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Mardi bin Ali al-Tarsusi was a 12th-century Ayyubid writer and expert on military matters.[1] He wrote a number of treatises, including a military manual for Saladin in 1187. His writings have proved an invaluable resources for medieval and military historians.

The well known treatise was entitled Tabsirat arbab al-albab fi kayfiyat al-najah fi al-hurub min al-anwa' wa-nashr a'lam al-a'lam fi al-'udad wa-al-alat al-mu'inah 'ala liqa' al-a'da' , or "Information for the intelligent on how to escape injury in combat; and the unfurling of the banners of instruction on equipment and engines which assist in encounters with enemies."[2]

Counterweight trebuchet[]

The first clearly written record of a counterweight trebuchet comes from Mardi bin Ali al-Tarsusi, who wrote a military manual for Saladin circa 1187. He describes a hybrid trebuchet that he said had the same hurling power as a traction machine pulled by fifty men due to "the constant force [of gravity], whereas men differ in their pulling force." (Showing his mechanical proficiency, Tarsusi designed his trebuchet so that as it was fired it cocked a supplementary crossbow, probably to protect the engineers from attack.)[3]

In his book, Medieval Siege, Jim Bradbury[4] extensively quotes from Mardi ibn Ali concerning mangonels of various types, including Arab, Persian and Turkish, describing what could be trebuchets, but not quoted as above. In On the Social Origins of Medieval Institutions,[5] more detailed quotes by Mardi ibn Ali may be found on the various types of trebuchets.

Notes[]

  1. Nicolle & McBride 1986:17
  2. Needham 1986:42
  3. Scott Farrell, Weaponry: The Trebuchet
  4. Jim Bradbury, Medieval Siege
  5. Philip Daileader, On the Social Origins of Medieval Institutions

References[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Mardi bin Ali al-Tarsusi and the edit history here.
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