Objective In order to understand the engineering disaster mechanism of fissured rock subjected to in-situ stress and dynamic disturbance at the same time.Methods The improved split Hopkinson pressure bar system was used to carry out static-dynamic loading tests on prefabricated fissured rock samples.The effects of strain rate,fissure angle and prestress on dynamic mechanical properties and energy consumption of the sample were studied,and the failure mode of the sample was analyzed.Results The results showed that the dynamic increase factor of the fissure sample,when the strain rate increased from 61.82s-1 to 195.57s-1,increased continuously,and the strain rate effect was significant.The dynamic elastic modulus change law was not obvious and the strain rate effect was not significant.With the increase of incident energy,the unit dissipative energy density of the fis-sure sample increased continuously.When the fissure angle changed from 0° to 90°,the dynamic increase factor of the sample increased continuously,and the dynamic elastic modulus and unit dissipative energy density de-creased continuously.The dynamic increase factors of 30°,45° and 60° fissure samples all increased after pres-tressing.The dynamic elastic modulus of 45° fissure samples increased obviously except for the 30° and 60° fis-sure samples while the unit dissipative energy density of 45° and 60° fissure samples decreased obviously except for 30° fissure samples.The failure modes of fissure samples mainly included tensile failure,shear failure and ten-sion-shear composite failure,and the influence of prestress on the failure modes of fissure samples was not obvi-ous.Conclusion The 0° fissure have the least effect on the bearing capacity of engineering rock mass,and the 90° fissure is beneficial to improve the rock breaking efficiency,while the prestressing improves the bearing capacity of engineering rock mass to some extent,which provides reference for predicting and evaluating the risks in rock engineering and formulating reasonable reinforcement measures.