There are two bartizans on opposite corners of the tower which have holes for muskets. |
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Inaccurate and dangerous, muskets are not very useful for crime or self-defense. |
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For example, you use lumber for buildings and ships, iron ore for cutlasses and muskets, and sugarcane for rum. |
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In the firearms field, flintlock smoothbore muskets gave way to percussion-capped, rifled muskets. |
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The firepower of an infantry company was increased by a third as the pikemen were phased out and issued with muskets and bayonets. |
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With their swords and muskets raised the Yankee soldiers began killing every confederate soldier in sight. |
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With their swords and muskets raised the Yankee soldier began killing every confederate soldier in sight. |
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Beginning in 1795 and 1801, respectively, these armories manufactured muskets based upon a.69-caliber French 1777 design. |
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The phrase puts me in mind of pub engravings, of rustics in waistcoats lying full-length in rowing boats, poking at ducks with long muskets. |
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Old muskets, pistols and sabers were spread everywhere Billy and White Eagle rode. |
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They want to dominate Europe by bureaucratic cleverness where they could not do so by muzzle-loading cannon, muskets and cavalry sabers. |
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Every confederate soldier gave a loud battle cry and with their muskets, pistols, and sabers raised, they ran toward the Union army. |
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They shouldered responsibility, faith and idealism along with muskets, carbines and courage. |
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Instead, he saw the men walking calmly, saw them carefully scanning the terrain ahead of them, muskets ready to fire. |
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Men in scarlet ran in every direction, some shouldering muskets, others munitions and like paraphernalia. |
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The introduction of muskets, as a major item of trade and barter, was the catalyst for the many conflicts which broke out. |
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A week later, a larger party of some 200 Maori appeared, this time with spears slung over their backs, and muskets and tomahawks. |
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Men from the regiment gave military displays and demonstrated how to load muskets. |
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Newton mounted guns on deck and trained muskets on the captives' quarters to intimidate them. |
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Vast quantities of clothing, gunpowder, pikes, halberds, swords, and muskets poured out of the workshops of the metropolis. |
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However, his soldiers now have more primitive weapons, such as blunderbusses, muskets, swords, and repeating crossbows. |
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The soldiers were hurriedly leaving the scene, their muskets over their shoulders, not even sparing a look back at the panicked crowd. |
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Pikemen stood on guard with their 16 feet long weapons and musketeers cleaned their matchlock muskets ready for the later mock battles. |
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By the late 17th century devices were being developed to fire grenades from the muzzles of flintlock muskets. |
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Assuming the soldiers were still armed with muzzleloading muskets, the warriors attacked in waves. |
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The British were masters of open-field fighting where massed lines of infantry faced one another while using the inaccurate smooth-bore muskets. |
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Yet I still felt muddled, as the breastwork became more defined in the clouds of smoke from the firing of muskets. |
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The cartridges fired by these early breech-loaders were lacking in power when compared to muskets. |
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For the next 50 years breech-loading muskets and rifles were made in England as sporting guns. |
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Side plates are decorative additions placed on the lateral margins of flintlock muskets opposite the lock plate. |
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He also downplays the quality of early muskets, but that too ignores the same reality. |
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Since they provided their own weapons, the variety was large, from carbines, fowling pieces, buccaneers, muskets and fuzees. |
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The sentry called for help and was soon joined by eight soldiers who formed a semicircle and tried to keep the crowd at bay with their loaded muskets and fixed bayonets. |
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The British soldiers, Brown Bess muskets primed and loaded, slid down the ropes onto the shaky boats, cramming about thirty light infantrymen to each of the tiny transports. |
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The history of English conquest in America began with five native bowmen ambushing a scouting party of prospective Jamestown settlers, armed with matchlock muskets. |
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And so it was that the panicking soldiers turned their muskets on the crowd. |
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France is peopled with patriots in red caps and tricoloured cockades, armed with national muskets and sabres, sullen and suspicious, who instinctively curse all aristocrats. |
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The infantry of both armies in the Civil War for the first time used muzzle-loading rifled muskets, while cavalry with breech-loading carbines fought dismounted. |
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Maori began to barter muka for muskets and other European goods. |
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Two centuries ago, soldiers called fusiliers, who were armed with light flintlock muskets, fought on battlefields using tactics and formations trained on the parade field. |
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Yet for all the muskets, bombards, and cannon, Kelly appears more interested in the impact of gunpowder as a technological force driving deeper societal changes. |
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After decades of producing small arms by hand, by 1842 the armories introduced large-scale assembly of muskets from uniform, interchangeable parts. |
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Soon, scuffles broke out, spears were thrown, and muskets discharged. |
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These flamboyant Turkish uniformed troops also had muskets with bayonets of this form, and a number of yataghan blade bayonets appeared for both U.S. and Confederate forces. |
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But when a final showdown occurs between a gang with gats and a group toting muskets and spear guns, it's clear that the filmmakers have lost their way. |
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Velvet bellows, cushions, muskets, plates, microtonic music plus narghiles or hookahs for a post-prandial smoke of tobacco sweetened with such agents as rose essence. |
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He allowed his slaves to keep muskets to hunt for small game. |
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We watched the Firangi as they struggled through the pass, their hands frozen and fingers unable to load their heavy muskets. |
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The fall of Vienna provided the French a huge bounty as they captured 100,000 muskets, 500 cannons, and the intact bridges across the Danube. |
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Analysis of the finds confirms that the Jacobites used muskets in greater numbers than has traditionally been thought. |
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The Ottoman army was once among the most advanced fighting forces in the world, being one of the first to use muskets and cannons. |
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They attached the long hunting knives in the barrels of their muskets and that way they fashioned makeshift spears later called bayonets. |
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Of the 50 handguns listed in the Anthony Roll, the complete stocks of five matchlock muskets and fragments of another eleven have been found. |
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In time, the successors to muskets and cannon, in the form of rifles and artillery, would become core battlefield technology. |
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Before, he had always seemed to believe revenge a dirty business, all thundering muskets and brandished steel, a pleasuresome stench. |
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When traders from Portugal introduced arquebuses and muskets, Iberian warlords were quick to adapt them, giving them a large advantage. |
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Portugal responded by aiding king Gelawdewos with Portuguese soldiers and muskets. |
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On the 25th a dozen men from the Halve Maen, using muskets and small cannon, went ashore and assaulted the village near their anchorage. |
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The intertribal Musket Wars lasted 1807 to 1843 when large numbers of slaves were captured by northern tribes who had acquired muskets. |
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At the peak of the slave trade hundreds of thousands of muskets, vast quantities of cloth, gunpowder, and metals were being shipped to Guinea. |
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The motives behind Whitney's acceptance of a contract to manufacture muskets in 1798 were mostly monetary. |
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Blanc demonstrated in front of a committee of scientists that his muskets could be fitted with flint locks picked at random from a pile of parts. |
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President George Washington approved of the idea, and by 1798 a contract was issued to Eli Whitney for 12,000 muskets built under the new system. |
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Other settlers followed Jencks, and by 1775 the area was home to manufacturers of muskets, linseed oil, potash, and ship building. |
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The main Indian weapons were a mixture of tomahawks, knives, swords, rifles, clubs, arrows and muskets. |
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At its peak the Red Stick faction had 4,000 warriors, only a quarter of whom had muskets. |
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After completing the initial contract, Whitney went on to produce another 15,000 muskets within the following two years. |
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This line includes Snider Enfield rifles, Martini Henry rifles, Brown Bess muskets, Gurkha Kukris and accessories. |
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The British first became aware of the jezail during the First Afghan War, where the arms were reported to outrange smoothbore muskets by 100 yards or more. |
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Thus it was that the early hand-held gonne was superseded by the matchlock harquebus, which was replaced with the snaphaunce and dog lock muskets. |
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Out of 250,000 troops the Prussians sustained 25,000 casualties, lost a further 150,000 as prisoners, 4,000 artillery pieces, and over 100,000 muskets. |
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The Dutch have a method of granting commissions by dressing these camisated nobles with a duck-shirt and trousers, and discharge three muskets as an inaugural confirmation. |
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The police and troops captured eleven thousand stand of arms, including muskets and pistols, together with several thousand bludgeons and other weapons. |
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Based on his reputation as the inventor of the cotton gin, the US government gave him a contract in 1798 for 10,000 muskets to be produced within two years. |
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The War Department issued contracts for the manufacture of 10,000 muskets. |
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Thereafter, he turned his attention into securing contracts with the government in the manufacture of muskets for the newly formed United States Army. |
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However, they soon renewed the fight with muskets and artillery. |
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Continental European powers such as the Iberians, Germans, and French differentiated muskets from arquebuses by size and if they required a fork rest or not. |
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The museum housed a number of muskets, medals, and other militariana. |
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Muskets spanned the transition from matchlock, through wheel lock and flintlock, to percussion. |
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Muskets and pikes and sabers lay strewn and forgotten like cut hay. |
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