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			I have to make an admission: I like Wikipedia ( some snobbish  dog whistles notwithstanding:-))).Most articles were written by people who carefully researched the subjects and supported them  by references and illustrations.
 
 So, Wiki to the rescue!
 
 Entry " Mughal artillery"
 
 "Elephants carried two pieces of "elephant barrel" (gajnal and hathnal) artillery and two soldiers to fire them. The elephants served only to transport the weapons and their crew, however; they dismounted before firing. "Camel guns" (Shutarnal) and "swivel guns" zamburak, on the other hand, were carried on camel-back and were fired while mounted.[14]"  (  Irvine W. (1903). The Army Of The Indian Moghuls: Its Organization And Administration. Luzac. pp. 113–159.)
 
 Entry " War elephant" provides exhaustive review of the topic from Carthage to WWII with multiple contemporaneous iconographic  sources.
 Interestingly, none of them ( except for the picture of the  the Met example) show any trunk or tusk implements.
 
 On the other hand, entry " Camel artillery" ( in addition to Mr. Irvine's book) reviews  old and new ( WW I and II)  participation of camel-mounted artillery. Obviously, camels were not as skittish as elephants.
 
 So were elephants  "armed"?  Yes. Was this practice even modestly wide spread? No. It might have been tried early on, but the skittishness of the animals and the  development of successful countermeasures, including  guns, arrows, spears, torches and even squealing pigs,  often leading to  turning the animals around and squishing their own forces  quickly convinced the Rajahs to use these giant creatures only as monstrously impressive  transportation vehicles with ( often) lavishly decorated  howdahs to sit  in well behind the battle lines.
 
				 Last edited by ariel; 9th December 2018 at 06:59 AM.
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