Long before drive by shootings and police stabbings, our ancestors used some truly badass weapons against each other. Our ancient ancestors seemed to have a knack for finding the most gruesome and painful ways to attack each other – you could even argue that no modern weapons come close to being able to inflict the same level of suffering as these ancient weapons. You might even be forgiven for being thankful for guns with their quick deaths when you read this list of top 10 badass weapons.
This is a list of the most badass weapons in ancient history. This list excludes weapons beyond the medieval period.


Culverins were medieval guns. These were often used by horsemen in a medieval kind of drive-by shooting. The hand culverin were made of a simple smoothbore tube, closed at one end except for a small hole designed to fire the gunpowder. The tube was held in place by a wooden piece which could be held under the arm. The tube was loaded with gunpowder and lead bullets. The culverin was fired by inserting a lighted cord into the hole. In the image above, the hand culverin is between two small canons.
These hand culverins soon evolved into heavier portable culverins, around 40kg in weight, which required a swivel for support and aiming. Such culverins were further equiped with back-loading sabots to facilitate reloading, and were often used on ships – a precursor to the modern canon.

A caltrop is a weapon made up of two (or more) sharp nails or spines arranged so that one of them always points upward from a stable base (for example, a tetrahedron). Caltrops serve to slow down the advance of horses, war elephants, and human troops. It was said to be particularly effective against the soft feet of camels.

In modern times Caltrops have been used at times during labor strikes and other disputes. Such devices were used by some to destroy the tires of management and replacement workers. Because of the prevalence of caltrops during the Caterpillar strike of the mid-1990s, the state of Illinois passed a law making the possession of such devices a misdemeanor.
Iron caltrops were used as early as 331 BC at Gaugamela according to Quintus Curtius. They were known to the Romans as tribulus or sometimes as Murex ferreus, meaning ‘jagged iron’. The Roman writer Vegetius said:
The Roman soldiers rendered [the armed chariots] useless chiefly by the following contrivance: at the instant the engagement began, they strewed the field of battle with caltrops, and the horses that drew the chariots, running full speed on them, were infallibly destroyed. A caltrop is a device composed of four spikes or points arranged so that in whatever manner it is thrown on the ground, it rests on three and presents the fourth upright.
Punji sticks and caltrops were used in the Vietnam War, sometimes with poison or manure on the points.

Back in the day, you had to scale the walls of a city or castle before you could rape and pillage. This led someone to the brilliant idea that you could pour boiling oil on top of the people trying to climb in.

Oil was not difficult to come by as the women would all donate their cooking oil (a small price to pay to keep their privates private). If the town ran out of oil, they would use boiling water, or other easily obtainable things like sand.
Castles were often built with special holes in the sides to make it easier to pour this blistering liquid on unsuspecting climbers. They were so effective that they were called murder-holes. These holes were also useful for firing arrows at attackers or throwing rocks. Similar holes, called machicolations, were often located in the curtain walls of castles and city walls. The parapet would project over corbels so that holes would be located over the exterior face of the wall, and arrows could be shot at, rocks dropped on, or boiling water poured over, any attackers near the wall.
Various sources claim that molten lead was also used as a weapon in this way, but there is no historical evidence to support that view.

We all know that crossbows are badass – but what about the arbalest? The Arbalest was a larger version of the crossbow and it had a steel prod (“bow”). Since an arbalest was much larger than earlier crossbows, and because of the greater tensile strength of steel, it had a greater force. The strongest windlass-pulled arbalests could have up to 22 kN (5000 lbf) strength and be accurate up to 500m. A skilled arbalestier (arblaster) could shoot two bolts per minute. Arbalests were sometimes considered inhumane or unfair weapons, since an inexperienced crossbowman could use one to kill a knight who had a lifetime of training.

The use of crossbows in European warfare dates back to Roman times and is again evident from the battle of Hastings until about 1500 AD. They almost completely superseded hand bows in many European armies in the twelfth century for a number of reasons. Although a longbow had greater range, could achieve comparable accuracy and faster shooting rate than an average crossbow, crossbows could release more kinetic energy and be used effectively after a week of training, while a comparable single-shot skill with a longbow could take years of practice. Crossbows were eventually replaced in warfare by gunpowder weapons, although early guns had slower rates of fire and much worse accuracy than contemporary crossbows.
This weapon was so badass, that Pope Innocent II (pictured to the left) banned them at the second Lateran Council in 1139:
We prohibit under anathema that murderous art of crossbowmen and archers, which is hateful to God, to be employed against Christians and Catholics from now on.
Today the crossbow often has a complicated legal status due to the possibility of lethal use and its similarities with both firearms.

The Hunga Munga is an iron fighting tool named by the African tribes south of Lake Tchad; also called “danisco” by the Marghi, “goleyo” by the Musgu, and “njiga” by the Bagirmi. It is handheld weapon and has a metal pointed blade with a curved back section and separate spike near the handle. The weapon can be used in hand to hand combat (Melee) although it is normally thrown with a spinning action.

These African iron weapons are thrown with a rotatory motion (similar to an Australian boomerang), and cause deep wounds with their projecting blades. They come in many shapes and sizes and they were (and are) used across Africa from the Upper Nile on the east through Central Africa by Lake Tchad to the Africans of the Gaboon in West Africa. In parts of Central Africa, these weapons are shaped like a bird’s head.
This weapon is used in the Role-Playing game Mage The Ascension by the Euthanatos characters for their magical rituals. Buffy (from Buffy the Vampire Slayer – image to the right) used one of these from time to time to battle demons that enslave their victims and force them to give up their identities. The hunga munga was used in the opening credits of the show.

The Morning Star (also sometimes called the goedendag or Holy Water sprinkler) is a term used for a variety of club-like weapons with one or more sharp spikes sticking out of it. It would normally have one big spike poking out of the top with a bunch of smaller ones around the sides. These are often thought of as peasant weapons, but there were also very high quality ones made for the rich guys.

These weapons were most effective when you hit someone on the head with them. The Holy Water sprinkler, was a morning star popular with the English army from the sixteenth century and made in series by professional smiths. Some of them were over 6 foot long! This was the favored weapon of King John of Bohemia who was blind – he would just sit on his horse and swing the thing until he hit someone (preferably one of the bad guys).
In the game Mortal Kombat Deception, the character Havik (in the picture to the right) weilds a morning star in his form of armed combat. The Morning Star is considered to be a Holy Weapon in Dungeons and Dragons. Of course, when not engaged in battle, this was a useful tool for keeping thine wyfe and kids in line, or as a backscratcher. Badass!

One of the upsides to siege warfare in the middle ages was the huge number of dead bodies from people who had died of plague or other mysterious illnesses. A very handy use for these bodies was biological warfare! Most towns would barricade themselves behind huge walls that could not be breached by the enemy – but they often relied on outside sources of fresh water. This is where the bodies come in. You could dump a few bodies in the rivers leading in to the town and all you had to do was wait! A perfect opportunity to sit back and watch some jousting.

After a while, the plague would infect the town and you have a great victory! Obviously you can’t rape and pillage too soon, but at least you didn’t lose any men (except maybe the poor guys that had to carry the bodies to the river). In the image to the left, we see Jane Godbotherer being treated for the plague. She will eventually end up being used as a biological weapon.
Plague infection in a human occurs when a person is bitten by a flea that has been infected by biting a rodent that itself has been infected by the bite of a flea carrying the disease.
This type of warfare was used before the advent of catapults which were more much more effective at infecting towns with disease.

With the advent of the trebuchet (a very high powered catapult) came the realization that plagued bodies were no longer needed to slowly kill people in a fortified town or castle – you could simply catapult a rotting or diseased animal over the ramparts – or for truly fast results, you could fling over a few beehives. Dead horses were a popular weapon in this form of biological warfare, though anything filled with disease would do the trick.
The counterweight trebuchet appeared in both Christian and Muslim lands around the Mediterranean in the twelfth century. It could fling three-hundred-pound (140 kg) projectiles at high speeds into enemy fortifications. Trebuchets were invented in China in about the 4th century BC, came to Europe in the 6th century AD, and did not become obsolete until the 16th century, well after the introduction of gunpowder. Trebuchets were far more accurate than other medieval catapults.
The trebuchet could launch projectiles a distance of over half a mile (over 750 m).

Picture, if you will, a slow day on the seas. The water is calm, the sky is blue, when suddenly, from out of nowhere, it starts raining fire! You discover that you have just been engaged by a Greek warship and they have flame-throwers! Yes – that’s right, the Greeks used flame-throwers in their naval battles from around 670 AD. So what do you do when you are being fired on by flame-throwers? According to one witness:
“Every time they hurl the fire at us, we go down on our elbows and knees, and beseech Our Lord to save us from this danger.”

In other words, not much! The recipe for Greek fire was a closely guarded secret – even now no one really knows what it was made of. Modern scientists have ventured a few guesses: petroleum, niter, sulfur; or naphtha, quicklime, sulfur; or phosphorus and saltpeter. Regardless of the recipe, the stuff was heated in a cauldron on the ship and squirted out a giant syringe at the enemy.
But… the Chinese beat them to it
In the 3rd century BC, a flammable liquid substance was found in the Gao Nu County, located in the northeast portion of what is now the Shaanxi Province. This “flammable liquid” (called Meng Huo You) was probably petroleum that had seeped through the ground and was floating above the local waters. Ever the ingenious people, the Chinese put it to good use in destroying towns built with timber.
In 900 AD, the Chinese also invented the Pen Huo Qi – a piston based naphtha flamethrower. The double-piston pump flamethrower was carefully documented and illustrated in the Chinese military manual known as the Wujing Zongyao (image on the right). It was, of course, used in siege warfare.

I am sure most will agree that it doesn’t get more badass than this. A scythed chariot was a war chariot with one or more blades mounted on both ends of the axle. The scythed chariot was pulled by a team of four horses and manned by a crew of up to three men, one driver and two warriors. Theoretically the scythed chariot would plow through infantry lines, cutting combatants in half or at least opening gaps in the line which could be exploited. It was difficult to get horses to charge into the tight phalanx formation of the Greek/Macedonian hoplites (infantry). The scythed chariot avoided this inherent problem for cavalry, by the scythe cutting into the formation, even when the horses avoided the men.
The blades extended horizontally for a meter on the sides of the chariot. Xenophon, an eyewitness, describing the scythed chariots at the battle of Cunaxa says, “These had thin scythes extending at an angle from the axle and also under the driver’s seat, turned towards the ground”.
A scythed chariot can be seen in the chariot race of the movie Ben Hur, operated by Messala (here called a “Greek chariot” or a “beaked chariot.”). Scythed chariots are seen in the first Colosseum scene in the movie Gladiator. In the film Alexander by Oliver Stone, scythed chariots are shown charging into Macedonian phalanx during the beginning of Battle of Gaugamela scene.
This article is licensed under the GFDL because it contains quotations from the Wikipedia articles: Crossbow, Caltrop, Trebuchet, Scythed Chariot
Contributor: Xanthius




















Mom424: You’re too hard on yourself. I find you to be a very intelligent and fascinating person with far more experience than me.
Mystern; I am also old enough to realize that at LEAST 1/3 of the human race is smarter than me…you do realize that I am not too hard on myself because that must mean that I believe around 2/3s to be lacking…….
Sorry for the double post but I must add that the listverse viewers imho beat the odds of the general population…..
And to think I just happened to stumble across this site one day while I was bored. This is only the 2nd site I’ve ever felt the urge to comment on.
1st one for me….and we’ve had constant internet access since 1994.
Same here, I think half the ppl found this on stumbleupon..whee! now I’m hooked. I like the new layout, but I miss the centered feeling!
I’ll be back for the 100th comment to claim my arbelest or maybe a trebuchet, anyone selling these on ebay or amazon?!
Harsha: haha yes – you can get a mini trebuchet on Amazon – it is on our Top 10 Gifts for the Guy Who Has Everything
Must agree with you there… This is the first and only website that I’ve felt to comment upon… Perhaps people who enjoy lists are generally smarter than the rest of the population
A morning star, also called a goededag- which is Dutch for ‘good day’. wonder why it’s called that; guess it wouldn’t be such a good day if one of those hit you over the head…
but yeah, a great list, and now that i’ve gotten used to the new layout, i really love it!
SocialButterfly; Its just this particular list site. It credits readership with a modicum of intelligence and I don’t have to weed through 10 Biggest *****s on TV, or 10 Best Bukake videos…
yes. awesome
Hmmmm….”Top 10 Biggest *****s on TV.”
I….I could get into that. I love *****s, after all. Not as much as I love bukkake, of course, but they are a close second…and third.
jfrater: paying attention?
Dorothy Parker is badass!!! Oh wait, wrong list.
SlickWilly: o_O
Angelina: XD
Mom424: Just remember what George Carlin said.
“Think about just how stupid your average person is… and then realize that half of them are stupider than that.”
Ooh – doing well on Reddit:
http://reddit.com/info/67ur1/comments/
Nearly at the front page!
We’re very lucky not to be living during those period. I promise not to complain no more.
I was waiting for the morning star! I toured a museum that had them on display and remembered them from a decade ago. They had both the short, hand-held variety and the large, pole variety. They also had some very nice, dangerous looking halberds on display.
The dead bodies are way badass. Cool
We learned about most of those in World History. But I said “OOGA BOOGA” when I saw that Hunga Munga.
I want a hunga munga!!! And just for the record I love buffy too! I have the whole DVD set!
The trebuchet is the atom bomb of its time!
ok, you ahve to put the Mughal Battle Rockets that they used. They were amazing. its also what the english eventually adopted and used against america, hence the line “And the rockets red glare, the bombs bursting in air” in the national anthem. But the mughal rockets had swords attached so that when they wobbled (before they hit the ground) it would be able to cause serious damage that way as well. It truly was a badass weapon
actually i was corrected, the Rockets were used AGAINST the mughal empire by Tupu Sultan of a neighboring waring state. But either way, they are still awesome
Trebuchets were the “nuclear weapon” of the day. If you saw one of those bad boys coming down the road to your castle, you knew it was a matter of days, maybe just hours to surrender.
Great list, I love medieval stuff. Trebuchets are amazing, in Age of Empires they were really usefull…so they’re selling miiatures on amazon…hmmm
Any list involving a trebuchet and Ben Hur has my support
What about the falchion ?
Now there’s a handy tool
This list is missing the flail. Similar to the morning star but with a chain it adds a whole new dimension to combat.
Sweet list
I used to be called a smart-ass. Now I mostly keep my mouth shut. Eventually people that get to know me find that I have a pretty well rounded knowledge base and then they ask me questions. If I don’t know the answer I say so. I rarely ever state anything as fact, even if I am pretty sure. I also rarely ever tell anybody that they are wrong, I usually say something to the effect that I was under a different impression, or that I thought …….. I find that life is too short to get into an argument with an idiot. Even if you do win, you’ve won nothing. It’s like playing games against preschool children.
There is some pretty awesome ***** on this list. Kinda too bad it was all designed for killing people.
What a great list.
I never knew that thing was called a “Hunga Munga”
Love the trebuchet. It is truly badass and is also useful in the present for hurling pianos, pumpkins whatever. And of course, for Mony Python fans, hurling cows. Prenez la vache!
Good list, but have you ever seen the Roman Scorpion? Each legion had like two dozen or so of them and basically they were smaller sized ballistas. They shot a long iron arrow that could impale a few men at a time, combined with the QUICK reload time it was a truly deadly weapon.
Here is a picture..
http://www.michtoy.com/MTSCnewSite/figures_kits_folder/seil_models/sa54001.jpg
sddgrant: wow – that looks great – a definitely number 11 for the list for sure!
Badass list!!!
But why no mention of the Francesca or the infamous bearded axes?
Those were badass weapons
and me thinks that the gurkha kukri and the indian katar should be included as well
here some pics
bagh nakh http://therionarms.com/sold/com005d.jpg
kukri http://www.ikedaswords.com/img/CU/CU_kukri1.jpg
francesca http://amobhitman.com/files/thumbnails/PH2120.jpe
bearded axe (skeggox) http://www.medieval-weaponry.co.uk/acatalog/DX628GClose.jpg
katar http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/f/f5/Ornamental_katar.jpg/468px-Ornamental_katar.jpg
Along the lines of dead bodies, engineers used to use dead pigs to blow up castle walls. They’d mine under the wall, load up the tunnel with dead pigs and let the resultant methane gas do the rest.
The list is great. I probably would have included elephants and/or claymores, but to each their own.
Very interesting lists. I’m such a sucker for melee weapons that I wish there were more included here, but in terms of ‘badass’ then you really do need to go for the heavy projectiles eventually.
Mystern- Directions, please? I’ll bring the Dew.
Arisma: Hey, anytime you happen to be in Salt Lake City on a Saturday or Sunday feel free to stop by. Sunday mornings I make breakfast for everyone.
Many images of Monty Python and the Holy Grail came up in my head with your description of how valuable a trebuchet is.
I laffed heartily at the alternative uses for the Morning Star. BUTTSCRATCHER!
badass weapons? what about a pair of pliers and a blowtorch? and somebody getting medieval?
i think i would have some “biological warefare” if someone charged me with one of these weapons. i might poop my pants. that might keep them at arms distance
i didnt see the yo yo mentioned here ….maybe a new list idea badass weapons that are now toys
I think we now need to see a list of modern day badass weapons. And we may need a list of more than 20 for that.
Pretty cool list! The only thing is I think the arbalest could be replaced with the Chu Ko Nu, or the Manchurian Repeating Crossbow. I mean, come on! 10 bolts in 15 sec? BADASS.
Another interesting fact about the “greek fire” ,which i’d read in an encyclopedia at school, is that it could not be doused with water; rather it burnt more fiercely! That’s the unique thing that modern scientists have failed to replicate.
Great list.. keep up the ‘badass’ work.
The Flail (or ball and chain) should definately have been included as one of the top 10 badass weapons. I don’t have the mental capacity to figure out the kind of force you can hit someone with using a flail, but its huge.
le hunga munga is evil looking…
i shall ask someone that i know of to put it in their game
WHAT!!! No scottish caveman clubs??? They were soo cool.
I was about to comment on Havok using the Morning Star when I saw that you had already added it! Doesn’t he have that weapon in Armaggedon?
flails are probably the best ancient weapon of all time because its like impossible to block just throwing it out there
C’mon jaime… come up with part II of this list =^_^=
“Culverins were medieval guns. These were often used by horsemen in a medieval kind of drive-by shooting.”
The first of many funny sentences on the list. And a great list at that, specially when there are many variations and methods used back then.
As for the Morningstar issue, I always considered Morningstar as an addition to a weapon. Whether it was a mace, or a flail, or a spear, a Morningstar meant more piercing damage, usually in the form of additional spikes.
You said sulfer twice in the Greek fire article
repeating crossbows are badass too…..
(they were invented in china and could fire up to five poison tipped bolts in rapid succession)
The idea of medieval firearms being used from horseback is based on a single illustration from the renaissance. Its very doubtful that they were ever used in the way, due to inherent difficulties in use.
Chinese Chu Ko Nu should be on there, the semi-automatic crossbow!
Actually a trebuchet is nothing like a catapult. A catapult is a torsion weapon, while the trebuchet is a counter-weight weapon. The catapult would use twisted sinews to provide power. The trebuchet would use a large counter-weight to fling loads farther.
What about the Ghurka Khukri knife?
http://www.m4040.com/Survival/Ghurka/Khukri%20Modification.htm