13th January 2019, 01:39 PM | #1 |
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Unidentified pistol
In my collection there is a pistol that shows the VOC mark of the Dutch Vereenigte Company on its barrel. Obviously the pistol used to have a belthook that is missing but its fixing device is still there. Has anybody here seen such a pistol or at least such a device? Inside the lockplate is a mark "P" (perhaps PISTOR at Schmalkalden)
Total length is 405 mm, barrel length is 234 mm. corrado26 |
13th January 2019, 03:05 PM | #2 | |
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Quote:
And by the way, does this pistol have a French touch; powder pan, butt cap, 'embouchoir' and all ? |
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14th January 2019, 12:21 AM | #3 |
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Hello Udo,
I'm not convinced, that this really is a VOC mark. I've never seen any with the O and C overlapping, much less so heavily... Also there appear to be arrows (which don't seem to vibe with the VOC-V, too). Any other marks that might fit? Regards, Kai |
14th January 2019, 02:22 AM | #4 |
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Hi Corrado,
Nice pistol but are you sure it once had a belt hook? Normally belt hooks had 2 screws holding them in place. Also if it was hooked onto a belt, the rammer would likely fall out, as it does not look to be a captive rammer. Stu |
14th January 2019, 09:03 AM | #5 |
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What else than a belthook should this device be for? I made a drawing how this hook fits in the recess so that it cannot move when the screw is tightly screwed. Your objection because of the rammrod is ok, but as I think that this pistol is made arround 1770/75, there are more examples without a swivel rammer as for instance the French navy pistols 1779 and 1786. The swivel rammers came up not before ca. 1790. And there are hundreds of examples of pistols with belthooks that have just one screw to fix the hook!
corrado26 |
14th January 2019, 02:50 PM | #6 |
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Udo is right. The parallel recess would lodge whatever system in a way that it could not swing.
And the fact that, if this pistol was hanging down a belt or a bandolier by means of a hook or a ring, would cause the ramrod to easily fall off, well, such would fall off in any case, as the pistol would never be kept by whatever method with its barrel upright. The remedy for this contingency was to build the rod thick enough to get firmly stuck into the stock pipe. I know of systems where the ramrod had a protuberance that would be caught by a little steel dent in the stock. And back to this pistol model, allow me to be stuck up with the French influence idea. Here is a confrontation between Udo's example and the French Cavalry an IX (Full details HERE). ... Don't tell me there are no several similarities. Probably this is about a civilian version or a contract, including variations like the hanging device ? . |
14th January 2019, 05:33 PM | #7 |
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I found nearly the same pistol in the collection of Dutch pistols of Robert E. Brooker in the U.S.
The only thing that is missing is the belt hook device. It also shows what he describes as intertwined Cs what I think is the VOC mark. The barrel ring and the style of the butt is absolutely the same. By the way, this type of pistol has nothing to do with the French M an 9 - the differences are too numerous. Brookers dating of this pistol with 1815 is much too late corrado26 |
14th January 2019, 06:38 PM | #8 | |
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Hello Udo,
Quote:
Also the additional vestigial smaller "features" just don't line up with any VOC mark I've come across. For the time being, I'd go with Brooker's "intertwined Cs" hypothesis. Any close-up of his example? Regards, Kai |
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