Mongol Conquests and Gunpowder: How the World's Largest Land Empire Rewired the History of Firearms
-
Long article, so let's pull a few threads worth chewing on.
The Mongols get credit for a lot of military innovation, but the actual story here is more interesting — they were the world's first great technology adopters, not inventors. Before we had "military contractors," the Mongols were conscripting engineers from every civilization they rolled through.
Whenever the Mongol troops encountered one [thunder bomb], several men at a time would be turned into ashes.
That's a 13th-century fragmentation device lowered on a rope down a castle wall to kill miners tunneling underneath. The tactical problem-solving there isn't that different from what happens at any serious obstacle — you find a standoff solution. The Jin defenders couldn't stop the Mongols from digging, so they figured out how to bring the payload to the target instead of the other way around.
The fire lance, the direct ancestor of the firearm, had by 1259 evolved to a point where a bamboo-tube version propelled a pellet wad that occluded the barrel — what may be the first true bullet in recorded history.
That sentence should land harder than it probably does for most readers. Everything from the first flintlock to your EDC started here — a charge behind a projectile that fills the bore. The mechanical complexity between a bamboo tube and a modern striker-fired pistol is enormous, but the operating principle took roughly one step to establish and 800 years to refine.
Mongol rulers in the Near East sent Muslim engineers capable of constructing advanced counterweight trebuchets into China to assist in the final overthrow of the Song dynasty.
This is the part that doesn't fit the simple "China invented it, everyone else copied it" narrative. Technology was moving in multiple directions simultaneously across this empire — Persian engineering going east, Chinese gunpowder knowledge going west. When you're standing at the reloading bench with a pound of Hodgdon powder, there's a longer chain of custody behind that than most people think about.
What's the oldest piece of firearm history — a specific weapon, a design lineage, a manufacturing tradition — that you've gone down a rabbit hole researching, and what did you find that genuinely surprised you?
Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better 💗
Register Login