![]() ![]() ![]() The stock in which the bamboo bow is fixed. The magazine in which the ten or twelve small arrows are laid (one on the other) when the weapon is made ready for use. THE CONSTRUCTION OF THE CHINESE REPEATING CROSSBOW, Figs. The impetus of the heavy bolt of the mediaeval European crossbow which had a thick steel bow, was sufficient to destroy life without the aid of such a cruel accessory as poison. For this reason the head of the arrow was sometimes dipped in poison, in order that a slight wound might prove fatal. ![]() The small and light arrow of the comparatively weak Chinese crossbow here described had little penetrative power. The effect of a continuous stream of a thousand arrows flying into a crowd of assailants-in so short a space as fifteen seconds-would, of course, be infinitely greater than that of only two hundred in the same time, especially as the arrows of barbaric nations were often smeared with poison. On the other hand, one hundred men with bows, or with ordinary crossbows that shot only one arrow at a discharge, would not be able to loose more than about two hundred arrows in fifteen seconds. When bows, and crossbows which shot one bolt at a time, were the usual missive weapons of the Chinese, it is probable that the repeating crossbow was very effective for stopping the rush of an enemy in the open, or for defending fortified positions.įor example, one hundred men with repeating crossbows could send a thousand arrows into their opponents' ranks in a quarter of a minute. The interesting and unique feature of this crossbow is its repeating action, which though so crudely simple acts perfectly and enables the crossbowman to discharge ten arrows in fifteen seconds. In the recent war between China and Japan, 1894-95, the repeating crossbow was frequently seen among troops who came from the interior of the first-named country. Though the antiquity of the repeating crossbow is so great that the date of its introduction is beyond conjecture, it is to this day carried by Chinese soldiers in the more remote districts of their empire. HERE we have surely the most curious of all the weapons I have described. ![]()
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