome HEAT arrows?

    • @Athanatoi
      @Athanatoi 6 років тому +7

      What about Ice arrows?

    • @potatoraider7320
      @potatoraider7320 6 років тому +4

      Knights of the Nine High Explosive Anti Tank or HEAT for short could be a good idea

    • @vincentmaxwell5115
      @vincentmaxwell5115 6 років тому

      Togira Ikonoka what would be the point...? It would literally be worthless.

    • @DzinkyDzink
      @DzinkyDzink 6 років тому +1

      How about Phosphorus?

  • @feekygucker2678
    @feekygucker2678 3 роки тому

    Fond memories of participating in the York Viking festival in my youth, always ending with the annual ship singeing. The arrows usually stayed alight (thanks to modern accelerants), and usually missed the mock boat piled with straw bales. One year, one of the three arrows that hit (out of about 80) actually set fire to one of the bales for about 30 secs. Despite all our cheering and surprise it turns out that damp straw (British weather) is not very combustible.

  • @anthonyvandeist2857
    @anthonyvandeist2857 3 роки тому

    Excellent intro to this video.

  • @philchia4764
    @philchia4764 7 років тому +82

    There's an upcoming Matt Damon movie... you ain't seen fire arrows until you've seen chinese CGI fire arrows.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 7 років тому +9

      Phil Chia tbf it's about a fantasy great wall of china that looks like something from Attack on Titan

    • @SAOrules
      @SAOrules 6 років тому

      hedgehog3180 BUILD THAT WALL

    • @Saiyijon
      @Saiyijon 6 років тому

      I watched that abomination of cinema recently. It was free, yet I felt like two hours of my life had been taken from me.

    • @SAOrules
      @SAOrules 6 років тому +1

      I agree. It was a pretty awful movie.

  • @polymphus
    @polymphus 7 років тому +12

    I remember some show (Deadliest Warrior?) tested them out, and found that the flame doesn't necessarily get snuffed BUT
    1) in order to stick enough cloth/pitch on them for the flames to stay on, it means they suddenly can't penetrate very far, or even penetrate at all
    2) they don't tend to set the target on fire
    3) if they actually do penetrate, it just cauterises the wound
    There are definitely historical cases of people spreading (for example) oil on the ground before a battle then using fire arrows to ignite it when the other guy walks across it, but they're rare and seemed to be of mixed success.

    • @polymphus
      @polymphus 7 років тому +4

      yep, found it: Deadliest Warrior S02, E10. They also found that the impact from the arrow hitting a target often extinguished the fire.

    • @vonneely1977
      @vonneely1977 7 років тому +1

      polymphus IIRC they were a psychological weapon mostly used to break cavalry formations, since animals tend to freak out over fire pretty easily.

  • @MrCompassionate01
    @MrCompassionate01 3 роки тому +2

    But when you shoot a soldier with fire arrows their entire body head to toe is spontaniously engulfed in fire!

  • @caelestigladii
    @caelestigladii 2 роки тому

    I just saw the Barcelona 1992 Olympics torch lighting ceremony and I remembered this video.

  • @SolusBatty
    @SolusBatty 8 років тому +9

    Fire-katanas video in two years time. Can't wait.

  • @megafan5195
    @megafan5195 8 років тому +50

    Wouldn't it be nice to have guys with spandaus shooting flaming ponmels? I reckon if the guys had some katanas for self defence in a melee combat, they would be unstoppable warriors capable of penetrating frenchmen quite well.

    • @megafan5195
      @megafan5195 8 років тому +2

      pommels*
      Who placed n and m next to each other?

    • @SordoBjorn
      @SordoBjorn 8 років тому +1

      "Who placed n and m next to each other"
      french (azerty) layout doesn't... and all lindy talks about is penetrating the french lol.

    • @ZURATAMA1324
      @ZURATAMA1324 8 років тому +2

      Katana pommels.
      I rest my case.

    • @zachk.2125
      @zachk.2125 8 років тому +1

      Unless the Frenchmen wore studded leather armour.

    • @darkness4063
      @darkness4063 8 років тому +2

      You're doing it all wrong... We need spandaus shooting flaming katana pommels!
      And every soldier should have a bikini made out of studded leather armour. Compleate protection achieved!

  • @isababa97
    @isababa97 4 роки тому +1

    Chinese strategists used to use gunpowder loaded arrows, oil spills, and gunpowder barrels, these were then activated later by fire arrows to create an explosion or fire field or make a bomb out of their arrows. Gun powder didn't reach the West until later on, so maybe that's why it seems dumb, but it wasn't all nonsense in practice when the set up was there.

  • @pigboiii
    @pigboiii 2 роки тому

    I really didnt expect the candle to go out. Mind = blown

  • @brookssilber
    @brookssilber 7 років тому +109

    I predict the candle fire will turn into a genie and give three wishes to you.

  • @Smashachu
    @Smashachu 5 років тому +27

    Magnesium tipped arrow heads. Reacts with or without oxygen present, can withstand the winds of an arrows velocity and will react extremely violently when the gasses of the magnesium burning reacts with the h2o in your blood causing an pretty large explosion. It's also pretty easy to light on fire soooo. It also burns at 2200C, THATS 4000 degrees 'Merican units.

    • @vannlo355
      @vannlo355 4 роки тому +1

      Brilliant!

    • @simmyabis7330
      @simmyabis7330 4 роки тому +2

      @joanne chon yes i do

    • @totallynotalpharius2283
      @totallynotalpharius2283 4 роки тому +2

      Idk if I've ever seen a comment that is both awesome and makes me want to invoke some war crimes statute

    • @HRRRRRDRRRRR
      @HRRRRRDRRRRR 4 роки тому +3

      @joanne chon "alloy" Yep, feel pretty safe.

    • @wojciechkolaczkiewicz2881
      @wojciechkolaczkiewicz2881 4 роки тому

      @KeanuBodypillo g thermite is better for that use ;)

  • @decommissionedunitnanotech2265
    @decommissionedunitnanotech2265 4 роки тому +3

    How to know if you have an effective arrow?
    When every Frenchmen fears it

  • @Exxeron-ob3tv
    @Exxeron-ob3tv 3 роки тому

    Brilliant!