Trebuchet Siege Artillery - Battle Castle with Dan Snow

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 618

  • @sarahtanner6932
    @sarahtanner6932 Před 9 lety +2189

    I would just like to respond to a few of the comments made on this video.
    I am a member of the siege crew shown here - I'm in the green jacket.
    1) The water shot is not fake.
    The Treb is positioned on the outer keep of Caerphilly Castle and was built to aim into the inner moat. We used to display the engines 5 times a day over bank holiday weekends and our own show days. It was loosed (shot) approximately 40-50 times a year. There is no fire or gunpowder involved which is why we use the term loosed or shot, never fired. The moat was the safest place for the projectile to land which is why CADW had the engine build and aimed in that direction. We had no say as they were built over 30 years ago.
    2) We used 10kg balls. Landing the projectile on land rather than water would have produced a small dent in the ground. They are solid shots and non explosive so there would not have been anything to really see even if we had shot it into the ground.
    3) As to hitting a wall it would take multiple shots to show the damage. These trebs were designed to hit the same location every time once they were erected. Castle walls were designed to withstand such attacks. Stonemasons were used to both build the castle walls but also to make the treb projectiles to ensure the same weight in each shot. Having shots all the same weight helped to ensure the accuracy of these weapons.
    14th Century castles in England & Europe were made in a double skin method, with an inner and outer skin wall, the void in between was filled with rubble. The rubble severed to dissipate the shock wave of the attacking shots, this prevented the walls from blowing apart as seen in Hollywood.
    4) The only animals that may/may not have been hurt by the projectile were a few fish. The local birds (swans, geese and ducks) knew where the projectiles would land as it's been happening for a long time and therefore they never ventured near the landing zone.
    5) No the kettle helems we wear would not save you from the 2 ton bucket. No amount of armour would. As the operator of the trigger it was always my job to ensure the trigger was on and hold it in position until all engineers had cleared the treb and were out of the danger zone (approx 20ft). I always took this role seriously as I was responsible for my own safety as well as that of at least 6 others. If the trigger was ever to be left unattended and slip all crew could be either crush to death by the bucket or thrown into the lake.
    In the video there is a shot of a man holding the end of a rope at the back of the machine. He is holding the end of the sling which the other operators use to take the weight of the bucket while the wrench crew wind the arm down. If he didn't hold that rope and something did go wrong the end of that could easily have been caught around someones leg and amputated it as the arm swings round.
    6) Trebs were never on wheels although they were the original flat pack item! If they had been on wheels they would have become unstable during use. The forces that drop the buckets and swing the arm would have caused the treb to rock, roll and possible trip over. Trebs on wheels is another Hollywood fantasy.
    7) As an experienced team of 8 we were often able to lock, load and loose the treb in 3 minutes on a slow day. We were asked by CADW to slow down the demos to give people the chance to see everything that goes on. The crowds would only be permitted to stand the other side of the old mill, in one shot you might catch a glimpse of a dark wooden bridge, the public had to stay that side during the display but were able to walk around the machines and ask questions between displays.
    I hope this has helped to dispel some of the comments and myths about trebuchets.

    • @FoolishDoug
      @FoolishDoug Před 9 lety +31

      Sarah Tanner Is there any effort made into recovering the projectiles in the moat? I would assume not, but you never know unless it's asked.
      Back in the day of siege weaponry of this type would the crew have bothered to try and catch the arm and bring it back down while it's still swaying? Or just let it do it's thing until it had lost enough momentum to begin locking it back down again?

    • @sarahtanner6932
      @sarahtanner6932 Před 9 lety +58

      FoolishDoug For the shots used on the Treb, no there is no recovering them. However they do break down over time to be environmentally friends to the inhabitants of the mout.
      I am unable to say for sure how a medieval siege crew would react but from our own personal experiences you do not want to be near the sling rope until she settles. You have to bear in mind that at the end of the rope is a very heavy bit of knot work that creates the hoop that slips over the sling point at the tip of the arm. Although our helmets offer little protection from the list of potential injuries they can/have reduced the concussion one could receive from being caught on the head by the end of rope.
      Normally when we work the Treb ourselves once the trigger has been released the person pulling the trigger would walk backwards out of harm's way but always keeping an eye on the rope.
      To be fair the Treb only takes a few minutes to load with a good team, so the shoot rate isn't that bad especially when compared to the mangonel which is slow to load and temperamental at best. None are nowhere near as fast as the Perrier which I believe we once managed to lose 9 shots in 60 seconds.
      I hope this helps answer your questions.

    • @FoolishDoug
      @FoolishDoug Před 9 lety +12

      Sarah Tanner I wasn't worried about the shot causing environmental problems. I was curious if it would have been worth the cost to try and recover them to reuse. Or if they needed to be cleaned out of the moat periodically.
      I mean it's just a large rock, there's already plenty of that in the moat anyway. But I don't know the cost involved in making that shot vs recovering it.

    • @sarahtanner5367
      @sarahtanner5367 Před 7 lety +1

      RowanBows I can only find this comment asking for a reply. What was your question or comment?

    • @Rage639
      @Rage639 Před 7 lety +2

      Thanks for sharing this information Sarah!

  • @PopTartNeko
    @PopTartNeko Před 7 lety +579

    FINALLY, a video that actually showed the launching of a 90kg stone projectile across a distance of 300 meters.

  • @jcb5782
    @jcb5782 Před 4 lety +31

    Imagine just walking around a siege camp, seeing crews about firing these things day and night at the walls of a castle or fortified town. An impressive sight to behold.

  • @franciscorosario2709
    @franciscorosario2709 Před 4 lety +146

    Dan: “How about you go over there and catch the projectile”
    Trebuchet guy: “Absolutely”

    • @Dfathurr
      @Dfathurr Před 4 lety +8

      Trebuchet guy : HEAAAAVE

    • @ABZ49er
      @ABZ49er Před rokem

      @@Dfathurr trebuchet guy #2 : HEAAVVVVE

    • @80Loke
      @80Loke Před 4 měsíci

      Haha😅

  • @elblitzb
    @elblitzb Před 4 lety +129

    "It sucks to own a trebuchet"
    - no one - (ever in history)

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před rokem

      The "last" trebuchet was build to compensate a lack of black powder self destroyed at the first attempt.
      Besides owning a 300m trebuchet when facing 400m slingers is a short lived problem.

  • @bobsagot1163
    @bobsagot1163 Před 8 lety +1531

    in the medieval times these were operated by cave trolls

  • @evanw2195
    @evanw2195 Před 4 lety +18

    Early artillery was just a bigger version of whatever they had, bow meets ballista, sling meets trebuchet, if it works it works

    • @a.t967
      @a.t967 Před 4 lety +5

      Yep and Cannons and modern artillery are also essentially huge guns.

  • @smokeypillow
    @smokeypillow Před 7 lety +488

    WHY IS MY 95 kilogram stone projectile 300 METERS AWAY? deus vult!

    • @cloroxbleach9612
      @cloroxbleach9612 Před 6 lety +4

      SmokeyPillow You realise that deus vult means "god wants it"?

    • @earfqaukes3450
      @earfqaukes3450 Před 6 lety +16

      It's 90k, get your Trebuchet right, nerd.

    • @richardlionerheart1945
      @richardlionerheart1945 Před 5 lety +23

      @@cloroxbleach9612 IT MEANS GOD WILLS IT YOU HEATHEN

    • @GGuLost1
      @GGuLost1 Před 4 měsíci

      @@earfqaukes3450 5 years later, here to say its 10kg

  • @marcuswoolley3424
    @marcuswoolley3424 Před 7 lety +138

    Roses are red, soda is sold in litres. A trebuchet uses a counterweight to fling a 90kg stone projectile over 300m.

    • @boomstick900
      @boomstick900 Před 6 lety +6

      Nice, I would change "soda is sold in" to "soda comes in", seems to flow better. :)

    • @yummygoy5138
      @yummygoy5138 Před 29 dny

      Bars

  • @dinoflame9696
    @dinoflame9696 Před 9 lety +344

    maybe instead of focusing eight cameras on the counterweight, at least ONE could film the projectile being fired? just an idea... otherwise good vid

    • @-Kerstin
      @-Kerstin Před 8 lety +30

      The camera angles were great, dude. All eight of them included the projectile What video were you watching?

    • @vinceb8041
      @vinceb8041 Před 4 lety +15

      @@-Kerstin I suppose the missing shot was one with the entire trebuchet and the range in sight, where one can appreciate how far the projectile flies with reference to the ground. Probably difficult to record in cloudy weather and with non-illuminated projectiles though...

    • @-Kerstin
      @-Kerstin Před 4 lety +4

      Haha, I don't even remember leaving that comment. Yeah, an angle that show the full projectile arc from ground level would be cool to see.

    • @colinclarke4285
      @colinclarke4285 Před 4 lety +1

      It's still a fantastic example of human ingenuity

  • @easygoing2479
    @easygoing2479 Před 3 lety +13

    It's amazing how much work went into firing that thing. I can't imagine back in WW2 how those guys on the Bismarck and the HMS Hood did it.

    • @kaycey7361
      @kaycey7361 Před rokem

      Bismark put Hood to its proper place. huge respect for german navy. They crippled Britain that lead to de colonisation of many African and Asian nations after ww2

  • @kaoshjerte
    @kaoshjerte Před 7 lety +326

    Roses are red
    Water comes in litres
    A trebuchet can launch a 90 kilo stone
    300 metres

    • @penzalo4119
      @penzalo4119 Před 7 lety +6

      roses are red
      violets are blue
      you go to a pizzaria
      you come back with a gonorrhea

    • @joksizantos7520
      @joksizantos7520 Před 6 lety +4

      Roses are red
      Orange is orange
      If i have those trebuchet
      I would bring back the stone age

    • @30AndHatingIt
      @30AndHatingIt Před 6 lety +4

      roses are red
      violets are blue
      just shit my pants
      now I smell poo

    • @coolguy02536
      @coolguy02536 Před 5 lety +1

      *A trebuchet can launch
      a stone 300 metres
      seriously, can't neglect the syllables

    • @viggo8213
      @viggo8213 Před 4 lety

      Roses are red
      People have eyes
      That statement isnt true
      It depends on the size

  • @fabizio
    @fabizio Před 7 lety +17

    Trebuchet, from the Occitanian word Trebuca (south-west of France). Means literally "which causes terror". Many besieged places and towns surrounded just in seeing this powerful weapon, able to break a wall in a single (lucky) shoot.

  • @SirZorgulon
    @SirZorgulon Před 3 lety +6

    Trebuchets like these were most useful against the upper levels of defensive structures where they could damage parapets, machicolations and towers to protect the besieging army from archers.
    Only the largest trebuchets really stood a chance of damaging the wall itself, and even then a full breach was unlikely. It would take a couple of centuries more and the introduction of the bombard before walls could be reliably breached by artillery.
    Prior to this either scaling the wall with ladders or towers, or undermining it with sappers was the most effective means of assaulting a castle. But in most sieges the castle would have to be forced to surrender or gates could be opened by enemy agents inside the walls.

    • @codyking4848
      @codyking4848 Před 3 měsíci

      There are plenty of recorded instances of trebuchets and mangonels breaching walls. Not sure what you are on about.

  • @corentin.6624
    @corentin.6624 Před 8 lety +50

    Absolutly

  • @ThisIsAUser-yt4xf
    @ThisIsAUser-yt4xf Před 3 lety +1

    I now realized i'm watching this perfectly 8 years after this video was posted.

  • @Trefalas
    @Trefalas Před 5 lety +5

    counterweight gives me goosebumps

  • @exmaarmaca
    @exmaarmaca Před 5 lety +5

    I remember building this on AOE2 and not using them correctly, but they looked really cool lol.

  • @HelcaraxeUlairi
    @HelcaraxeUlairi Před 2 lety +3

    I got to see the beauty last weekend! What a dream. They weren't firing it, but just being in it's presences, wow 😲. Amazing

  • @hellohowareyou8295
    @hellohowareyou8295 Před 3 lety +2

    It could not even kill single infantryman with shield. Just one arm broken. But in total war game, it is nuclear weapon

  • @gadogadomarkesot7747
    @gadogadomarkesot7747 Před 4 lety +13

    the sound reminds me to stronghold crusader game.

  • @JhinDoppelgänger
    @JhinDoppelgänger Před rokem +1

    Cela est la meileure chose que j'ai jamais vue de ma vie j'adore les effort mis dans cette video et dans le montage

  • @kaidkyoung4298
    @kaidkyoung4298 Před 5 lety +6

    I was thinking, at the same time in East Asia already had black-powder canon

    • @deci2723
      @deci2723 Před 5 lety

      but could it throw a 90 kg projectile 300 meters away?
      Doubt it

    • @oussematrabelsi9429
      @oussematrabelsi9429 Před 4 lety

      Those canons were ineffecient

  • @anaselfellah6243
    @anaselfellah6243 Před 4 lety +3

    Fact: Japan had a technology when they packed the trebuchet so fast that they would start packing the trebuchet after the projectile is launched and finish packing before it hit it's target and the projectile would barely scratch the paint on the target

  • @RealCrusadesHistory
    @RealCrusadesHistory Před 10 lety +16

    What were some of the daily problems facing the commander of a castle defending against a siege? What would have been some of the daily annoyances, glitches, and issues that he would have had to deal with in his duties of maintaining the defense?

    • @VT-mw2zb
      @VT-mw2zb Před 9 lety +18

      Food, water, hygiene, disease and morale.
      And where to dump the corpse of the poor bastard who took an arrow in the face.

    • @Riley-xg6yy
      @Riley-xg6yy Před 6 lety

      Real Crusades History I really like your channel do you want to sub each other I subbed you sub back

    • @gortnewton4765
      @gortnewton4765 Před 5 lety

      Splinters... ooch!

    • @edie9158
      @edie9158 Před 2 lety

      Logistics is a big one, if you starve before your enemy does than that’s some shoddy work

  • @yahyagannour8486
    @yahyagannour8486 Před 5 lety +44

    I bet u all of Aoe2 players are having a trance right now

  • @szabogergo-bence3669
    @szabogergo-bence3669 Před 8 lety +232

    Who's here from Age Of Empire 2?

  • @dimitristripakis7364
    @dimitristripakis7364 Před 7 lety +4

    After 30 years, has not the woodwork rotten and break ? I see no varnice applied ? What exactly is going on ?
    Great machine to display, well done.

  • @Greenriver842
    @Greenriver842 Před 4 lety +1

    Basically is a giant hand with a giant sling, amzing

  • @ardaozcan7617
    @ardaozcan7617 Před 4 lety +1

    Absolutely!

  • @b-1battledroid674
    @b-1battledroid674 Před 3 lety +1

    Spartans when a 5 years old kid can't kill a bear with their bare hands: 2:13

  • @LH-bq3xo
    @LH-bq3xo Před 4 lety

    I like the vision of the bullet hiting the water few meters away from a walker in the park.

  • @miguelsims
    @miguelsims Před 4 lety +1

    ABSOLUTELY

  • @AdrienGirod
    @AdrienGirod Před 9 lety +6

    "Absolutely !"

  • @Bufflapierre
    @Bufflapierre Před 8 lety +3

    I commented this on the other videos, but does anyone else notice that they use the same camera shot of the rock hitting the moat for all these videos? The mangonel uses the exact same shot and the Perrier uses it again only mirrored.

    • @hmad898
      @hmad898 Před 5 lety

      Is it in the same location?

  • @thomasblack4041
    @thomasblack4041 Před 5 lety +3

    The superior siege weapon

  • @edelweiss-
    @edelweiss- Před 3 lety +1

    "biggest siege artillery"
    laughs in heavy Gustav

  • @theangrycheeto
    @theangrycheeto Před 7 lety +7

    Absolutely.. -HEAVE!

  • @BlikeNave
    @BlikeNave Před 2 lety

    The shot of the projectile landing in the water is the same exact shot from the "Mangonel Siege Artillery" example from the same show and location (different episode). One of them is not what it claims. Played them side by side and they are identical.

  • @DerSpartaner
    @DerSpartaner Před 7 lety +26

    I want that in my garden... ^^

  • @bobcobb158
    @bobcobb158 Před 5 lety +1

    im more of a siege ram and champion kind of guy myself, but trebs are sick

  • @oscarlangdon4080
    @oscarlangdon4080 Před 7 lety +14

    But how far can it launch a stone projectile of 90kg?

  • @tokareuv
    @tokareuv Před 5 měsíci

    The sound at 2:10 is very satisfying

  • @s0so328
    @s0so328 Před 4 lety +1

    Ah Dan Snow the bastard

  • @itsyuupi
    @itsyuupi Před 7 měsíci

    The voice, the tone... very medieval!

  • @whynotanyting
    @whynotanyting Před 6 lety +2

    "Jolly good observation there Dan- HEAVE!!!"

  • @JJefArt
    @JJefArt Před 4 lety +3

    Incredible !

  • @maksuree
    @maksuree Před 9 lety +43

    you know nothing, dan snow.

  • @maxh6979
    @maxh6979 Před 4 lety +10

    im sure felix watched this like 20 times

  • @AntiCookieMonster
    @AntiCookieMonster Před 3 lety +2

    I wish one of these videos showed the full flight path of a projectile, preferably captured with a fixed camera angle.
    It should be possible, even easy, if shooting trebuchet is indeed as repeatable as some claim.
    It's a real shame they never do that. It would make for much more interesting material, even if range turns out to be underwhelming.

    • @AllAmericanGuyExpert
      @AllAmericanGuyExpert Před rokem

      There are several other videos of them on the tube here with other angles

  • @gopr3117
    @gopr3117 Před 6 lety

    Absolutely

  • @ROLtheWolf
    @ROLtheWolf Před 3 lety +2

    All these cameras and you never considered showing the complete arc!

  • @imshadkhan692
    @imshadkhan692 Před 2 lety

    Really really thanks from pakistan.
    I was searching this video and here I found it.

  • @Thor.Jorgensen
    @Thor.Jorgensen Před 7 lety +9

    0:48 That helmet is absolutely useless without a padded cloth cap or any padding underneath.

  • @wedgeantilles1498
    @wedgeantilles1498 Před 4 lety +2

    *ABSOLUTELY, HEAVE!*

  • @behnamasid
    @behnamasid Před 5 lety +2

    And it attacks the water and does major damage

  • @martinmatin7112
    @martinmatin7112 Před 4 lety +1

    Quel ingenieux système de contrepoids !

  • @The_DevTato
    @The_DevTato Před 4 lety

    dude responds like an oblivion NPC
    Dan: *asks a question evertime*
    Trebuchet man: *ABSOLUTLEY*

  • @billy4072
    @billy4072 Před 7 lety

    absolutely.

  • @lordtarace123
    @lordtarace123 Před 4 lety

    Ingénieux ce système de contrepoids

  • @WK-yw2me
    @WK-yw2me Před 5 lety +1

    Oh my god. Ive been pronouncing Trey-Bucket in my head all my life.

  • @niamhansell7678
    @niamhansell7678 Před 4 lety +1

    I have to watch this for online history class aha

  • @Gryphon1-1
    @Gryphon1-1 Před 3 lety

    This made me happy.

  • @2adamast
    @2adamast Před rokem

    "the size of a peasant hut" one more to line up in the realm of fantasy size units. Scores 3 twaddles on my own scale of speach

  • @JFBD1999
    @JFBD1999 Před 4 lety

    I live a few hundred meters from Caerphilly Castle and the best thing about the castle is the trebuchets and the pokemon go spots.

  • @anthonyobrian2665
    @anthonyobrian2665 Před 3 lety

    The cog slips at 1:40 and we see a peasant launched by his hut...

  • @renegadeace1735
    @renegadeace1735 Před 2 lety

    Everybody be rebelling until the trebuchet shows up.

  • @purestyle8857
    @purestyle8857 Před 6 lety +1

    That bird at 0:11 almost thought it was a projectile

  • @pokerandphilosophy8328

    This video would have attracted at least 50% more views if they had used the trebuchet to demolish the actual medieval castle in the background.

  • @nicholas4436
    @nicholas4436 Před 3 lety

    The impact shot of the lake is the exact same one they used in the Mangonel one :DD

  • @RoninAndrey
    @RoninAndrey Před rokem

    Спасибо за это видео. Оно показывает, что требушеты в том виде, как нам предоставляют, никогда не использовались, и вот почему:
    1. Сложность управления под огнем неприятеля
    2. Сложность постройки вблизи от замка под огнем противника
    3. Сложность доставки строительных материалов под огнем противника (на чем они доставляли этот брус, кстати?)
    4. Сложность доставки снарядов в необходимом количестве под огнем противника
    5. Сложность создания унифицированных снарядов (для хоть сколько-то приемлемой точности)
    6. Непредсказуемая точность, которая зависит от множества параметров, в т.ч. от погодных условий
    7. Ничтожность разрушений
    Резюме: сложная, дорогая, и совершенно бессмысленная конструкция, которая в лучшем случае убьет пару бедолаг, которым этот камень прилетит по голове.
    Вывод: древние были не идиоты, экономику, логистику и физику отменить нельзя, этого оружия в том виде, как мы его знаем, никогда не было, это фантазия историков.

  • @mrmacedon
    @mrmacedon Před 6 lety +2

    Cant wait to use these in Mount and Blade Bannerlord 2

    • @mrmacedon
      @mrmacedon Před 5 lety

      @@dafty4183 away with you vile beggar !

  • @Seboolek
    @Seboolek Před 5 lety

    How many times do we have to see that launch? Couldn't choose the best shot?

  • @fiddlepants5947
    @fiddlepants5947 Před 5 lety +1

    Some fish didn't make it all the way home from work that day.... moment of silence

  • @warker6186
    @warker6186 Před 4 lety

    that was a big one

  • @Eza_yuta
    @Eza_yuta Před 4 lety +2

    Can we throw chicken? I want to see them fly high.

  • @panzer263
    @panzer263 Před 4 lety

    Am I the only one thinking about the feelings of that poor duck when that projectile hit the water nearby??

  • @sebastjansslavitis3898

    - did we scared a ducks?
    - absolutely

  • @radinelaj9280
    @radinelaj9280 Před 3 lety

    You should build this amusement near the sea ( at sea shore). You should build it near the sea( at sea shore ),the person who will be launched , will fall into water ,so there is no risk any more

  • @cnon.
    @cnon. Před 11 lety

    One end of the two lengths of rope is not permanently attached, it goes around a pin and flies off at apex, opening the weave for the projectile to fly free. This pin is also how the device is calibrated. Sucks they had a million cameras for the release and all the angles were dumb.

  • @renascitur7051
    @renascitur7051 Před 5 lety

    "Winter is coming"
    "You know nothing *Dan* Snow"

  • @sparkyboi7352
    @sparkyboi7352 Před 5 lety

    A superior siege weapon

  • @diegosantidrian2625
    @diegosantidrian2625 Před 5 lety +1

    So how do you turn this on?

  • @federalbureauofinvestigati6386

    That’s really cool seeing a trebuchet Being loosed

  • @rachellaurence9731
    @rachellaurence9731 Před 4 lety

    This is for knocking over big walls isn't it?
    ABSOLUTELY

  • @dima1353
    @dima1353 Před 5 lety +1

    В сети полно видео о требушетах. Но хочется посмотреть на разрушения. Например на реплике какой-то стены или деревянного домика

  • @patrickbaitman8336
    @patrickbaitman8336 Před 3 lety

    Just watched Colin Furze build one of these, now CZcams thinks I'm a trebuchet connoisseur apparently.

  • @saruealmeida3717
    @saruealmeida3717 Před 4 lety +1

    That stone is a bit too small tho. But prob the real trebuchets from the medieval period were larger...

  • @miraclekeeltjes1860
    @miraclekeeltjes1860 Před 5 lety

    trebuchet ready sir!

  • @VRichardsn
    @VRichardsn Před 5 lety +2

    The trebuchet *heave!* is a compound machine that makes use of the mechanical advantage of a lever *heave!* to throw a projectile. They are typically large constructions (up to 30 meters (100 ft) in height or more) made primarily of wood, usually *heave!* reinforced with metal, leather, rope, and other materials. They are usually immobile *heave!* and must be assembled on-site, possibly making use of local lumber -*heave!* with only key parts brought with the army to the site of the siege or battle.
    Counterweight trebuchets *heave!* are powered by gravity; potential energy *heave!* is stored by slowly raising an extremely heavy box (typically filled with stones, sand, or lead) attached by a hinged connection *heave!* to the shorter end of the beam, and releasing it on command. Traction trebuchets *heave!* are human powered; on command, men pull ropes *heave!* attached to the shorter end of the trebuchet beam.

  • @samdumaquis2033
    @samdumaquis2033 Před 2 lety

    Great piece of equipment

  • @Nothyo666
    @Nothyo666 Před 4 lety

    So rn there in te imperial age I see the castle but we're the town center and siege workshop?

  • @royouyong2131
    @royouyong2131 Před 3 lety

    "Send these foul beasts into the abyss! Hold them back! Do not give in to fear! Stand at your posts! Fight!!!" XD

  • @viktorszamko3739
    @viktorszamko3739 Před 9 lety +1

    hy!its beautiful video...and show the real siege power...i need information about the opener "button"...cheers

  • @tejaswithalastname264
    @tejaswithalastname264 Před 4 lety

    The put like eight cameras repeatedly showing the trebuchet firing. Like how many cameras did they have?!?

  • @throwing_things7773
    @throwing_things7773 Před 9 měsíci

    Wow, very impressive!

  • @StopFear
    @StopFear Před 4 lety

    Why didn’t they think of putting a camera in together with the rock so it’d record from the air? Could have wrapped it so it doesn’t break.

  • @UffUffsen
    @UffUffsen Před 5 lety +1

    "lets make a scene where you throw a big ass rock in the lake so it seems we know where the fucking boulder actually went. oh god i hope it didnt hit someone"

    • @hmad898
      @hmad898 Před 5 lety

      Trebuchets are designed to hit a specific place every single time they are used without fail. They knew where it went.

  • @mlg_teletubby9391
    @mlg_teletubby9391 Před 6 lety

    The superior siege engine

  • @cjl1634
    @cjl1634 Před 5 lety

    The superior siege engine.