Episode one begins with the development of gunpowder by a Chinese alchemist, used for fireworks displays and later military applications, including gunpowder-packed arrows, cannons, and grenades. The episode examines the "fire lance," believed to be the first firearm. It was a bamboo tube with gunpowder and a projectile packed into it, highly effective but only at short ranges. Gunpowder remained a Chinese secret until the 13th century when Roger Bacon, a Franciscan monk, learned of it, saying, "the sound of thunder may be artificially produced in the air with greater resulting horror than if it had been produced by natural causes." As the episode jumps ahead to more modern times, it examines the development of hand cannons made of bronze metal tubes and the development of the Matchlock, the Wheellock, and the Snaplock.. This episode ends with the lead-up to the place of armsin pre-revolution America and British General Gage's explicit orders to remove weapons from the colonists, resulting in the famed "shot heard 'round the world."
Name | Type | Role | |
---|---|---|---|
Baron Blakley | Writer | ||
Kevin R. Hershberger | Director |