The Greek Fire Misconception
‘Greek Fire’—the secret weapon that torched fleets—wasn’t ancient Greek at all. It was a Byzantine invention, nearly a thousand years later.
The myth: ancient Greeks hurled ‘Greek Fire’.
Movies and even textbooks show hoplites torching enemy ships with a mysterious, unquenchable liquid. ‘Greek Fire’ belongs to classical Greece—right?
It’s medieval, not classical.
The real 'Greek Fire' appeared in the 7th century CE. It was a Byzantine state secret: a petroleum-based weapon that burned even on water, devastating Arab fleets. Thucydides and Herodotus—our main ancient Greek historians—never mention it.
So why the name?
‘Greek Fire’ simply meant ‘the fire of the Eastern Romans’—by then called ‘Greeks’ in Western Europe. The myth stuck because the name sounded so ancient.
Despite the name, ‘Greek Fire’ was first unleashed by the Byzantine Empire in the 7th century CE, not by classical Greeks. Ancient sources make no mention of it before then.