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#1 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Chania Crete Greece
Posts: 511
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Dear Philipp, this last example is not locally made! It is 100% made in France, as aluxury gun for export to the east. The locals copied this style, with a lower quality but for sure less expensive imitation. Having said that though, i am thinking that in order for the French to make this style for export, the locals liked it.. So i dont know ηow this taste for caputcines was first developed!
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#2 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Chania Crete Greece
Posts: 511
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Again, a north African musket.
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jan 2011
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Lots of reasons for flint and even matchlocks to continue in use. Ease of supply is one reason certainly, but problems with storage is another. Matchlocks continued in use in South America til quite recently because the humidity corroded cartridges into uselessness.
Political reasons also apply. Most Imperial governments preferred the locals to be denied modern weapons. A current example I have heard of is that native Tibetans are allowed Matchlocks but not modern guns by the Chinese government Matchlocks are adequate for hunting but are not considered a threat to the local government forces. |
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#4 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: California
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Here is an example of a matchlock dated 1844 with a Spanish inscription on the lockplate, from a remote area in one of the Spain's former colonies in the Americas. What is notable, besides the long-obsolete mechanical design, is the shape of the buttstock, characteristic of parts of southern Europe two centuries or more earlier, totally unaffected by subsequent stylistic developments. The barrel of iron with flaring brass muzzle, cal. .62 in., overall length 41.5 in.
(Royal Scottish Museum, Edinburgh, inv. no. 1894.133) |
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#5 |
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Location: California
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That might have been true a half-century ago, but in more recent media images I have noted show Tibetan nomads allowed to keep arms for hunting carrying bolt-action Mosin-Nagant M1891s and Mauser Mod. 1898s from the pre-World War II era, with native-made bipod barrel legs added to the forestocks in traditional fashion. The rifles are chambered for calibers formerly used by Nationalist and Communist forces in China for much of the last century so ammunition supply must not have been a problem, indeed it is possible that they were supplied by the authorities since besides hunting, there isn't much of a livelihood for these people besides herding yaks and other animals.
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#6 |
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: St. Louis, MO area.
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These last photos show the lock plate was made for three screw mounting. Is there a photo of the left side of the stock ?
Rick |
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#7 | |
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Location: California
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Below are pics of a virtually similar lock, you sent me these some years back. The exterior is from an early type of internal-spring flintlock used in Portugal, which used a unique and somewhat complex sliding-rod sear system called an agulha. However, on these late trade locks, the "guts" have been simplified with an low-market version of the French flintlock system with a pivoting sear engaging a notch in the tumbler (full cock only, the older external pivoting manual safety is retained). As you can see, the tumbler / sear bridle has been designed away in the interests of economy. These late locks with the archaic exterior styling are called fechos de três parafusos, (3-screw locks) to distinguish them from the earlier versions. In actuality, they are in essence French flintlocks with a hybrid external half-cock "brake", masquerading as an older type, for the purposes of marketing to conservative and tradition-bound consumers. |
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#8 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Chania Crete Greece
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The other side of the musket.
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#9 |
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Location: California
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Thanks for the numerous photos accompanying your post. Of interest is the fluted buttstock and also a level of fit and finish that is above that of many north African guns (especially those from Morocco). Based on this I believe that the gun, in terms of origin, is European -- it looks like a lazarinha, a trade musket or fowling piece made for export in Portugal or Belgium in the century prior to the First World War. The majority of these went to the Portuguese and Belgian colonies of west equatorial Africa, not to the Maghreb. The use of dome-headed tacks as decoration is common among trade objects destined for this market, along with other objects produced in-culture.
Your gun is in very nice condition compared to most artifacts from the region and is a desirable ethnographic object reflecting its colonial history. |
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#10 |
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Chania Crete Greece
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Hi Phillip,
The barell of the gun speaks in favor of the name you mentioned! It is inscrbed "Lazarino"!!! |
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#11 |
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Location: California
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