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matchlock
matchlock (ˈmætʃlɒk) [f. match n.2 + lock n.2] 1. A gun lock in which slow-match is placed for igniting the powder. b. attrib.: matchlock musket = 2.1698 Fryer Acc. E. India & P. 139 The Infantry [consists] of Gentues, with Match-Lock Muskets. 1727–52 Chambers Cycl. s.v. Carabine, The carabine..was ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Matchlock
the matchlock barrel and firing mechanism. Under Qing rule, the Hakka on Taiwan owned matchlock muskets. Han people traded and sold matchlock muskets to the Taiwanese aborigines.
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Snap matchlock
The snap matchlock is a type of matchlock mechanism used to ignite early firearms. There were 2 different lock mechanisms used in Indo-Portuguese matchlock guns.
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The Matchlock Gun
The Matchlock Gun is a children's book by Walter D. Edmonds. Returning home, she loads the matchlock gun, fixes it in position to fire and instructs Edward how and when to fire it.
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Snaplock
Compared to a matchlock, the snaplock could fire twice as many shots per minute due to requiring fewer steps to reload. The Swedish king Gustavus Adolphus had many matchlock muskets converted to snaplocks during his military reforms.
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Snaphance
(The snaplock had a manually operated pan cover similar to that of the matchlock. Some definitions class the snaphaunce as a sub-type of snaplock.) By 1645 a matchlock musket cost 10 shillings in Britain compared to 15 shillings for a flintlock musket.
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Istinggar
Istinggar is a type of matchlock firearm built by the various ethnic groups of the Maritime Southeast Asia. The Portuguese in Goa independently produced their own matchlock firearms.
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Bo-hiya
In 1543, the Japanese acquired matchlock technology from the Portuguese, and the resulting firearms developed by the Japanese led to new means of launching waterproof rope which was wrapped around the shaft; when lit the bo-hiya was launched from either a wide-bore cannon, a form of tanegashima (Japanese matchlock
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هيو لونغ جينغ
وصف الكتيّب أيضاً طريقة صنع الألغام، كما تضمن شرح أسلوب صناعة أسلحة شبيهة ببندقية الفتيل matchlock والمدافع البدائية.
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Toradar
A toradar is a South Asian matchlock primarily found in the Mughal Empire, dating from the 16th century. Toradar matchlock remained to be the preferred firearms mechanism well until about 1830.
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Arquebus
The exact dating of the matchlock's appearance is disputed. However it did not have the matchlock mechanism traditionally associated with the arquebus. The exact dating of the matchlock addition is disputed.
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Bedil (term)
In the battle, the Malays were using cannons, matchlock guns, and "firing tubes". Java arquebus
Java arquebus is an early long matchlock firearm from Java, used before the arrival of Iberian explorers.
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Denshūtai
They were equipped with advanced Minié-type Enfield guns, vastly superior to the percussion Gewehr smoothbore guns and matchlock Tanegashima possessed
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Battle of Nagashino
He then deployed a matchlock corps led by five bugyō to the front line. of matchlock guns equipped was not much different between the allied forces and Takeda forces.
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Tanegashima (gun)
the matchlock barrel and firing mechanism. Godine Publisher, 1979
External links
The varieties of Japanese matchlock ().
information.
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en.wikipedia.org