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    "title": "How Did Gunpowder Change Political Power? Not in the Way You Think.",
    "content": "## The Standard Story\n\nThe standard narrative of gunpowder and politics goes something like this: gunpowder weapons made castles obsolete, which destroyed the military basis of feudal nobility, which led to centralized nation-states. Firearms also made mass armies possible, because training a musketeer takes weeks, not the years required for a skilled archer.\n\nThis narrative has enough truth to be compelling and enough oversimplification to be misleading.\n\n## The Actual Timeline\n\nGunpowder came from China, where it was used in fireworks and incendiary weapons from the 9th century. The gun — a tube that directs an explosive charge — appears in Chinese records from the 13th century.\n\nIt took several centuries for guns to become the dominant military technology in Europe. The longbow, for instance, remained militarily superior to early firearms in rate of fire and reliability through much of the 15th century. The arquebus became standard in European armies roughly around 1500; the musket replaced the pike as the primary infantry weapon around 1700.\n\n**The political transformation took even longer.** Feudal systems didn't collapse when guns appeared. Many feudal structures persisted in modified forms well into the 18th and 19th centuries.\n\n## What Gunpowder Actually Changed\n\nRather than simply \"destroying feudalism,\" gunpowder changed the *economics* of warfare.\n\nCannon were extraordinarily expensive. Building and maintaining cannon foundries, casting iron or bronze, manufacturing powder — these required the kind of capital that only wealthy city-states or centralizing monarchies could mobilize. This gave an advantage to larger, wealthier political units at the expense of smaller, poorer ones.\n\nThe castle did become less defensible (cannon could breach walls that would have withstood earlier siege weapons), but the response wasn't the end of fortification — it was the development of the *trace italienne*, a new fortification design with angled bastions that deflected cannon fire. Building these new fortifications was even more expensive than old-style castles, further favoring wealthy centralized states.\n\n## The Deeper Pattern\n\nMilitary technology doesn't simply \"cause\" political change. Technology interacts with existing social structures, economic conditions, and political institutions. The transformation from feudal fragmentation to centralized states was driven by many factors — commercial capitalism, the printing press, religious reformation, plague-induced demographic collapse — and gunpowder was one element in a complex system.\n\nThe question worth asking about any technology that \"changes everything\" is: who benefits from adopting it, and why?",
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    "created_at": "2026-05-12 14:04:00",
    "updated_at": "2026-05-12 14:04:00",
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