Kallinikos (Callinicus) of Heliopolis, a Greek-speaking Jewish …
Years: 665 - 665
Kallinikos (Callinicus) of Heliopolis, a Greek-speaking Jewish Syrian refugee from the Arab conquest of Syria, invents, around 665, “Greek fire”, a primitive incendiary bomb of unknown but evidently petroleum-based composition that bursts into flame spontaneously when wet and cannot be doused with water.
Sand and—according to legend—urine are the only effective means of extinguishing the flames.
It can be expelled by a pumplike device, or siphon, similar to a nineteenth-century hand-pumped fire engine, and it may also be thrown from catapults in breakable containers.
The art of compounding the mixture is a state military secret so closely guarded that its precise composition remains unknown to this day.
The most likely ingredients are colloidal suspensions of metallic sodium, lithium, or potassium-or perhaps quicklime-in a petroleum base.
Locations
Groups
- Jews
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Heraclian dynasty
- Umayyad Caliphate (Damascus)
- Syrian people
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- Commerce
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- Conflict
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- Technology
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- Chemistry
