In ancient China, science and innovation were a common theme; we should be thankful to their civilization for inventing paper currency, gunpowder, paper, magnetic compasses, seismoscopes, and plenty of other inventions. While the abovementioned inventions are certainly quite certainly incredible, the invention of the wheelbarrow changed everything. According to a legend, in the beginning, it was meant to be used in warfare as an easier way to transport goods.
For that reason, it became an essential factor in the everyday lives of almost every worker and craftsman in many civilizations. There are plenty of myths surrounding the invention of the wheelbarrow. However, it is quite certain; the invention was made in ancient China. Since Shu Han was already involved in a war with Cao Wei, Zhuge Liang invented the wheelbarrow and intended to use it to help the war efforts against the Cao Wei.
Thanks to the wheelbarrow, a single soldier could carry enough food to feed four other soldiers for an entire month. It was considered such an advantage over the Cao Wei that Shu Han wanted to keep it a secret at all costs. However, this may not be entirely accurate, and there is an excellent chance that some farmers came up with the idea of the wheelbarrow.
However, the Prime Minister thought of using it as a tool to feed his soldiers. Click here for audio of Episode Today, let's finish inventing the wheelbarrow. The University of Houston's College of Engineering presents this series about the machines that make our civilization run, and the people whose ingenuity created them. D id you ever wonder about the history of the wheelbarrow? Well, don't worry, neither did I.
Then I found that it, like any technology in the commonplace, has a story to tell. The West was very slow to invent the wheelbarrow. We find no evidence before AD Then one turns up in the oddest place. Medieval stained glass was used to tell the common folk about things celestial. That glass had to speak in the language of a hard familiar world. So the earliest known European wheelbarrow gleams down from a stained glass window in Chartres Cathedral. But the Chinese have had wheelbarrows for millenia.
They celebrate a half-mythical inventor named Ko Yu. Prior types were universally front-wheeled wheelbarrows. The central-wheeled wheelbarrow could generally transport six human passengers at once, and instead of a laborious amount of energy exacted upon the animal or human driver pulling the wheelbarrow, the weight of the burden was distributed equally between the wheel and the puller.
European visitors to China from the 17th century onwards had an appreciation for this, and was given a considerable amount of attention by a member of the Dutch East India Company, Andreas Everardus van Braam Houckgeest, in his writings of who accurately described its design and ability to hold large amounts of heavy baggage. However, the lower carrying surface made the European wheelbarrow clearly more useful for short-haul work.
As of the s, traditional wheelbarrows in China were still in wide use. Click Here to Know about a Legend Dr. Abdul Kalam. Toggle navigation Menu. Social Discuss Sign Up Login. Wheelbarrow Famous Inventors. Home inventions Wheelbarrow. Wheelbarrow - Invented by Zhuge Liang. Invented Year. Invention Field. About Invention Zhuge Liang A.
Other inventions in Construction Materials.
0コメント