How powerful was Roman Battering Ram | Rome's deadliest artillery machine
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Загружено: 2025-08-11
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How powerful was Roman Battering Ram | Rome's deadliest artillery machine
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How powerful was Roman Battering Ram | Rome's deadliest artillery machine. Okay, so picture this. Back in the day, when armies wanted to break into a big walled city, they didn’t have bombs or tanks. So what did they do?
They built this giant wooden cart, and hanging from it was a massive log—think the size of a telephone pole. Soldiers would swing it back and forth, slamming it into the gates again and again until the gates finally cracked open.
How powerful was Roman Battering Ram | Rome's deadliest artillery machine. That’s a battering ram. Super low-tech, but it worked. Think of it like the ancient world’s wrecking ball, specially made for castle gates.
Sounds simple, right? But we’re about to spend the next 30 minutes talking all about it. Why? Because it turns out, this thing was way more complex than it looks. Engineering, teamwork, tactics—everything had to come together to make it work.
How powerful was Roman Battering Ram | Rome's deadliest artillery machine. Welcome back to Great History, your daily history channel. Don’t forget to help us reach 50,000 subscribers. Smash that button and let’s get started.
This… is a battering ram—one of the most enduring and recognizable siege weapons from antiquity all the way into the medieval age.
The Romans called it aries—Latin for “ram,” the horned animal known for its fierce headbutts and charging strength. And the name wasn’t just clever wordplay. It was a metaphor rooted in observation. Just as a ram lowers its head and slams into its target, so too did this siege weapon crash into fortifications with relentless force. The term captured both the shape and spirit of the weapon—direct, powerful, and unyielding.
And the idea stuck. Later European languages kept that same animal metaphor. Italian calls it ariete, German says Rammbock, the French use bélier. All of them refer to the same thing: a beast of burden turned into a symbol of destruction. Even the English verb “to ram”—meaning to strike something forcefully—shares the same origin.
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