Index: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Home > Musket
A musket is a muzzle-loaded, smooth-bore long gun. It is fired from the shoulder, except for the rare wall guns. The date of their origin is unknown, but they were obsolete by the middle of the 19th century, having been superseded by rifles. Typical calibers ranged from .50 to .75 inch. A soldier whose weapon is a musket is a musketman or musketeer.The bullets were spherical lead balls contained in a paper cartridge which also held the black powder (gunpowder) propellant. The balls were smaller than the bore, wrapped in a loosely fitting paper patch which formed the upper part of the cartridge.
The lower part of the cartridge contained the gunpowder and the two sections were separated with one's teeth. The gunpowder was loaded first, followed by the paper from the lower section of cartridge as wadding. Then the ball and upper piece of cartridge were loaded. Finally, a ramrod was used to compact the ball and wadding down onto the gunpowder.
In flintlocks, the pan was either filled from a powder flask after loading the ball, or from the paper cartridge before the bulk of the gunpowder was poured down the barrel. Following its invention in 1807, muskets started to be fitted with percussion caps which were much more reliable than flintlocks, as well as working in the rain.
A very experienced user could load and fire at a maximum rate of around 4 shots per minute, but the average soldier was expected to be able to fire 3 rounds per minute.
Muskets were slow to reload and inaccurate, so army formations typically deployed musket-men in formations two or three lines deep. The first line would fire in unison, then drop to their knees to reload, while the lines behind them fired.
Owing to the musket's inaccuracy, musketmen were not expected to aim at particular targets. Rather, the objective was to deliver a mass of musket balls into the enemy line. Soldiers expected to face musket fire were disciplined to move in precise formations and obey orders unquestioningly. British troops in particular were reputed to be drilled until they could perform coolly and automatically in the heat of combat.
See also
- Muskets
- gun
- weaponA weapon is a tool used to kill, maim, destroy or perhaps simply disable, a person or animal and as a result, also to threaten and defend. Since the dawn of humanity the use of weapons has been codified resulting in both martial arts and strategic doctrin
- Charleville musketThe Charleville musket was the primary musket used by the French during their participation in the American Revolutionary War. It was also distributed to the Americans, and later became the pattern for the Springfield musket of 1795. It fired a. 70-calibe
- Brown BessShort Land Pattern The Brown Bess in History Brown Bess is a nickname of unknown provenance for the British Long Land Pattern Musket and its derivatives. The Long Land musket and its derivatives, all 0. 75 calibre flintlock muskets, were the standard long
- The Three MusketeersThe Three Musketeers Les Trois Mousquetaires is a novel by Alexandre Dumas, pere. It recounts the adventures of a young man called D'Artagnan after he leaves home to become a musketeer. D'Artagnan is not one of the musketeers of the title; those are his f
- MuzzleloaderA muzzleloader is any firearm into which the bullet is loaded from the muzzle of the gun. This can apply to anything from cannons to pistols, but in modern parlance the term most commonly applies to black powder small arms. In general, the sequence of loa
- The Military RevolutionSimilar to Charlemagnes re-establishment of the feudal monarch, the invention of gunpowder for warfare brought another great change and transformation to Europe. Some call this change The Military Revolution because gunpowder forced military advancements
Firearms
Read more »