Greek Fire was a mysterious liquid flame weapon used by the Byzantine Empire in the 7th century that could burn on water, stick to surfaces, and was nearly impossible to extinguish; created by engineer Callinicus, its exact formula remains unknown today despite theories suggesting it contained crude oil, sulfur, resin, or quicklime, and it played a crucial role in protecting Constantinople for centuries before the secret was lost.
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Greek Fire — The Weapon That Burned on Water #shortsAjouté :
Imagine fighting a fire in the middle of the ocean. Now imagine the ocean burning, too. In the 7th century, enemies of the Byzantine Empire witnessed something so terrifying, many believed it came straight from hell itself. A mysterious liquid flame blasted from ships, stuck to wood, flesh, and sails, and somehow kept burning on water. This was Greek fire, the ancient superweapon historians still cannot fully explain. And before we uncover one of history's deadliest secrets, subscribe for more forgotten mysteries, ancient [music] weapons, and unbelievable true stories from the past.
The year was 678 AD, Constantinople, the heart of the Byzantine Empire, was under attack. Enemy fleets [music] surrounded the city, and the empire was dangerously close to collapse. Then the Byzantines unleashed their secret weapon. Using bronze tubes mounted on ships like ancient flamethrowers, they fired [music] streams of burning liquid across the sea. Enemy ships exploded into flames within seconds. Sailors jumped into the water to escape, only to discover the fire floating beside them.
Imagine realizing the sea itself is trying to kill you. At that point, honestly, retirement starts sounding attractive. The weapon was reportedly created by an engineer named Callinicus, but here's the strange part. Nobody today knows the exact formula.
Historians believe it may have contained crude oil, sulfur, resin, or quicklime.
[music] Some theories suggest the mixture reacted violently with water, making it nearly impossible to extinguish, >> [music] >> and that mystery made it even more terrifying. The Byzantine Empire guarded Greek fire like the world's biggest secret. Only a small group knew how to make it. Enemies tried to steal the [music] formula for centuries, but failed because Greek fire wasn't just a weapon, it was survival. For hundreds of years, it protected Constantinople and helped keep the Byzantine Empire alive.
Some enemy sailors reportedly panicked the moment Byzantine ships appeared on the horizon, not because of the ships, but because of the fire. Eventually, the formula vanished. Maybe key engineers died. [music] Maybe records were destroyed. Or maybe the empire kept the secret so well, it disappeared forever.
Today, Greek fire remains one of history's greatest lost technologies. A weapon so powerful, the world still fears it centuries later. And somewhere in history, the secret of the fire that burned on water may still be waiting to be [music] rediscovered.
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