Yeah. Greek fire was used as late as the end of the 12th century, by the Byzantines (a little before 1192).Drakon7 said:Really? I must be thinking of something else then. I remember something in science, we were all lolling at the kid when the teacher told him to put the fire out and he kept throwing water on it, fire kept getting bigger, it was like a crystally powdery stuff.eatenbyagrue said:Greek fire. And the formula has been lost for centuries.Drakon7 said:roman fire or something.
HOWEVER, napalm can easily be made from common household materials.
one sec
*googles*
Yeah didnt find anything, If I hadnt thrown my books in the bonfire all those years ago, Id look it up.
and the stuff that explodes was Sodium, I thought it was but I wasnt gunna say it incase it wasnt.
Although reportedly, Henry V used it against the French during the Battle of Agincourt in 1415, but I cant find any sources proving or disproving it.