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===Eastern Europe=== Documentary evidence of cannons in Russia does not appear until 1382 and they were used only in sieges, often by the defenders.<ref name="Nossov">{{cite book|last=Nossov|first=Konstantin|year=2007|title=Medieval Russian Fortresses AD 862–1480|publisher=[[Osprey Publishing]]|isbn=978-1-84603-093-2|page=52}}</ref> It was not until 1475 when Ivan III established the first Russian cannon foundry in Moscow that they began to produce cannons natively.<ref>{{cite book|author=Geoffrey Alan Hosking|title=Russia and the Russians: A History|publisher=[[Harvard University Press]]|year=2001|page=[https://archive.org/details/russiarussianshi00hosk/page/91 91]|isbn=978-0674004733|url=https://archive.org/details/russiarussianshi00hosk|url-access=registration|quote=first cannon foundry was set up in Moscow.|author-link=Geoffrey Alan Hosking}}</ref> The earliest surviving cannon from Russia dates to 1485.{{sfn|Chase|2003|p=78}} Later on, large cannons were known as bombards, ranging from three to five feet in length and were used by [[Dubrovnik]] and [[Kotor]] in defence during the later 14th century. The first bombards were made of iron, but bronze became more prevalent as it was recognized as more stable and capable of propelling stones weighing as much as {{convert|45|kg}}. Around the same period, the [[Byzantine Empire]] began to accumulate its own cannon to face the [[Ottoman Empire]], starting with medium-sized cannon {{convert|3|ft|m}} long and of 10 in calibre.<ref name="Turnbull">{{cite book|last=Turnbull|first=Stephan|title=The Walls of Constantinople AD 413–1453|publisher=[[Osprey Publishing]]|year=2004|isbn=978-1-84176-759-8|pages=39–41}}</ref> The earliest reliable recorded use of artillery in the region was against the Ottoman siege of Constantinople in 1396, forcing the Ottomans to withdraw.<ref name="Turnbull"/> The Ottomans acquired their own cannon and laid siege to the Byzantine capital again in 1422. By 1453, the Ottomans used 68 Hungarian-made cannon for the 55-day bombardment of the [[walls of Constantinople]], "hurling the pieces everywhere and killing those who happened to be nearby".<ref name="Turnbull"/> The largest of their cannons was the Great Turkish Bombard, which required an operating crew of 200 men<ref name="Trivia Library">{{cite book|title=The People's Almanac|publisher=[[Doubleday (publisher)|Doubleday]]|year=1975|last=Wallechinsky|first=David|author2=Irving Wallace|isbn=978-0-385-04186-7|url=https://archive.org/details/peoplesalmanac00wall}}</ref> and 70 oxen, and 10,000 men to transport it.<ref name="Turnbull"/> Gunpowder made the formerly devastating [[Greek fire]] obsolete, and with the final fall of Constantinople—which was protected by what were once the strongest walls in Europe—on 29 May 1453, "it was the [[Late Middle Ages|end of an era]] in more ways than one".<ref>Turnbull, p. 43.</ref>
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