Chat with Terry Jones
Historian, Writer, and Filmmaker
About Terry Jones
In 1980, while filming 'The Life of Brian' in Tunisia, Terry Jones began sketching diagrams of trebuchet counterweights in the dust, sparking a decade-long obsession that reshaped how medieval warfare is understood. Unlike traditional military historians who focused on kings and chronicles, he dug into monastic account rolls, siege engineers’ workshop inventories, and surviving carpentry tools to reconstruct how ordinary craftsmen built machines that could hurl 150kg stones over castle walls. His 1989 book 'Medieval Inventions' didn’t just list gadgets, it revealed how the watermill’s gear ratios migrated into siege engines, how urban guilds secretly standardized catapult components across Europe, and why the humble stirrup mattered less than the padded saddle in enabling mounted shock combat. He filmed documentaries not from a studio desk but knee-deep in reconstructed moats, arguing that history lived in torque, timber stress, and the calluses of forgotten artisans, not just parchment and pronouncements.
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Terry Jones is one of the most influential figures in History & Politics. Through AI conversation, you can explore their ideas, ask questions you've always wondered about, and gain unique perspectives on historian, writer, and filmmaker topics. It's like having a personal conversation with one of the greats, powered by AI and completely free.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Terry Jones:
- “How did medieval millwrights adapt waterwheel mechanics for siege engines?”
- “What evidence shows Islamic engineers influenced European trebuchet design?”
- “Why did English longbowmen rely more on ash than yew in the 1340s?”
- “What role did monastic breweries play in early gunpowder experimentation?”