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Jules Verne's Columbiad Cannon Launch, From the Earth to the Moon 1870s
Astonishing for its era, this engraving captures the impossible made visceral: a projectile-spacecraft blasting skyward from a colossal ground cannon, trailing a pillar of blinding light through billowing smoke and debris. Two luminous spheres — possibly cannonballs or optical flare effects — flank the beam like planetary witnesses. The cross-hatched darkness, dramatic chiaroscuro, and sense of thunderous kinetic energy make this one of the most dynamically rendered launch sequences in all of 19th-century speculative illustration.
Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: Henri de Montaut
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 6/10
A Victorian gentleman's idea of a space program: fire a giant bullet at the Moon and call it engineering. Remarkably, the engraver made this look more terrifying than most modern rocket launches.
Tags:
space-travelrocketsmad-scienceexplorationcannon launchprojectile spacecraftexplosionsmoke cloudsnight skyluminous beamdebristreeline silhouetteJules VerneFrom the Earth to the MoonColumbiad cannonVictorian sci-fispace launchengraving19th centuryHetzelprojectilespace travelbook illustrationFrench science fiction





