It helped them knock down walls in battle ant take out ships andenemy soldiersthey could even launch sick bodies over an enemy wall to sicken the enemy duringsieges.
stewy from greece
Ceaser-this didnt help me but it might help u !! ;-)
Cleisthenes
he said dohh
its from ancient Greece
ancient Greece and Rome
The word catapult came from ancient greece. It was also invented there. It means from two seperate words kata pultos
stewy from greece
in 399 BC by the ancient Greeks at Syracuse for warfare
the difference in the ancient catapult and a canon are that the canon is more of a gun and uses gunpowder where as the catapult usesrope as a booster to sling the rock!
The first catapult was invented in ancient Greece around 399 BC by Dionysius the Elder of Syracuse. It was called the "springald" and was a weapon of war used to hurl projectiles at enemy troops or fortifications.
It was invented in ancient Greece (in 399 BC) by Dionysius the Elder of Syracuse. The Romans later added wheels to the catapult to make it more maneuverable. A double-armed catapult (also called the trebuchet) was invented by Mariano Taccola of Siena during the middle Ages, about AD 1400.
That is the correct spelling of catapult (ancient flinging weapon, or to be flung upward).
David in the Bible had a catapult with which he beat Goliath. [religious scholars please correct] And the Australian Aborigines use catapults. The ancient Greeks are known to use beam catapults to harass their enemies. The place and date are probably several in each case.
He help to build most of the buildings and column in ancient Greece when he was alive.
the connect because the spartins went to war againts ancient greece and the greece depended on there gods to help them
The ballista (also called the catapult) is a device that hurls heavy objects or arrows over a large distance. It was invented in ancient Greece (in 399 BC) by Dionysius the Elder of Syracuse. The Romans later added wheels to the catapult to make it more maneuverable. The catapult was a major weapon of warfare for well over a thousand years.