The discovery of the Claw of Archimedes:
The Claw of Archimedes is a weapon that he is said
to have designed in order to defend the city of Syracuse. Also known as
"the ship shaker," the claw consisted of a crane-like arm from which
a large metal grappling hook was suspended. When the claw was dropped onto an
attacking ship the arm would swing upwards, lifting the ship out of the water
and possibly sinking it.
These machines featured prominently during
the Second Punic War in 214 BC, when the Roman
Republic attacked Syracuse with a fleet of at
least 120 Quinqueremes
under Marcus Claudius Marcellus. When the Roman
fleet approached the city walls under cover of darkness, the machines were
deployed, sinking many ships and throwing the attack into confusion. Historians
such as Polybius
and Livy attributed
heavy Roman losses to these machines, together with catapults also
devised by Archimedes.
The plausibility of this invention was
tested in 1999 in the BBC
series Secrets of the Ancients and again in early 2005 in the Discovery
Channel series Superweapons of the Ancient World. The producers of Superweapons
brought together a group of engineers tasked with conceiving and implementing a
design that was realistic, given what we know about Archimedes. Within seven
days they were able to test their creation, and they did succeed in tipping
over a model of a Roman ship so that it would sink. While this does not prove
the existence of the Claw, it suggests that it would have been possible.
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