The discovery of gun powder by the Chinese lead to the development of the matchlock musket. |
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The rifle kicked against his shoulder and the thundering of musket fire grew louder. |
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I tried to sleep, but the echo of the musket fire woke me from my light slumber and pierced my heart with panic. |
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A soldier sitting at the foot of the bridge pushed himself upright and picked up his musket. |
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Percussion caps now replaced flints, but the basic weapon remained a smoothbore musket. |
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The introduction of the rifled musket in the 1850s with ranges greater than canister altered the role of field artillery. |
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It seemed that an American retreating from the confrontation had tripped the switch on his musket. |
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In mounted combat their prime weapons were bow and arrow and lance rather than the awkward and uncertain trade musket. |
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For example, an infantryman with a rifled musket was a greater threat to artillerymen and cavalrymen. |
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The Jacobites stood the fire for some time before charging, being decimated by grape and musket shot. |
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The thrust of a saber, the firing of a musket, even the discharge of a cannon found easy expression in art. |
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As the barrage of musket balls continued to cascade down, the sailors hurried to tie the ropes, and scramble up after the two containers. |
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The smaller.50-caliber balls could be used in the.60-caliber musket, although they would require more wadding than the larger ones. |
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The apparatus employed consisted of a musket, to the muzzle of which a speaking trumpet had been attached. |
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Have your musket clean as a whistle, hatchet scoured, sixty rounds powder and ball, and be ready to march at a minute's warning. |
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This coincided with rapid improvement in firearms, with breech-loading rifles replacing the musket. |
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Thirteen individual steps were required to load and fire a historic reproduction flintlock musket. |
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Eight of the lead musket balls have been flattened from impact, while others show mold lines, indicating that they had never been used. |
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Then suddenly, he pulled the pinchers out, and in their serrated grasp was a perfectly round lead musket ball. |
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A musket ball whined past my ear and gouged a furrow in the trunk of a tree. |
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The redcoats fell as they ran, musket fire and cannon booms sweeping out the men successfully. |
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Recent finds include copper pins marked with the broad arrow of the Admiralty, copper sheathing, pan weights, musket balls, cannonballs and a sounding lead. |
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Anticipating the next attack, the commander ordered to close ranks. Grasping his musket in dismay, John moved closer to his comrade's side. |
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This man wears civilian clothing of the period, and is shown reloading his musket with a powder horn. |
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This is a man who operates on himself, removing a musket ball, and then goes on a 10 mile trek across the rocky lengths of one of the Galapagos islands. |
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The British musket fire, and the intense hand-to-hand fighting, killed or wounded hundreds of American troops, forcing them back in disarray. |
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In response, Salaberry stood on a tree trunk, shouldered the musket of one of his Voltigeurs and put an end to his speech! |
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Clothed and equipped, the new soldier immediately began to learn how to operate and handle his musket. |
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The firearm which Canadian militiamen preferred using was the solid and light hunting musket with no bayonet, made at Tulle in central France. |
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But even though the percussion musket fired reliably, its range remained the same as that of the weapons it replaced. |
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They carry objects that provide clues about their abilities, such as a bow and quiver or a musket. |
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The Canadian volunteers were supplied with the Enfield rifled musket from 1856 onward. |
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What nerve it must have taken to run into the face of massed musket fire. |
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Whether or not a musket ball could penetrate armour was dependent on a number of factors, one of which is that firearms in those days did not always fire. |
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Also uncovered were musket balls, cannonballs, a grenade and tools. |
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Michael Taylor says lead musket balls were made on the site and the team has found spills of molten lead that have formed small hollows in the ground. |
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She held a musket and fired several shots, each hitting their marks. |
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After 1726, they also received a hunting musket. |
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Before becoming a commercial centre, Montreal, like many of the world's large cities, lived through a period when the sword and the musket were in regular use. |
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During the War of 1812, Canadian militiamen used a smooth-bored, muzzle-loaded musket, usually a Brown Bess, with an extremely limited range and a level of accuracy that left much to be desired. |
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The troops were lined up on deck, firing musket volleys, with full colours flying and the military bands playing. |
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Real-time battles will pose new challenges with the addition of cannon and musket, challenging players to master new formations and tactics as a result of the increasing role of gunpowder within warfare. |
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You can hear the musket shots ring out as a restored Bourbon is deposed in a fresh bout of revolutionary ardour. Mr Kasich, to be fair, is not just posturing. |
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Finds of musket balls appear to mirror the lines of men who stood and fought. |
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Soon, bolstered both by the new musket technology and naval support, the Bengal army came to be widely regarded. |
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The three main size categories generally corresponded with the arquebus, caliver, and musket. |
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An arquebus shot was considered deadly at up to 400 yards while the heavier Spanish musket was considered deadly at up to 600 yards. |
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As musket technology evolved, the flaws of the musket became less frequent and the bow became irrelevant. |
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The rebels' assaults were unsuccessful, and so they began a barrage of artillery and musket fire into the compound. |
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After placing the cartridge in the musket, ram it down securely with the ramrod. |
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As any man could be quickly trained in the use of a musket, it became far easier to form massive armies. |
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He noted that changing technology raised the costs of war for example, that the musket was a more expensive item to acquire than its predecessor, the javelin. |
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Both carried a smoothbore flintlock musket that might just kill their man at 50 yards. |
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Finds included hidden pieces of Elizabethan linenfold panelling, a 17th century fork, musket ball and 1775 penny under the kitchen floorboards. |
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The ships were close enough for sailors on the upper decks of the English and Spanish ships to exchange musket fire. |
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In order to obtain a new one without having to spend a lot of money, one could hide the old one or present himself for service armed with a musket so bad that the authorities were obliged to provide another. |
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Noteworthy on the English musket of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries is the 'dog lock', a kind of small safety catch attached to the gun lock to hold the hammer. |
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The musket was usually placed close to the bed, sometimes in a rack. |
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To show that he was a warrior, Brant holds a musket in his right hand. |
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Look, another one.' My father shot with a musket. |
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Fees for citizenship ranged from 12 Polish florins to a musket and gunpowder, or an undertaking to marry within a year and a day of acquiring a holding. |
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Goldstein and Mowbray present a pattern-by-pattern, full-color collector's guide to the Brown Bess musket, organized chronologically by pattern date. |
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After shooting it with a musket when it tried to climb aboard the ship, the seamen decided to capture it with the hope of bringing it back to Holland. |
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