Panjagan

Panjagān was either a projectile weapon or an archery technique used by the late military of Sasanian Persia, by which a volley of five arrows was fired.[1] No examples of the device have survived, but it is alluded to by later Islamic authors.[2]

Name

The name panjagān (Middle Persian for "five-fold")[3] is reconstructed from its Arabized forms recorded by the Islamic authors al-Tabari (بنجكان banjakān, فنجقان fanjaqān), al-Jahiz, and al-Maqdisi (فنرجان fanrajān).[1] The word banjakiyya (بنجكية, "a volley of five arrows") mentioned by al-Jawaliqi is also related.[3]

History

Al-Tabari records the use of panjagān by the Sasanian army during the Yemeni campaign of Wahriz against the Aksumites of Ethiopia, noting that the latter had not encountered it before.[4] The author makes another allusion when describing the assault by the Persian asāwira (descendants of the Sasanian aswārān heavy cavalry) that killed Mas'ud ibn Amr, the governor of Basra, in 684 AD during the Second Islamic Civil War. As the advance of the 400-strong asāwira cavalry was halted by spearmen in the street, their commander Māh-Afrīdūn ordered to shoot by "fanjaqān", thus they hit them with "2,000 arrows in one burst", forcing them to retreat.[5][6]

Analysis

A. Siddiqi has translated the word as five-pointed/five-barbed arrow, but C. E. Bosworth consider this interpretation unlikely.[3] Boss proposed that the term refers to a military technique of rapid firing of five arrows in succession. However, Ahmad Tafazzoli's analysis of Middle Persian military terminology suggests that it was actually a device, probably a type of crossbow.[1] Furthermore, a device capable of shooting five arrows simultaneously has been described in the work of Ā'īn-Nāmah.[1] According to Kaveh Farrokh, use of the panjagan allowed the archer to shoot with greater speed, volume, and focus, creating a "kill zone".[2] Thus, it may have been developed for the wars against the Göktürks and the Hephthalites, who were known for their agile cavalrymen.[7]

See also

  • Nawak, a Sasanian arrow-guide
  • Repeating crossbow, an ancient Chinese weapon
  • Mad minute, a pre-WWI British military exercise for rapid firing and reloading

References

  1. Farrokh, Kaveh; Maksymiuk, Katarzyna; Garcia, Javier Sanchez (2018). The Siege of Amida (359 CE). Archeobooks. pp. 44–45. ISBN 978-83-7051-887-5.
  2. Farrokh, Kaveh (2012). Sassanian Elite Cavalry AD 224–642. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-78200-848-4.
  3. Al-Tabari; Bosworth, C. E. (1999). History of al-Tabari Vol. 5, The: The Sasanids, the Byzantines, the Lakhmids, and Yemen. SUNY Press. p. 247, footnote 600. ISBN 978-0-7914-9722-7.
  4. تاریخ طبری، مقدمه، جلد ۱۶، ص ۷۵ (in Persian)
  5. Mohammadi-Malayeri, Mohammad (1382). تاریخ و فرهنگ ایران در دوران انتقال از عصر ساسانی به عصر اسلامی (in Persian). 5. Tehrān: Tūs. pp. 369–370. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  6. Tabari, Muhammad ibn Yarir al- (1989). The History of al-Tabari Vol. 20: The Collapse of Sufyanid Authority and the Coming of the Marwanids: The Caliphates of Mu'awiyah II and Marwan I and the Beginning of The Caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik A.D. 683-685/A.H. 64-66. SUNY Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-88706-855-3.
  7. Farrokh, Kaveh (2012). Sassanian Elite Cavalry AD 224–642. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78200-848-4.
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