Persian panemones, for article on panemone windmill

Persia’s panemone windmill brings wind power to the ancient world

Long before turbines dotted coastlines or solar panels covered rooftops, people in the Persian region of Sistan figured out how to put the wind to work. A simple vertical device — fabric sails attached to a wooden shaft, enclosed within a slotted wall — began grinding grain and lifting water from the earth. It was the first clear wind machine in recorded history, and it changed what was possible.

What the evidence shows

  • Panemone windmill: The earliest confirmed evidence of a working wind-powered machine comes from the Persian region of Sistan — modern-day Iran and Afghanistan — documented by Muslim geographers in the 9th century C.E.
  • Vertical-axis design: Unlike the horizontal-axis turbines familiar today, the Persian design rotated on a vertical shaft, with lightweight fabric or wooden sails catching wind through slits in a surrounding wall.
  • Wind energy origins: The machine was first used to pump water, then adapted to grind grain — practical applications that made it immediately valuable in arid, agricultural communities across the Islamic world.

A design born of necessity

Sistan is one of the windiest places on earth. The “Wind of 120 Days” blows hard and predictably across the region every summer, and the people who lived there turned that relentless force into something useful. The panemone — a vertical-axis drag-type windmill — was their solution.

The basic structure was elegant in its simplicity. A central vertical shaft held four to eight sails made of fabric or light wood. A surrounding wall with narrow slits channeled the wind so that it struck the sails on only one side of the rotation, allowing the shaft to spin in a consistent direction. That shaft connected to millstones or water-lifting mechanisms below.

It was not a high-efficiency machine. Because the sails had to return against the wind on every rotation, roughly half the potential energy was wasted in resistance. But it worked — consistently, at scale, with materials available to communities that had no access to flowing rivers for water mills.

Who built it and what we know

Muslim geographers of the 9th century C.E. described working windmills in Sistan in enough detail to confirm their existence and general design. These are the earliest unambiguous records. An older legendary account attributes the invention to Abu Lu’lu’a Firuz, a craftsman who lived during the caliphate of Umar ibn al-Khattab between 634–644 C.E. — but historians note this account may have been added to the record in the 10th century C.E. and cannot be verified.

What the record does show is that the technology spread rapidly. From Persia, the panemone windmill moved across the Islamic world — into Central Asia, the Arabian Peninsula, and North Africa. It later reached India and China. Each region adapted it to local materials and needs.

The knowledge moved through trade networks and scholarly exchange that defined the Islamic Golden Age. The same intellectual culture that was preserving and extending Greek mathematics, building hospitals, and mapping the stars was also solving the engineering problem of how to grind grain without a river nearby.

Lasting impact

The panemone windmill is the root of an unbroken technological lineage. When wind-powered grain milling reached medieval Europe — via the Islamic world and, possibly, returning Crusaders — European engineers adapted the concept into the horizontal-axis post mill and later the familiar tower mill. Those designs were far more efficient, but they built on the foundational insight the Persian engineers had already proved: wind could be captured, directed, and made to do mechanical work.

Today’s wind turbines — whether the three-blade horizontal-axis giants of offshore wind farms or the smaller vertical-axis models being reconsidered for urban use — trace their conceptual ancestry back to those slatted walls in Sistan. The U.S. Department of Energy’s history of wind energy marks the Persian windmill as the starting point of the entire tradition.

The economic impact was immediate and lasting. Windmills freed communities from dependence on water sources for milling — a critical advantage in the arid landscapes of Central Asia and the Middle East. They reduced the labor burden of grinding grain by hand, work that in most societies fell disproportionately on women. The time and energy recovered could go elsewhere.

The spread of wind milling technology also contributed to the agricultural productivity that sustained growing urban populations across the medieval Islamic world. Cities like Nishapur and Merv — major centers of learning and trade — were fed in part by grain processed by wind.

Blindspots and limits

The historical record for early wind machines is thin. Muslim geographers described what they saw, but detailed technical drawings, construction records, or firsthand accounts of the workers who built and maintained these mills do not survive. It’s possible — perhaps likely — that wind-harnessing devices existed earlier in Persia or elsewhere, but no clear evidence has yet been found to confirm it.

The legendary account of Abu Lu’lu’a, while vivid and specific, cannot be verified and may reflect later storytelling rather than historical memory. Scholars flag it, but it remains in circulation — a reminder that the line between documented history and constructed origin story is often blurry, especially for technologies that predate systematic record-keeping.

The panemone itself remained a marginal design in the longer arc of wind engineering. It was repeatedly reinvented and even patented in modern times — the Wikipedia entry on the International Renewable Energy Agency’s wind technology overview notes how often basic drag-type vertical-axis designs resurface — yet it never displaced lift-based horizontal-axis designs for large-scale power generation. Its efficiency ceiling is simply too low.

Why it still matters

There is something worth sitting with in the image of those first windmills turning in the Sistan wind. The people who built them were not theorists. They were solving a concrete problem — how to process food and move water in a dry, windy place — and they found an answer that spread across half the world.

The early documentation of Persian wind machines in academic energy history confirms that the transition to renewable energy is not a new idea. Humanity has been harvesting wind for over a thousand years of recorded history. The scale has changed. The stakes have changed. But the basic act — reading what the environment offers and building something that works with it — is ancient.

Modern vertical-axis wind turbine research continues to explore configurations that echo the panemone’s form, particularly for low-wind and urban environments. And the regions where the windmill first flourished — Iran, Afghanistan, Central Asia — remain part of the global conversation about energy access and sustainable development. The circle, in some ways, has not fully closed.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia: Panemone windmill

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

About this article

  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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