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#13 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Bay Area
Posts: 1,660
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I agree with all of them. In fact, the Ottoman administration strived to maintain some level of control over the production of firearms for obvious reasons and in some cases was even suppliying the gunsmiths with raw material, such as iron. However, based on Ottoman records for the confiscation of weapons from the Christian peasantry, and the large numbers in those records of various firearms seized, it is obvious that the majority of the production was sold locally. So while the best gunsmiths were transferred to Istanbul to work for the Sultan and the Janissary corps, and garrisons throughout the Balkans often placed orders with the local gunsmith guilds, I still think the relationship was far from a contractual one, such as say Colt's contract with the U.S. Navy. Given the nature of the production of the characteristic Balkan firearms and its lack of industrialization, the gunsmith guilds in Tetovo, Elbasan or Sliven could not really complete a large government contract. Thus, after the military reforms of Mahmud II, the Ottoman army was relying mainly on Belgian, English and American factories for its firearms, and the local gunsmiths were soon out of business, unable to compete on quality and price. Regards, Teodor |
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