Re: The oldest known handgun in existence, ca. 1400-10
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I should mention that the hook, like the firing mechanism, seems to be a working amendment as it is not wrought to the barrel but split in half, drawn over the muzzle and riveted on the underside.
The comparison with the attached illustrations of 1405, 1410 and 1411, with no support hooks present, indicates that the hook which actually defines a haquebut (German: Hakenbüchse) was an invention of the first half of the 15th century. For having patience with me you are credited with additional images. Matchlock |
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A few more details of this 600 year-old handgun.
Michael |
Very interesting to see the spring-loaded serpentine,
This must be an extremely rare hand gun! Lovely pictures, Michael. Best wishes, Richard. |
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Hi Michael,
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Text and gun from the great collection of Rainer Daehnhardt, as illustrated in his work 'Homens Espadas e Tomates' (1997). Fernando . |
Also amazing is that this Malabar example doesn't have a firing mechanism, having to be ignited manualy.
What can you tell us about this, Michael ? Any correction to its dating ? Fernando |
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Hi Fernando, Sorry to have to destroy a possible myth but Rainer Daehnhardt's gun is far from being European and/or early 16th century. The barrel is clearly Indian, 18th/19th centuries, the stock is a crude modern reproduction missing only the tiniest touch of original German style... Mind: hooks were never parts of the stocks but only of the iron barrels! Otherwise they would have made no sense at all. Michael |
Hi Michael, thanks a lot for your coments.
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Sorry Michael, but these are all doubts from a layman like me. I am not worried about this specimen being a mith, nor about Daehnhardt's sincerity; i don't like helping to build gurus. But i need to be sure to myself that this thing is a fake ... to the extent that i can tell it in his face when i see him. Thanks again Fernando |
I think that the shearing force of the recoil would break off the hook unless it was heavily reinforced. Of course, a metal hook is simly a reinforced wooden one without the wood. :D
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You are doubtlessly right, Ed: a wooden hook set against a castle wall with the muzzle sticking out the fire slit would not have stood the immense recoil. Mind that the barrels at those times were filled up with (poor) black powder by two thirds of their length! Michael |
Hi Fernando,
Let's cut a long story short: You are right in assuming that this type of hooked stock originally never existed - neither in India nor in Europe. The one that you illustrated must be modern, for what purpose ever. As Ed supposed, a wooden hook would never have stood the recoil - please see my reply of today to his posting. This is due to the graining of the wood. Calling this crude phantasy stock a fake would imply a bad intention on the maker's side. I do not mean to put a suspicion on anyone. This is not what this forum is for, I believe. Just do not take this gun for an original, enough said. Michael |
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Don't i see that the Berne Harquebus has the hook peened through the stock ? On the other hand, isn't the system of casting the hook to the barrel a 'third generation' development ? If i well understand, in the first step the gun had a gunstock with a wooden shoulder on the underside, as shown in a specimen in the museum of Pilsen, which dates to around 1400. But as this design involved severe stress to the wood, which did not withstand the strain for long, the next step was the development of an iron hook with bands or nails being fitted to the shaft, further improved by positioning the hook on the barrel with a band and securing it in the shaft with a cross pin. It was only after this that, the hook was either forged directly on to the barrel or cast with it, when of bronze. This is the way i understood an article written by Bernhard Rietsche, in his work Meine gotischen Handfeuerrohre (page 47), which was gently passed to me by a notable person in this Forum ;). However i know i don't have the minimum preparation to discuss this subject, so i beg you to correct me if or where i am wrong :o . Fernando |
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As there are lots of early guns in both Berne and Pilsen, please post pictures of the two pieces you quoted. Michael |
Hi Michael
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But good faith fits in this Forum as it fits anywhere. If a person quotes an item as an early specimen, implicitely omitting it is a replica or a modern reproduction, such person is lacking transparency ... here or anywhere in the world. I know this author for some ten years; i don't think he has a necessity to 'sell cat for hare'. I can allways find a way, with the best of my diplomacy (?), to ask him why the specimen support text drives us to beleive the gun is an original, when it is not. My respects Fernando |
I first met Rainer Daehnhardt in 1990 and know quite a bit about him and his pieces.
Enough said. Michael |
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The Berne specimen seems to be quite popular, as largely divulged in the Internet. It is also, for example, in Clephan's work 'An outline of the History and Development of Hand Firearms' (page 47). I also happen to have a picture of it, myself. But again, i may obviously be labouring in error, and confusing the whole thing. Fernando |
Berne handgonne, inv.# 2193, 1st half 15th century
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Now this is Berne inv.# 2193. See Rudof Wegeli: Inventar der Waffensammlung des Bernischen Historischen Museums in Bern, vol.4, Feuerwaffen, 1948, p.153f. As the text mentions, the hook is of iron and hammered through the stock as an addition in the gun's working time. As this must have proofed less stable, hooks were fire welded to the barrels from ca. 1440-50. My library of more than 3,000 books and catalogs contains the complete original edition of the Zeitschrift fuer Historische Waffenkunde from its origins in 1897 until today. I have been a member of this society for more than 25 years. Michael |
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BTW, give my greetings to Bernahrd Rietsche. He came to see my collection only a few weeks ago. Michael |
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Now here is the Pilsen handgonne that you mean, Fernando. I was in the Pilsen Armory in 2000, being kindly allowed by Dr. Hus to handle and photograph all the items I liked to. The stock of this piece with the staged wall support may be original and may have worked against the recoil with this small and short barrel as the "hooked" stage is both very long and thick! It would never work with a long barrel and slender stock as in Daehnhardt's gun, though. I enclose another early 15th century Pilsen handgonne with an iron hook drawn over the barrel (!) and put through the stock - the last stage before welding the hook directly to the barrel for optimum stability. I have tried to do my best and sure hope to have made things as clear as possible. I spent 30 years of my life studying to be able and tell wrong from right. Michael |
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Yes but it would never have combusted. |
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As you can see in the first Pilsen gun, what actually works as the real wall support is a small rudimentary rectangular iron piece extending down through the stock, and being a vertical prolongation of the rear underside of the barrel! It may have been shortened later.
So there is a wooden stage, true, but this was not the wall support because it would have been too weak! Allright? Michael |
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Please help my aged mind along, Ed! Michael |
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I also know him since about that long; i buy weapons at his shops and frequently listen to what he has to say about questions i ask him on pieces i take to him for apreciation. I have also read a couple of his books. Our relation is only a little more than that between customer and supplier. However i never had the chance to visit his private mannor house and apreciate his collection. But up to this moment i don't have an actual reason to dislike him; given the discount that everyone has virtues and defaults. Our talks are about weapons and their history; nothing else. Quote:
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I surely would like to hear your coments about this particular subject. Eventualy also Daehnhardt quotes that hooks were first made of wood; i still have to learn a huge lot about this fascinating area of early firearms. Quote:
My respects Fernando |
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Sorry, I mean that a large mass of unignited powder would have been expelled from the barrel. You can see the same effect today if you overload a black powder rifle. The powder that never got a chance to burn is expelled. |
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The Daehnhardt's gun is an Indian item... not necessarily an example of European haquebus expertize. Allright, it has an atypical design and you say such stock could never work; noted. But ironically, every wooden hook experiments, after time, ended up failing. But i bother you no more. Now it's my turn to say: enough said With respect. Fernando |
This thread has gotten me to thinking.
I wonder how bad the recoil was for these little guns. Lets think about it a bit together. - The actual charge of black powder was limited. Filling a barrel all the way might not result in greater velocity/force for the projectile than filling it 1/8 of the way. This is directly related to recoil. - there was not a fine ball to bore fit, couldn't be. This would result in lowered velocity and recoil. - it isn't clear that using modern powders for testing is appropriate. These are sorta random thoughts that bear on the basic question of the reality of using vey early handguns. If there were a way to really duplicate the performance I could run some live tests out back. |
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Hi Ed, The old black powder was, as I noted, quite poor in performance. Of course, there was one or more rolling balls used but then followed by a heavy wad, often a wooden plug; so the recoil must have been hard. Hadn't it been very hard there would have been no need for hooks. In an earlier posting I mentioned the firing tests that the Landeszeughaus Graz carried thru with 400 year old guns, and gave the literature. An accompanying video shows the heavy recoil of the various pieces which sometimes made the testers step back or aside. A friend of mine builds exact copies of earliest guns and fires them the old way, using 500 year old powder recipes. The recoil is very hard, comparable to a 12 or 10 gauge shotgun with "nomal" loads and going worse with heavy ones. The testers had black shoulders after each time they tried. Michael |
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It looks as if the short iron lug was originally a hook and broken off or shortened later. In any case it had the function of a wall hook. I am afraid that Herr Riestche had overlooked that detail. With my respect and best wishes, Michael |
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Can you point me to that posting/video? |
Graz catalog and VHS video
Done, Ed.
Michael |
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I must say that the part of this topic that has mainly raised my curiosity was whether indeed the first generation of harquebus recoil hooks was made of wood ... even soon to be assumed they were doomed to failure. Fernando |
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Fernando |
Fernando,
Unfortunately I have no knowledge of - any original illustration from the Gothic period - any photo of a doubtlessly original piece - any existing piece that is undoubtedly original comprising barrel and stock with a "wooden hook". I will, however, ask Herr Rietsche about his reference and report to you. Best, Michael |
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Sorry, Fernando, and all of you, Here are the details of the catalog and video, and the contact. Maybe the URL will not work; I do not know how to copy it. |
Were recoil support hooks on guns made of wood?
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Fernando,
I hope to be able now and sort out the qestion if there were wooden hooks to guns. Let's stick closely to terms, meaning that a hook has to look like a hook and a lug is - well, a lug. In his Park Land Arms Fair catalog article, Bernhard Rietsche refers to ZHWK, vol. 2, 1900-1902, pp. 119. This article by Paul Sixl is based on the Pilsen guns and solely refers to the piece that I posted twice above, and a third time below, with the large wooden base to its underside. In fact, Sixl does not call this a "hook" but attributes its function to absorbing the recoil. He writes that pressing the heavy piece down on its rest must have reduced the kick back. He also mentions a historical drawing in Vienna codex ms. 53 (actually, in his first quote in ZHWK vol. I, 1897-1899, p. 182, he calls it codex ms 55) arguing that the stock of that drawing was absolutely identical ("in voller Übereinstimmung") to the one in Pilsen. Let's check out the two pieces ourselves. Here is the Pilsen gun once more, contrasted to the gun from the Vienna codex. Not only is there almost no similarity, let alone "identity" between their stocks, the Vienna gun has in fact no wooden lug or "hook" at all. So this argument is missing any base. Things remain the same they used to be: There is no original historical source evidence of the existence of "wooden hooks". What makes the Pilsen gun special is the big wooden lug on its underside that was certainly used to rest the heavy handgun (Sixl gives its length with 130 cm and its weight with 10,37 kg) e.g. on a wall. This lug alone was doubtlessly apt to soften the recoil a bit, but, as I pointed out before, it does clearly have a rudimentary iron lug protruding from the underside which must have served as the real recoil stop. It may even be the rest of a regular hook. The Pilsen gun is not really an example for a wooden hook. Only iron hooks could stand the recoil and prevent the wood from being heavily damaged. It cannot be categorically excluded that heavy wooden lugs were the first stage in recoil prevention, but if so, they were certainly not "hooks", and it was not for long. The next stage were iron hooks nailed thru the stock (as is the case in the Berne gun) oder drawn over the barrel and rivited, as in my piece. From ca. 1440-50 we know both the earliest illustrated sources and various surviving haquebut barrels with integral fire welded wrought iron hooks. Bronze barrels had cast hooks, of course. Michael |
Hi Michael,
Thanks a lot for investigation and consequent revelations. Quote:
Now, if you allow me the impertinence ... What if we don't (strictly) stick to terms ? Like if we are flexible to the extent that when we mention hook, this may as well be a figure of speech; after all, hooks have so many shapes ... i mean, what instead of mentioning hook, we just call it a 'device', comprehending hooks, lugs, stumps, when they all serve the same purpose?! If you allow me the correlation, i was reading about the appearance of the stock in portable firearms; the author reminds us that, after all, the stock is ( or also is) an implement to absorb the recoil. Is this 'reasoning' any 'reasonable' ? I know, in this case the human shoulder, or chest, plays the role of the wall. This is what happens when you pay attention to laymen :shrug: . If you don't have any more patience, just send me to that part :eek: . Fernando |
Fernando,
I think that most reasoning is "reasonable". This is why I did not exclude the possibility of a real existence of wooden devices to reduce the recoil. Of course such existed as the lug of the Pilsen gun sure does, apart from being a rest, effect one more thing: it makes the gun heavier where this is most useful to keep the kick back low. I hope the two of us can happily meet under this compromise. Michael |
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Graz catalog
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I have been informed that the video is sold out. Those who are interested in the catalog (in German but the measurement results like muzzle velocity, impact etc. are perfectly understood and there are lots of b/w photos) please email: infopoint@museum-joanneum.at The link should work this time. Michael |
what is the calibre of handgonne with matchlock? what is the barrel length?
Barreel is 6 or 8 meshes? |
Spiridonov,
The barrel is 33 cm in length measured from the touch hole, the caliber is 23 mm smoothbore. Michael |
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