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  2. Battering ram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battering_ram

    Smaller, hand-held versions of battering rams are still used today by law enforcement officers and military personnel to break open locked doors. A capped ram is a battering ram that has an accessory at the head (usually made of iron or steel and sometimes punningly shaped into the head and horns of an ovine ram) to do more damage to a building ...

  3. Siege engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_engine

    Another Roman siege engine sometimes used resembled the Greek ditch-filling tortoise of Diades, this galley (unlike the ram-tortoise of Hegetor the Byzantium) called a musculus ("muscle") was simply used as cover for sappers to engineer an offensive ditch or earthworks. Battering rams were also widespread.

  4. List of siege engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_siege_engines

    Battering ram: 9th Century BC Assyria: First siege engine recorded to be used, soon adopted by Sparta. [1] Catapult: 500 BC Greece: A signature siege engine, used until World War I. [2] Lithobolos: 5th Century BC Magadha, India: Siege engines that propel a stone along a flat track with two rigid bow arms powered by torsion. Invented by the ...

  5. Battering Ram (disambiguation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battering_Ram_(disambiguation)

    A battering ram is a siege engine originating in ancient times. Battering Ram may also refer to: Battering Ram (comics), a fictional mutant in the Marvel Universe; Battering Ram (Iron Savior album), a 2004 album by the German power metal band Iron Savior; Battering Ram (Saxon album), a 2015 album by the English heavy metal band Saxon

  6. Roman siege engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_siege_engines

    Roman battering ram. A battering ram (aries) with a shed . After a relief on Septimius Severus' triumphal arc in Rome. Roman battering rams, or aries, were an effective weapon for breaking down an enemy's walls, as well as their morale. Under Roman law, any defenders who failed to surrender before the first ram touched their wall were denied ...

  7. Ramming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramming

    The ram of Olympias, a reconstruction of an ancient Athenian trireme. In warfare, ramming is a technique used in air, sea, and land combat. The term originated from battering ram, a siege engine used to bring down fortifications by hitting it with the force of the ram's momentum, and ultimately from male sheep. Thus, in warfare, ramming refers ...

  8. Aerial ramming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aerial_ramming

    In the early stages of World War II the tactic was employed by Soviet pilots, who called it taran (таран), the Russian word for "battering ram". A ramming pilot could use the weight of the aircraft as a ram, or they could try to make the enemy lose control of their plane, using the propeller or wing to damage the enemy's tail or wing.

  9. Headbutt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Headbutt

    Rams are well known for butting with their heads and horns. From this, the terms battering ram and hydraulic ram are derived. Goats are also well-known for butting. [5] Many males in various animal species employ butting during courtship to show off their strength to potential mates.