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  2. Ancient Greek military personal equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_military...

    Ancient Greek weapons and armor were primarily geared towards combat between individuals. Their primary technique was called the phalanx, a formation consisting of massed shield wall, which required heavy frontal armor and medium-ranged weapons such as spears. [1] Soldiers were required to provide their own panoply, which could prove expensive ...

  3. Ancient Greek warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_warfare

    Warfare occurred throughout the history of Ancient Greece, from the Greek Dark Ages onward. The Greek 'Dark Ages' drew to an end as a significant increase in population allowed urbanized culture to be restored, which led to the rise of the city-states (Poleis). These developments ushered in the period of Archaic Greece (800–480 BC).

  4. Category:Ancient Greek military equipment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Ancient_Greek...

    Xiphos. Xyston. Categories: Ancient Greek metalwork. Ancient Greek military terminology. Ancient inventions. Ancient weapons. Military equipment of antiquity. Military equipment of Greece.

  5. Makhaira - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Makhaira

    Makhaira entered classical Latin as machaera, "a sword". The dimachaerus was a type of Roman gladiator that fought with two swords. In modern Greek, μαχαίρι means "knife". Modern scholars distinguish the makhaira from the kopis (an ancient term of similar meaning) based on whether the blade is forward curved (kopis), or not (makhaira).

  6. Category:Ancient weapons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Ancient_weapons

    Category: Ancient weapons. ... Ancient Greek military equipment (6 C, 30 P) Ancient instruments of torture (9 P) Ancient Near East weapons (6 P) Ancient swords (3 C ...

  7. Claw of Archimedes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Claw_of_Archimedes

    Claw of Archimedes. The Claw of Archimedes (Ancient Greek: Ἁρπάγη, romanized: harpágē, lit. 'snatcher'; also known as the iron hand) was an ancient weapon devised by Archimedes to defend the seaward portion of Syracuse 's city wall against amphibious assault. Although its exact nature is unclear, the accounts of ancient historians seem ...

  8. Ballista - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballista

    v. t. e. The ballista (Latin, from Greek βαλλίστρα ballistra[1] and that from βάλλω ballō, "throw"), [2] plural ballistae or ballistas, sometimes called bolt thrower, was an ancient missile weapon that launched either bolts or stones at a distant target. Developed from earlier Greek weapons, it relied upon different mechanics ...

  9. Polybolos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polybolos

    Arsenal of ancient mechanical artillery in the Saalburg, Germany; left: polybolos reconstruction by the German engineer Erwin Schramm (1856–1935). The polybolos (the name means "multi-thrower" in Greek [1]) was an ancient Greek repeating ballista, reputedly invented by Dionysius of Alexandria (a 3rd-century BC Greek engineer at the Rhodes arsenal, [2] [3]) and used in antiquity.