| Early Middle
Ages |
- New iron mines and smelting sites are established
- The first literature on mining and metallurgy appears.
- The furnace gains a small chimney of clay and sandstone; gas
exit and two openings, one for introduction of the ore and one
aperture near the bottom to allow extraction of the "bloom"
of iron.
- The introduction of a draft supplied by a pair of bellows.
- The hinged flail, although invented in the fourth century,
slowly begins to displace the simple stick for threshing grain.
- Iron use increases (plowshares, harrows, sickles, billhooks,
church bells, long swords, battle axes, chain mail).
- The lathe is diffused more widely (2 types, pole lathe and
bow lathe)
- Swords, axes, agricultural and household implements are sharpened
with a rotary grindstone, as opposed to the earlier whetstone.
The rotary grindstone employs a crank.
- The Roman Vitruvian mill and windmill, not generally used
in Mediterranean world, are widely disseminated throughout the
medieval world and technologically developed, advancing from
a mere 3 horsepower yield to 40-60 horsepower.
|
| 10th
century |
- The shortage of charcoal begins as a result of deforestation;
laws limiting its production appear. Efforts to adapt coal for
metallurgical purposes are intensified.
- Invention of the drawplate aids blacksmiths in fabricating
wire for chain mail, until then painstakingly hammered out at
the forge.
|
| 11th
century |
- Water-driven bellows and hammers appear in the eastern Alps
and Silesia.
|
| 12th
century |
- Early 12th century - Guilds of craftsmen, including
metalworkers, join guilds of merchants.
- The blacksmith's work is in higher demand as building and
commerce increase. Carpenters required nails, saws and hammers;
masons, mallets, picks, wedges and chisels; carters and wagoners,
iron axles and parts; millers, iron components of mill machinery;
shipbuilders, nails and fittings.
- Surface deposits or iron ore no longer suffice; pits, trenches
and tunnels are driven into the earth.
- The long-handled scythe, developed in the Roman Empire, gains
a short bar-handle projecting from its long haft.
|
- 1122/23 - Theophilus Presbyter writes De diversis artibus.
|
- Mid 12th century - The blacksmith moves from the
castle as armorer to the village, as the demand for his services
to agriculture grow.
|
- 1185 - The earliest surviving written record of a postmill
is a rental note in Weedly, Yorkshire.
|
- 1195 - postmills become popular enough to have the Pope levy
a tithe on them.
|
| 13th
century |
- Early 13th century - The windmill becomes the prime-mover
on the plains of eastern England, the Low Countries and northern
Germany.
|
- Mid 13th century - Coal is used for the primary
stages of iron smelting, although charcoal still predominates.
- Water mill construction rapidly increases, as mill function
becomes more specialized.
- The combination of mills and weirs appears, to measure the
flow of water to the millrace.
- The technique of raising the carbon content of iron to produce
cast iron is discovered
- Threshing begins to be done under cover, far into the winter
in great barns, usually on monastic estates.
|
- Late 13th century - The use of wheelbarrow reduces
the number of necessary laborers by half, particularly for mining
ore.
|
| 14th
century |
- Early 14th century - Water-powered stamping mills
appear in the Saar.
|
- c1325 - Forged iron firearms appear in Germany.
|
- c1350 - The first cast iron cannons appear.
- The earliest known blast furnace is built in Europe, at Lapphytten,
Sweden.
|
- 1351 - The application of waterpower to wiredrawing in Augsburg.
|
- Late 14th century - The shortage of labor leads
to a severe decline in the production of metals.
- The price of iron and charcoal rises.
|
- 1370 - Iron needles (with no eye but a closed hook) are produced
at Nuremberg.
|
| 15th
century |
- Early 15th century - Casting directly from the
furnace into the mould is achieved.
|
- 1430 - The Dutch invent the "wipmolen" or hollow postmill.
|
- Mid 15th century - Eyed iron needles are produced
in Low Countries.
- More attention is paid to the legal aspects of mining, smelting
and raw material consumption because the manufacture of bronze
and iron contributed powerfully to a state's warlike potential.
Wars subsequently increase the demand for and price of iron.
- The scythe replaces the sickle as the primary tool for harvesting
grain.
- Attempts are made to make milling simpler and more efficient.
- postmills begin to be built to drive two pairs of stones placed
fore - and - aft in the mill, rather than only one pair of stones,
as before.
|
- c1450 - Saigerhuetten are first erected.
|
- 1460 - 1530 - The iron industry booms.
|
- Late 15th century - Kriegsbuecher<> and
Ruestungsbuecher<>, <>describing metalworking
in terms of warfare and armament, and Bergwerkbuechlein<>
and Probierbuechlein<>, essays on mining and assaying,
become widespread with the use of the printing press
- The most agriculturally advanced region in Europe, Flanders,
develops a scythe with a small half - circle of bent withy attached
near the base of the handle, to gather together the cut grain
stems.
|
- 1489 - 94 - Duerer's paints his watercolor of a wire mill.
|
| 16th
century |
- 1502 - Boller proposes using mill - power to shake sieves,
thus beginning the mechanization of bolting in milling.
|
- 1530 - J.A. Pantheus writes Voarchadumia contra alchimiam<>,
a book of alchemical nature, concerned with the metallurgy of
the more precious metals and materials.
|
- 1540 - Italian metallurgical engineer, Vanoccio Biringuccio,
writes about water - powered wire - drawing mills in his Pirotechnia<>.
|
- 1550 - Wooden box - bellows are invented by Hans Lobsinger
of Nuremberg, displacing the older leather ones.
|
- c1550 - Blast furnaces reach sizes of around twelve to sixteen
feet high and four - and - a - half feet wide.
|
- 1556 - Georgius Agricola (Georg Bauer) writes the De re
metallica<>, the great textbook on every aspect of mining.
|
- Late 16th century - The production of iron by the
indirect process, using moulds, or pigs, comes into widespread
use, particularly in northern Europe, in the Low Countries,
in Sweden and in Britain.
|
- 1574 - Lazarus Ecker writes his Treatise describing the
foremost kinds of Metallic Ores and Minerals<>, adding to
the previous printed knowledge on assaying.
|
- 1588 - Giambattista della Porta is the first to mention the
use of the trompe bellows, invented in Italy.
- Agostino Ramelli writes his book on machines, including milling
devices, Le diverse et artificiose machine<>, in Paris.
|
- c1595 - Verantius writes Machinae novae<> in Venice.
|
| 17th
century |
- Early 17th century - Massive deforestation provides
a pressing incentive to find a means of smelting iron with coal.
|
- 1603 - Sir Hugh Platt supplies a recipe to the brewing industry
for making briquettes of raw coal, known as Ôcoke;' it would
later be applied to metallurgical practices.
|
- 1612 - 1613 - Simon Sturtevant and John Rovenzon publish treatises,
advocating the adoption of coal - burning blast furnaces.
|
- 1617 - Georg Engelhard Lšhneiss writes on the organization
of mining and its employees in the Bericht von Bergwercken<>.
|
- 1627 - Mathurin Jousse describes the sequence of colors on
tempering of steel. He also discusses the recognition of good
iron or steel, on the basis of fracture.
|
- 1636 - Mersenne writes the first serious tests of tensile
properties of gold, silver, copper and iron.
|
- 1640 - In the Arte de los Metales<>, Alvaro Alonzo
Barba discusses smelting operations as practiced in the gold
and silver mines of the New World, but also contains information
on European metallurgy.
|
- 1648 - Use of the chimney stack to enhance the draught spreads
throughout Europe.
|
- 1651 - Biringuccio mentions a solar furnace, a German mirror
capable of melting a gold ducat.
|
- 1665 - Robert Hooke develops a theory of the hardening of
steel based on the colors it turns during tempering and relates
it to the hardening of other materials by cold working.
|
- Late 17th century - Blast furnaces double in size.
- The invention of reverberatory furnace makes it possible to
substitute raw coal for charcoal in the process of smelting.
|
|
18th century |
- Early 18th century - New methods of producing iron
and steel are introduced.
- Swedish scientists, Emanuel Swedenborg and Christopher Polhem,
improve Swedish metallurgical and mining methods, almost doubling
their country's iron production.
|
- 1700 - The volume of the Stückofen triples in size from
that of 1500.
|
- 1702 - Mathurin Jousse writes the first publication, actually
one on carpentry, that included viable instructions for the
construction of a windmill.
|
- 1709 - The first recorded successful experiment in using coke
for smelting iron ore, at Bosley, in Shropshire.
|
- 1722 - The first reliable treatise on iron metallurgy, Réaumur's
essay on the art of converting iron into steel, is written.
|
- 1732 - By this time, there are six blast - furnaces and nineteen
hammer - forges, besides numerous bloomeries, in the British
colonies of North America.
|
- Mid 18th century - The first known round-house
postmills are constructed.
- By employing a continuous process of feeding ore and fuel
into the furnace as the pig iron is tapped, furnaces are producing
twice the amount of pig iron per day as the first blast furnaces
of 1500, while consuming less fuel.
- Cast iron is applied to uses where stone, wood and other metals
had formerly served.
- Cast iron gears are used in the mill, allowing for improvements
in turning.
|
- 1738 - Schlüter's metallurgical handbook is written.
|
- 1745 - Edmund Lee patents the automatic fantail, keeping a
windmill facing directly into the eye of the wind.
|
- c1750 - Good sheet iron is produced by rolling - and slitting
- mills.
|
- 1759 - John Smeaton presents to the Royal Society the first
scientific study of windmill sails.
|
- Late 18th century - The role of carbon is finally
recognized as the essential difference between wrought and cast
iron and steel.
|
- 1772 - In England, Andrew Meikle invents the spring - sail
for windmills, solving the problem of setting and shortening
the sail - cloths in poor weather.
|
- c1784 - Henry Cort invents the puddling process, in which
the evolved heat of coal fuel was transmitted by reverberation
to make pig iron into bar iron, ensuring the triumph of coal
in iron metallurgy.
|
- 1789 - Stephen Hooper invents the roller-reefing sail, allowing
all blinds in the windmill sails to be opened and closed simultaneously
without stopping the mill.
|
- 1795 - American, Oliver Evans, designs the first automatic
mill for the mass-production of flour, using power-driven roller-mills
and cylindrical bolters.
|