
Greek Fire — The Byzantine Superweapon Whose Secret Died with an Empire
Greek fire (Greek: Ὑγρὸν Πῦρ, 'liquid fire') was the most devastating weapon of the medieval world. First deployed by the Byzantine Empire against the Arab fleet at the Siege of Constantinople in 672 AD, it was a liquid incendiary compound that burned on water, could not be extinguished with water (which reportedly made it burn more fiercely), and was projected from bronze siphon tubes mounted on the prows of Byzantine warships — the world's first flamethrower.
The formula was a state secret of the Byzantine Empire, known only to the Kallinikos family who invented it and the emperor's inner circle. Byzantine emperors warned their successors never to reveal the formula, even under torture. When Constantinople fell to the Ottoman Turks in 1453, the secret died with the empire — no confirmed recipe has ever been found, making Greek fire one of history's great lost technologies.
Modern historians and chemists have proposed reconstructions based on contemporary descriptions: the flame was liquid, sticky, burned on water, and produced thick smoke. The leading candidate ingredients are naphtha (crude petroleum), quicklime (which reacts exothermically with water, explaining the water-burning effect), sulfur, and pine resin (for adhesion and thickening). This blueprint presents the best-understood reconstruction — but the true formula remains unknown.
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