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15th August 2020, 01:18 PM | #1 |
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A Rare unique early Pistol
Hello friends,have been busy so have not posted since a long time,here I am sharing a small pistol which recently came in a local auction .The guess would be Afganistan/india but found out that this actually is a Russian Cossack gun,may have been shortened at both ends at some stage of its life ,Thanks Oliver Pinchot for this information.A rifle of similar lock and character was recently sold at Auctions Imperial as a rare Russian snaplock rifle being preserved foe centuries in the Imperial Russian hinterlands,the archaic wooden stock with faceted butt,the characteristic lock,showing a variety of influences and all other stock furniture handwrought
the first recorded examples of this type of weapon in Russia occurred during the late 16th century.They were rugged,reliable weapons popular amongst Cossacks and other march forces ,remaining in use ,formally unchanged ,until the late 19th century he also mentioned it could be Russian or Swedish , some where along the Baltic coast and late 19 th century the overall length of is just 52.5 cm someone here will tell us more about this unusual pistol,am also adding a photo of a Afgani man with a similar type of pistol around his waist Regards Rajesh |
15th August 2020, 03:04 PM | #2 |
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Please edit pictures for clarity ...
Hi Rajesh:
Your pictures are a bit hard to see against the black background. Do you think you could work on them with a picture editing program, adjusting the contrast and exposure a bit, in order to make them clearer. This is a rare and interesting gun, and it would be good to have some clearer pictures for the archives. I've adjusted your first picture to show what a little editing can do. If you don't have access to a picture editing program, let me know and I will edit them for you. Regards, Ian P.S. Having not heard back from Rajesh, here are the remaining pictures of his gun that have been edited for contrast and exposure. . Last edited by Ian; 16th August 2020 at 09:12 AM. Reason: Added further edited pictures |
15th August 2020, 04:29 PM | #3 |
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Maybe this is a rare variation of the Norwegian "Goenge-snaplocks" made around 1650, at least the lock is very similar except its strange release mechanism. The rest of the gun was certainly made in later times.
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15th August 2020, 05:31 PM | #4 |
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16th August 2020, 05:56 AM | #5 | |
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16th August 2020, 06:30 AM | #6 | |
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The one above is Norwegian (Norsk Folkemuseum, Oslo, no. 34-29), described as late 17th cent. It is a true snaphaunce, the frizzen and pan cover are separate; the latter is manually opened as on a matchlock, a very primitive form for something supposedly made in the late 1600s. The one below is Swedish, mid-17th cent., (Livrustkammaren, Stockholm, no. 1795), it is identified as a Göinge-bössa and note that it is more like a true flintlock in that the frizzen and pan cover are combined in one L shaped unit. What is interesting to note is that the locks on both these guns feature mainsprings that press UPWARD on an arm extending to the REAR of the bottom of the cock. (Like the Spanish or Ottoman "patilla" miquelets). The lock on the gun in this thread has a mainspring that is supposed to press DOWNWARD on the FRONT of the cock's foot (the end of the spring on this exemplar seems to be dislodged from its position and possibly the lock is non-functional at this time). The way the mainspring is arranged on this type of lock is analogous to the Italian alla romana or Algerian "toe lock" miquelets. In the next post I will show a Russian snap lock for comparison. |
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16th August 2020, 06:39 AM | #7 |
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OK, so here we have a Russian snap lock, published in the same book. This is a very princely example, dated 1654, in the Kremlin Armory, Moscow (no. 6763).
Note 3 things similar to the primitive version on this "pistol" being discussed. 1. Mainspring pushes down on the front of the cock's base. 2. Similar loop on top of the cock, to make it easier to pull back with the fingers. 3. Simple leaf spring that provides tension on the frizzen. So it would seem that the gun being discussed is a rustic version, with a greatly simplified (but no doubt effective) trigger system, based on a Russian design and made in the hinterlands, perhaps Siberia? |
16th August 2020, 07:03 AM | #8 |
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found two more!
This, from a French magazine, Gazette des Armes, December 1986, article by J R Clergeau on firearms from Siberia, prior to the introduction of industrial-age weaponry from Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union.
Here are two examples, with snaplocks of differing design. The example in the black-and-white illustration has the combined frizzen and pan-cover of a true flintlock, as seen on the Swedish Göinge-bössa posted above, but with the downward-acting mainspring of the 1654 Russian snaphaunce in the Kremlin Armory. The gun in the color photo is a snaphaunce with separate frizzen, and an upward-acting mainspring of the Swedish and Norwegian locks shown two posts previously. So it would appear that the locally-made firearms of Siberia did not mechanically conform to any single precedent, but rather exhibit varying features depending upon the maker's preferences. |
17th August 2020, 01:53 AM | #9 | |
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Thanks Corrado |
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16th August 2020, 06:06 AM | #10 | |
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horse of a different color
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Looking closely at the image of the Afghan (a drawing, not a photo) I can see that the artist has depicted a firearm notably different from your "pistol". The lock mechanism in the artwork shows a "swan neck" cock or hammer dissimilar to the piece under consideration, and a lack of the large external mainspring. Seems to me that the artist was trying to depict, in a rough sketch format, a typical flintlock of the 19th cent., of a type used by the British in India. |
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17th August 2020, 01:55 AM | #11 | |
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thanks |
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