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Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page |
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#1 |
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 28
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My Grand Refutation to the General Counter-Arguments Made Against Me(Cont'd)
So there are no problems about the rock crumbling, and now we are back to talking about the issue of space. Thankfully for me again, it is also clear that space is not lacking on the Upper Deck of The Ship. The blatantly obvious clue here is the word “mariners”; even at the very tip of The Ship, there is enough room for multiple persons. Since the rock is described only as the bow of the ship and not as an entire ship (bow and stern), it is obvious that the rock would only widen when you move back towards the Tower of Ecthelion; there can only be more spaces behind the “front tip” of The Ship. Many artilleries can be placed just a bit behind the Second Wall, and they will be 700 feet up in the air. Indeed, all of the precise replicas of Minas Tirith that I have ever seen shows that many people can be fitted on the Upper Deck. All the things that might hinder the placement of artilleries on The Ship has now been eliminated. If the Gondorians still won’t place the artilleries on such a great height, then they are far below “sub-human” in terms of intelligence. The sheer amount of advantages that they are throwing away is appalling. Last edited by TheAzn; 08-13-2012 at 03:21 AM. |
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#2 | |
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 28
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My Grand Refutation to the General Counter-Arguments Made Against Me(Cont'd)
The only thing left against my arguments now is that the Mordorians simply might have used a far more technologically superior set of artilleries. My refutation to the argument, again, should have been easily understood from the beginning. There is a limit to how powerful the Mordorian artilleries can be. We know that the Mordorians were not using cannons because of several reasons. 1. It said so in the text itself. Quote:
So the best artilleries that the Mordorians are left with are trebuchets. One of the largest trebuchets, flinging an average pumpkin - about 10 to 20 lbs, almost the same as a human head - has a maximum range of far less than one mile. Here is the record list from Pumpkin Chuckin. http://www.punkinchunkin.com/current-world-record Look for a siege engint titled Yankee Siege II. Here is a Youtube video about it. The first trebuchet shown is Yankee Siege II. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NNbIVvtujZA Of course, it might be that the Mordorian artilleries were enhanced by “magic”. However, I have a refutation to that argument as well. Since I do not have a lot of time left, I will not post my refutation here. You can ask me for it later if you are curious. Then there is also a limit to how weak the Gondorian artilleries can be. No matter how Gondor was lacking in resources, an entire nation will always have more resources than a middle-income family of modern time. Yet, as seen in many Youtube videos, middle-income families can amazingly build ancient style artilleries that can compete with archery. Yes, some of these scrawny artilleries built by lay people may fall very short of standard, but they are still impressive given their cheapness. Ancient artilleries like ballistas, catapults and trebuchets required many people to operate. If the artilleries are not better than a simple bowman, then there is no point in building them. And I have made a strong point that Gondor MUST have artilleries. Last edited by TheAzn; 08-13-2012 at 02:58 AM. |
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#3 | |
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 28
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My Grand Refutation to the General Counter-Arguments Made Against Me (FINISH)
Some people here might be curious as to why I am a bit serious about this apparently trivial error in writing. I hope that I am able to explain this clearly: the inconsistencies created by this plot hole is largest that I have ever seen in the trilogy. 1.) As the quote explains, the Mordorian trenches were just outside the range of the Archers of Gondor. Being just outside the range of the archers, the workings of the enemies should have been well within the range of any serious artilleries. If Tolkien thought that the Gondorians only have very weak artilleries, then he is terribly mistaken. The inconsistencies of the plot here are horrendous. Quote:
So why am I excited? I am not just confirming the basic fact that Professor Tolkien, like every human authors out there, are not infallible. What I am excited about is that I believe that I have found one of Professor Tolkien’s greatest writing mistakes; I believe that I have found one of the greatest plot holes in the entire Lord of the Ring series. The Minas Tirith that Professor Tolkien described is being utilized nowhere near its highest potential, very nonsensical when we are talking about preparing for life and death struggles. Last edited by TheAzn; 08-13-2012 at 02:53 AM. |
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#4 | |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 785
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Again, it's only obvious from our perspective, a perspective we cannot assume to be universal. It's also worth considering that sieges of that nature were uncommon in Gondor, and in the later centures of the Third Age the Men of Gondor had spent most of their military endeavours in open battles, street-fighting in Osgiliath, skirmishes in Ithilien and Naval combat against Umbar and the Men of the Harad. Minas Tirith itself had not been beseiged since the end of the Second Age over three thousand years earlier, and so its unique defensibility had realistically never had a chance to be fully realised and exploited. Perhaps at the end of the Third Age the Men of Gondor simply lacked the experience or technological expertise to make engines of that nature and utilise them effectively. We must remember that this was not really the medieval world and the state of warfare was not identical to that of a period of real history. What I'm trying to say is that while I do agree with you that Minas Tirith probably would have been very well served by powerful artillery, I personally don't believe that the lack of artillery in the book is necessarily some kind of internal logical inconsistency on the part of Professor Tolkien when writing. I'm afraid to say that the Men of Gondor were not perfect and did not always think of everything, including things that might seem blatantly obvious to us. That being said, if this point is indeed "one of the greatest plot holes" in The Lord of the Rings then we can be extra thankful that we got a book with such a tight and consistent plot. I personally never liked the way the Men of Minas Tirith were given trebuchets in the films - they are too explicitly medieval/early Renaissance and too mechanical for me, which doesn't really fit with how I imagine the Dśnedain. Last edited by Zigūr; 08-13-2012 at 06:37 AM. Reason: clarification |
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#5 |
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Wight
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Settling down in Bree for the winter.
Posts: 208
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The notion that fortified cities often have less siege machinery than those outside the walls seems historical. One would think that if a people expends effort and money to build these big walls they would spend some effort on catapults and similar devices. Yet, does anyone know of walled cities with platforms for siege engines built into the walls?
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#6 | |
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 28
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One example that springs to my mind is the fortress of Euryalos connected to the New Wall of Syracuse, on the west side of the Epipolai Plateau. This is after all where the catapult was invented. The katapeltikon (arrow projector) and lithobolos (stone projector). Later the Romans called them Catapulta and Ballista respectively. The fortress of Euryalos was built solely for the purpose of having stone projectors and arrow projectors on top of. This held the North of Syracuse safe until 212 BCE when Marcellus invaded it. ![]() Other than Euryalos, there's been many more finds in Greek territories of walled artillery positions. Schramm excavated and analyzed the ruins at Ephyra finding the same. Washer-plates from catapults were found, and the walls were of sufficient width and volume that they were not just meant for soldiers. Source: Greek and Roman Artillery 399 BC-AD 363 .................................................. .... To keep with the European theme for a moment, one need to look no further than the great Julius Caesar himself. Even in something temporary like Roman camps, ballistas were kept within wooden "towers", ready to be used at any moment. Sources: Caesar: Life of A Colossus .................................................. .... But what about other cultures? In terms of China, there are both textual as well as archeological evidence of wall mounted artillery from as far back as the Han dynasty. I believe that Joseph Needham's volume on catapults covered this the best. Source: Science and Civilisation in China: Volume 5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology, Part 6, Military Technology: Missiles and Sieges by Joseph Needham and Robin Yates I am not familiar with the artilleries of other Non-European cultures, so I might have to do more research on them. .................................................. .... Last edited by TheAzn; 08-14-2012 at 10:59 AM. |
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#7 |
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A Northern Soul
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Valinor
Posts: 1,847
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A friendly reminder...
Don't take personal offense to differing opinions. It's not necessary to call people wrong, confused, or ignorant, especially when dealing with less explicit features of the stories. Continue to make your case without personal remarks.
__________________
...take counsel with thyself, and remember who and what thou art. |
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#8 | |||||||||||
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 28
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1) The first would be the Hornburg. The attack upon Rohan was sudden too. Yet, the Hornburg was relatively well prepared. This is despite the fact that Theoden has just recently been freed from the influence of Saruman. 2) Saruman was definitely caught off guard. Yet, merely a short time after returning to the Orthanc, he immediately figured out how to use Isengard its near fullest potential. The great forges were started and some Ents burned. Unfortunately for Saruman, this just makes the Ents more angry. Still, people can do amazing things even when surprised. Quote:
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Below is a video showing Pre-teens firing their homemade artillery: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRazO...6157DAE738106D Quote:
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Last edited by TheAzn; 08-14-2012 at 01:06 AM. |
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#9 | |||
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 785
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#10 | ||
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 28
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If you want to know my complete arguments, please read the posts titled: My Grand Refutation to the General Counter-Arguments Made Against Me / My Grand Refutation to the General Counter-Arguments Made Against Me(Cont'd) / My Grand Refutation to the General Counter-Arguments Made Against Me (FINISH) The posts are located on the bottom half of page 1. |
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#11 | ||
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 28
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#12 | |
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Shade of Carn Dūm
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Toronto
Posts: 479
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Claiming that criticisms of your arguments have been disputed without indicating where doesn’t work with me. Mostly you appear to just ignore criticism and jump to irrelevancies that a falling palantķr would almost certainly kill a man if it hit him straight on. You are only assuming that Minas Tirith even had siege engines. The text doesn’t back up your assumption anywhere. Quite likely it can be taken as something that should go without saying, but in medieval accounts of siege warfare that I have read almost all the siege engines were in the hands of the attackers, not in the hands of the defenders. Seemingly siege engines were far more useful for attackers to use against fortress walls than for defenders to use against moving targets, as seems reasonable to my thinking and to those of some others here. Diagrams of siege engines on the top of Minas Tirith don’t prove anything when an accurate diagram shows that a siege engine lobbing a rock would lob it just as far if the siege engine was on an outer wall. The first throw might well kill 10 or 20 of the foe at most. Then the foe would see the stones were coming and get out of the way. When using a catapult to lob stones at the walls, walls don’t run away. The foe can find somewhere they think there is a weak point, and keep lobbing at the same place, hoping that the stone will crack there. But Tolkien explains clearly why this tactic is not used at Minas Tirith. Here the walls had been built too strongly. It seems to be a fact in medieval and older battles that siege engines were not greatly used by the defenders in a siege. If you think I and others are wrong, and in theory we might be, then point out historical counter-examples. Just saying Tolkien was wrong in his writing, was horrendous beyond words, doesn’t convince me at all. Those are only the empty words of someone who has provided no evidence that Tolkien was wrong. That historically defenders of a besieged fortress didn’t greatly rely on siege engines seems to be the best evidence that siege engines were less useful in the defense of a fortress than you imagine. Claiming that your posts support your arguments when they don’t doesn’t strengthen your arguments. Last edited by jallanite; 08-13-2012 at 09:13 PM. |
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#13 | ||||||||||||||||
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Animated Skeleton
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 28
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I am not sure how useful my responses will be, but I will give it a try.
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And what irrelevancies? In case you do not remember, one of the points that miss Gal kept on repeating was that, because they only need to fling light materials like human heads, the Mordorians can outrange the Gondorians. I refuted her arguments by stating what should have been the obvious: the Gondorians most likely used light projectiles as well. There is of course, a problem with this rebuttal. The Mordorian projectiles were not meant to cause physical damages, while the Gondorian projectiles must. This is when I brought in the palantir as an easy to understand example. Can light Gondorian projectiles cause substantial damages? The answer is absolutely yes, and most of the last page are dedicated to me giving the evidences. Quote:
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So what are my evidences? 1) Even without the threat of Mordorian artilleries, there are still overwhelming incentives for the Gondorians to build the best artilleries possible. These incentives are the threats of the Mumakils,armored trolls and siege towers, all of which the archers themselves cannot handle alone. Like all human beings, I presume that the Gondorians would respond to strong incentives. And this presumption is most likely sound, for a lot of ancient cities with sizeable walls very likely had artilleries on them. See post below for evidence. 2) Although Minas Tirith has not been besieged in a long time, the other important cities surrounding the area most likely experienced sieges frequently. This alone creates many chances for artilleries to be invented (if they are not already) and enhanced. 3) Despite the incentives, it is true there would not be much artilleries if there are no spaces. Non-essential building could have been torn away create more space. The Ship Rock is secure and is enhanced by the “a mighty craft”. Based on the description of the book itself, there are no lack of spaces on the Upper Deck. With such overwhelming incentives to use artilleries, and not much reasonable hindrances, Gondor most likely did use artilleries on Minas Tirith. 4) Finally, it is a fact that building respectable ancient artilleries is not really hard. Even Highschool students can build such devices. With such overwhelming incentives to use artilleries, and not much reasonable hindrances, Gondor most likely did use artilleries on Minas Tirith. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWXEqJlj8pM Quote:
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Last edited by TheAzn; 08-14-2012 at 10:58 AM. |
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