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Arquebus

An arquebus (/ˈɑːrk(w)ɪbəs/ AR-k(w)ib-əs) is a form of long gun that appeared in Europe and the Ottoman Empire during the 15th century. An infantryman armed with an arquebus is called an arquebusier.

17th-century arquebus at the Château de Foix museum, France

The term arquebus is derived from the Dutch word Haakbus ("hook gun").[1] The term arquebus was applied to many different forms of firearms from the 15th to 17th centuries, but it originally referred to "a hand-gun with a hook-like projection or lug on its under surface, useful for steadying it against battlements or other objects when firing".[2] These "hook guns" were in their earliest forms of defensive weapons mounted on German city walls in the early 15th century.[3] The addition of a shoulder stock, priming pan,[4] and matchlock mechanism in the late 15th century turned the arquebus into a handheld firearm and also the first firearm equipped with a trigger.

The exact dating of the matchlock's appearance is disputed. It could have appeared in the Ottoman Empire as early as 1465 and in Europe a little before 1475.[5] The heavy arquebus, which was then called a musket, was developed to better penetrate plate armor and appeared in Europe around 1521.[6] Heavy arquebuses mounted on war wagons were called arquebus à croc.[7] These carried a lead ball of about 3.5 ounces (100 g).[8]

A standardized arquebus, the caliver, was introduced in the latter half of the 16th century. The name "caliver" is an English derivation from the French calibre – a reference to the gun's standardized bore.[9] The caliver allowed troops to load bullets faster since they fit their guns more easily, whereas before soldiers often had to modify their bullets into suitable fits, or were even forced to make their own prior to battle.

The matchlock arquebus is considered the forerunner to the flintlock musket.

Terminology edit

 
A "double arquebus", 15th century

The word arquebus is derived from the Dutch word Haakbus ("hook gun"),[1] which was applied to an assortment of firearms from the 15th to 17th centuries. It originally referred to "a hand-gun with a hook-like projection or lug on its under surface, useful for steadying it against battlements or other objects when firing".[2] The first certain attestation of the term arquebus dates back to 1364, when the lord of Milan Bernabò Visconti recruited 70 archibuxoli, although in this case it almost certainly referred to a hand cannon.[10] The arquebus has at times been known as the harquebus, harkbus, hackbut,[11] hagbut,[12] archibugio, haakbus, schiopo,[13] sclopus,[14] tüfenk,[15] tofak,[16] matchlock, and firelock.[17]

Musket edit

The musket, essentially a large arquebus, was introduced around 1521, but fell out of favor by the mid-16th century due to the decline of armor. The term, however, remained and musket became a generic descriptor for smoothbore gunpowder weapons fired from the shoulder ('shoulder arms') into the mid-19th century.[18] At least on one occasion "musket" and "arquebus" were used interchangeably to refer to the same weapon,[19] and even referred to as an "arquebus musket".[20] A Habsburg commander in the mid-1560s once referred to muskets as "double arquebuses".[18] The matchlock firing mechanism also became a common term for the arquebus after it was added to the firearm. Later flintlock firearms were sometimes called fusils or fuzees.[21]

Mechanism and usage edit

 
Depiction of an arquebus fired from a fork rest. Image produced in 1876.
 
A serpentine matchlock mechanism
Demonstration of Tanegashima in Himeji Castle

Prior to the appearance of the serpentine lever by around 1411, handguns were fired from the chest, tucked under one arm, while the other arm maneuvered a hot pricker to the touch hole to ignite the gunpowder.[22] The matchlock, which appeared roughly around 1475, changed this by adding a firing mechanism consisting of two parts, the match, and the lock. The lock mechanism held within a clamp a two to three feet long length of smoldering rope soaked in saltpeter, which was the match.[22] Connected to the lock lever was a trigger, which lowered the match into a priming pan when squeezed, igniting the priming powder, causing a flash to travel through the touch hole, also igniting the gunpowder within the barrel, and propelling the bullet out the muzzle.[23]

While matchlocks provided a crucial advantage by allowing the user to aim the firearm using both hands, it was also awkward to utilize.[24] To avoid accidentally igniting the gunpowder the match had to be detached while loading the gun. In some instances the match would also go out, so both ends of the match were kept lit. This proved cumbersome to maneuver as both hands were required to hold the match during removal, one end in each hand. The procedure was so complex that a 1607 drill manual published by Jacob de Gheyn in the Netherlands listed 28 steps just to fire and load the gun.[24] In 1584 the Ming General Qi Jiguang composed an 11-step song to practice the procedure in rhythm: "One, clean the gun. Two, pour the powder. Three, tamp the powder down. Four, drop the pellet. Five, drive the pellet down. Six, put in paper (stopper). Seven, drive the paper down. Eight, open the flashpan cover. Nine, pour in the flash powder. Ten, close the flashpan, and clamp the fuse. Eleven, listen for the signal, then open the flashpan cover. Aiming at the enemy, raise your gun and fire."[25] Reloading a gun during the 16th century took anywhere from 20 seconds to a minute under the most ideal conditions.[26]

The development of volley fire—by the Ottomans, the Chinese, the Japanese, and the Dutch—made the arquebus more feasible for widespread adoption by the military. The volley fire technique transformed soldiers carrying firearms into organized firing squads with each row of soldiers firing in turn and reloading in a systematic fashion. Volley fire was implemented with cannons as early as 1388 by Ming artillerists,[27] but volley fire with matchlocks was not implemented until 1526 when the Ottoman Janissaries utilized it during the Battle of Mohács.[28] The matchlock volley fire technique was next seen in mid-16th-century China as pioneered by Qi Jiguang and in late-16th-century Japan.[29][30] Qi Jiguang elaborates on his volley fire technique in the Jixiao Xinshu:

All the musketeers, when they get near the enemy are not allowed to fire early, and they're not allowed to just fire everything off in one go, [because] whenever the enemy then approaches close, there won't be enough time to load the guns (銃裝不及), and frequently this mismanagement costs the lives of many people. Thus, whenever the enemy gets to within a hundred paces' distance, they [the musketeers] are to wait until they hear a blast on the bamboo flute, at which they deploy themselves in front of the troops, with each platoon (哨) putting in front one team (隊). They [the musketeer team members] wait until they hear their own leader fire a shot, and only then are they allowed to give fire. Each time the trumpet gives a blast, they fire one time, spread out in battle array according to the drilling patterns. If the trumpet keeps blasting without stopping, then they are allowed to fire all together until their fire is exhausted, and it's not necessary [in this case] to divide into layers.[29]

In Europe, William Louis, Count of Nassau-Dillenburg theorized that by applying to firearms the same Roman counter march technique as described by Aelianus Tacticus, matchlocks could provide fire without cease.[31] In a letter to his cousin Maurice of Nassau, Prince of Orange on 8 December 1594, he said:

I have discovered evolutionibus [a term that would eventually be translated as "drill"] a method of getting the musketeers and others with guns not only to practice firing but to keep on doing so in a very effective battle order (that is to say, they do not fire at will or from behind a barrier ...). Just as soon as the first rank has fired, then by the drill [they have learned] they will march to the back. The second rank either marching forward or standing still, will then fire just like the first. After that the third and following ranks will do the same. When the last rank has fired, the first will have reloaded, as the following diagram shows.[32]

Once volley firing had been developed, the rate of fire and efficiency was greatly increased and the arquebus went from being a support weapon to the primary focus of most early modern armies.[33]

The wheellock mechanism was utilized as an alternative to the matchlock as early as 1505,[34] but was more expensive to produce at three times the cost of a matchlock and prone to breakdown, thus limiting it primarily to specialist firearms and pistols.[35]

The snaphance flintlock was invented by the mid-16th century and then the "true" flintlock in the early 17th century, but by this time the generic term for firearms had shifted to "musket", and flintlocks are not usually associated with arquebuses.[36]

History edit

 
Two soldiers on the left using arquebuses, 1470
 
Early matchlocks as illustrated in the Baburnama (16th century)
 
Musketeer from Jacob van Gheyn's Wapenhandelingen van Roers, Musquetten ende Spiesen (1608)
 
Tanegashima arquebus of the Edo period
 
Illustration of a 1639 Ming musketry volley formation

Origins edit

The earliest known examples of an "arquebus" date back to 1411 in Europe and no later than 1425 in the Ottoman Empire.[5] This early firearm was a hand cannon, whose roots trace back to China, with a serpentine lever to hold matches.[37] However it did not have the matchlock mechanism traditionally associated with the arquebus. The exact dating of the matchlock addition is disputed. The first references to the use of what may have been arquebuses (tüfek) by the Janissary corps of the Ottoman army date them from 1394 to 1465.[5] However, it is unclear whether these were arquebuses or small cannons as late as 1444, but according to Gábor Ágoston the fact that they were listed separate from cannons in mid-15th century inventories suggest they were handheld firearms.[38]

In Europe, a shoulder stock, probably inspired by the crossbow stock,[4] was added to the arquebus around 1470 and the appearance of the matchlock mechanism is dated to a little before 1475. The matchlock arquebus was the first firearm equipped with a trigger mechanism.[34][39] It is also considered to be the first portable shoulder-arms firearm.[40]

Ottomans edit

The Ottomans made use of arquebuses as early as the first half of the fifteenth century. During the Ottoman–Hungarian wars of 1443–1444, it was noted that Ottoman defenders in Vidin had arquebuses. Based on the earliest known contemporary written sources, Godfrey Goodwin dates the first use of the arquebus by the Janissaries to no earlier than 1465.[41] According to contemporary accounts, 400 arquebusiers served in Sultan Murad II's campaign in the 1440s when he crossed Bosporus straits and arquebuses were used in combat by the Ottomans at the second battle of Kosovo in 1448. Ottomans also made some use of Wagon Fortresses which they copied from the Hussites, which often involved the placing of arquebusiers in the protective wagons and using them against the enemy. Arquebusiers were also used effectively at the battle of Bashkent in 1473 when they were used in conjunction with artillery.[42]

Europe edit

The arquebus was used in substantial numbers for the first time in Europe during the reign of king Matthias Corvinus of Hungary (r. 1458–1490).[43] One in four soldiers in the infantry of the Black Army of Hungary wielded an arquebus, and one in five when accounting for the whole army,[44] which was an unusually high proportion at the time. Although they were present on the battlefield King Mathias preferred enlisting shielded men instead due to the arquebus's low rate of fire. While the Black Army adopted arquebuses relatively early, the trend did not catch on for decades in Europe and by the turn of the 16th century only around 10% of Western European infantrymen used firearms.[45][46] Arquebuses were used as early as 1472 by the Portuguese at Zamora. Likewise, the Castilians used arquebuses as well in 1476.[47] The French started adopting the arquebus in 1520.[48] However, arquebus designs continued to develop and in 1496 Philip Monch of the Palatinate composed an illustrated Buch der Strynt un(d) Buchsse(n) on guns and "harquebuses".[49]

The effectiveness of the arquebus was apparent by the Battle of Cerignola of 1503, which is the earliest-recorded military conflict where arquebuses played a decisive role in the outcome of battle.[50]

In Russia a small arquebus called pishchal (Russian: пищаль) appeared in 1478 in Pskov. The Russian arquebusiers, or pishchal'niki, were seen as integral parts of the army and one thousand pishchal'niki participated in the final annexation of Pskov in 1510 as well as the conquest of Smolensk in 1512. The Russian need to acquire gunpowder weaponry bears some resemblance to the situation the Iranians were in. In 1545 two thousand pishchal'niki (one thousand on horseback) were levied by the towns and outfitted at treasury expense. Their use of mounted troops was also unique to the time period. The pishchal'niki eventually became skilled hereditary tradesmen farmers rather than conscripts.[51]

Arquebuses were used in the Italian Wars in the first half of the 16th century. Frederick Lewis Taylor claims that a kneeling volley fire may have been employed by Prospero Colonna's arquebusiers as early as the Battle of Bicocca (1522).[52] However, this has been called into question by Tonio Andrade who believes this is an over interpretation as well as mis-citation of a passage by Charles Oman suggesting that the Spanish arquebusiers knelt to reload, when in fact Oman never made such a claim.[53] This is contested by Idan Sherer, who quotes Paolo Giovio saying that the arquebusiers kneeled to reload so that the second line of arquebusiers could fire without endangering those in front of them.[54]

Mamluks edit

The Mamluks in particular were conservatively against the incorporation of gunpowder weapons. When faced with cannons and arquebuses wielded by the Ottomans they criticized them thus, "God curse the man who invented them, and God curse the man who fires on Muslims with them."[55] Insults were also levied against the Ottomans for having "brought with you this contrivance artfully devised by the Christians of Europe when they were incapable of meeting the Muslim armies on the battlefield".[55] Similarly, musketeers and musket-wielding infantrymen were despised in society by the feudal knights, even until the time of Miguel de Cervantes (1547–1616).[56] Eventually the Mamluks under Qaitbay were ordered in 1489 to train in the use of al-bunduq al-rasas (arquebuses). However, in 1514 an Ottoman army of 12,000 soldiers wielding arquebuses devastated a much larger Mamluk army.[55] The arquebus had become a common infantry weapon by the 16th century due to its relative cheapness—a helmet, breastplate and pike cost about three and a quarter ducats while an arquebus only a little over one ducat.[11][57] Another advantage of arquebuses over other equipment and weapons was its short training period. While a bow potentially took years to master, an effective arquebusier could be trained in just two weeks.[58]

Asia edit

The arquebus spread further east, reaching India by 1500, Southeast Asia by 1540, and China sometime between 1523 and 1548.[59][30] They were introduced to Japan in 1543 by Portuguese traders who landed by accident on Tanegashima (種子島), an island south of Kyūshū in the region controlled by the Shimazu clan.[30] By 1550, arquebuses known as tanegashima, teppō (鉄砲) or hinawaju (火縄銃) were being produced in large numbers in Japan. The tanegashima seem to have utilized snap matchlocks based on firearms from Goa, India, which was captured by the Portuguese in 1510.[60] Within ten years of its introduction upwards of three hundred thousand tanegashima were reported to have been manufactured.[61] The tanegashima eventually became one of the most important weapons in Japan. Oda Nobunaga revolutionized musket tactics in Japan by splitting loaders and shooters and assigning three guns to a shooter at the Battle of Nagashino in 1575, during which volley fire may have been implemented. However, the volley fire technique of 1575 has been called into dispute in recent years by J. S. A. Elisonas and J. P. Lamers in their translation of The Chronicle of Oda Nobunaga by Ota Gyuichi. In Lamers' Japonius he says that "whether or not Nobunaga actually operated with three rotating ranks cannot be determined on the basis of reliable evidence."[62] They claim that the version of events describing volley fire was written several years after the battle, and an earlier account says to the contrary that guns were fired en masse.[63] Even so, both Korean and Chinese sources note that Japanese gunners were making use of volley fire during the Japanese invasions of Korea from 1592 to 1598.[64]

Iran edit

In regard to Iranian use of the arquebus, much of the credit for their increase in use can be attributed to Shah Ismail I who, after being defeated by the firearm-using Ottomans in 1514, began extensive use of arquebuses and other firearms himself with an estimated 12,000 arquebusiers in service less than 10 years after his initial defeat by the Ottomans.[65] According to a 1571 report by Vincentio d'Alessandri, Persian arms including arquebuses "were superior and better tempered than those of any other nation", suggesting that such firearms were in common use among middle eastern powers by at least the mid-16th century.[19] While the use of 12,000 arquebusiers is impressive, the firearms were not widely adopted in Iran. This is in no small part due to the reliance on light cavalry by the Iranians.[65] Riding a horse and operating an arquebus are incredibly difficult which helped lead to both limited use and heavy stagnation in the technology associated with firearms.[65] These limitations aside, the Iranians still made use of firearms and Europe was very important in facilitating that as Europeans supplied Iran with firearms and sent experts to help them produce some of the firearms themselves.[65] Iran also made use of elephant mounted arquebusiers which would give them a clear view of their targets and better mobility.[66]

Southeast Asia edit

Southeast Asian powers started fielding arquebuses by 1540.[30] Đại Việt was considered by the Ming to have produced particularly advanced matchlocks during the 16–17th century, surpassing even Ottoman, Japanese, and European firearms. European observers of the Lê–Mạc War and later Trịnh–Nguyễn War also noted the proficiency of matchlock making by the Vietnamese. The Vietnamese matchlock was said to have been able to pierce several layers of iron armour, kill two to five men in one shot, yet also fire quietly for a weapon of its caliber.[67]

China edit

The arquebus was introduced to the Ming dynasty in the early 16th century and was used in small numbers to fight off pirates by 1548. There is, however, no exact date for its introduction and sources conflict on the time and manner in which it was introduced. Versions of the arquebus' introduction to China include the capture of firearms by the Ming during a battle in 1523,[68] the capture of the pirate Wang Zhi, who had arquebuses, in 1558, which contradicts the usage of arquebuses by the Ming army ten years earlier, and the capture of arquebuses from Europeans by the Xu brother pirates, which later came into possession of a man named Bald Li, from whom the Ming officials captured the arquebuses. About 10,000 muskets were ordered by the Central Military Weaponry Bureau in 1558 and the firearms were used to fight off pirates.[69]

Qi Jiguang developed military formations for the effective use of arquebus equipped troops with different mixtures of troops deployed in 12-man teams. The number of arquebuses assigned to each team could vary depending on the context but theoretically in certain cases all members of the team could have been deployed as gunners. These formations also made use of countermarch volley fire techniques. Firearm platoons deployed one team in front of them at the blast of a bamboo flute. They started firing after their leader fired and fired once at the blast of a trumpet, and then spread out according to their drilling pattern. Each layer could also fire once at the blowing of a horn and were supported by close quarters troops who could advance should the need arise. To avoid self inflicted injuries and ensure a consistent rate of fire in the heat of battle, Qi emphasized drilling in the procedure required to reload the weapon. Qi Jiguang gave a eulogy on the effectiveness of the gun in 1560:

It is unlike any other of the many types of fire weapons. In strength it can pierce armor. In accuracy it can strike the center of targets, even to the point of hitting the eye of a coin [i.e., shooting right through a coin], and not just for exceptional shooters. ... The arquebus [鳥銃] is such a powerful weapon and is so accurate that even bow and arrow cannot match it, and ... nothing is so strong as to be able to defend against it.[70]

— Jixiao Xinshu

European arquebus formations edit

 
Diagram of a 1594 Dutch musketry volley formation

In Europe, Maurice of Nassau pioneered the countermarch volley fire technique. After outfitting his entire army with new, standardized arms in 1599, Maurice of Nassau made an attempt to recapture Spanish forts built on former Dutch lands. In the Battle of Nieuwpoort in 1600, he administered the new techniques and technologies for the first time. The Dutch marched onto the beach where the fort was located and fully utilized the countermarching tactic. By orienting all of his arquebusiers into a block, he was able to maintain a steady stream of fire out of a disciplined formation using volley fire tactics. The result was a lopsided victory with 4,000 Spanish casualties to only 1,000 dead and 700 wounded on the Dutch side. Although the battle was principally won by the decisive counterattack of the Dutch cavalry and despite the failure of the new Dutch infantry tactic in stopping the veteran Spanish tercios, the battle is considered a decisive step forward in the development early modern warfare, where firearms took on an increasingly large role in Europe in the following centuries.[71]

"Musket" eventually overtook "arquebus" as the dominant term for similar firearms starting from the 1550s. Arquebuses are most often associated with matchlocks.[72]

Use with other weapons edit

The arquebus had many advantages but also severe limitations on the battlefield. This led to it often being paired up with other weaponry to mitigate these weaknesses. Qi Jiguang from China developed systems where soldiers with traditional weaponry stayed right behind the arquebusiers to protect them should enemy infantry get too close.[73] Pikemen were used to protect the arquebusiers by the English and the Venetians often used archers to lay down cover fire during the long reloading process.[74] The Ottomans often supported their arquebusiers with artillery fire or placed them in fortified wagons, a tactic they borrowed from the Hussites.[42]

Comparison to bows edit

 
Early arquebuses, the hook guns

Sixteenth-century military writer John Smythe thought that an arquebus could not match the accuracy of a bow in the hands of a highly skilled archer;[75] other military writers such as Humfrey Barwick and Barnabe Rich argued the opposite.[76][77] An arquebus angled at 35 degrees could throw a bullet up to 1,000 m (3,300 ft) or more,[78] much farther than any archers could shoot. An arquebus shot was considered deadly at up to 400 yards (360 m) while the heavier Spanish musket was considered deadly at up to 600 yards (550 m).[77] During the Japanese Invasions of Korea, Korean officials said they were at a severe disadvantage against Japanese troops because their arquebuses "could reach beyond several hundred paces".[79] In 1590, Smythe noted that arquebusiers and musketeers firing at such extreme distances rarely seemed to hit anything and instead decided to argue effective range, claiming that English archers like the ones from the Hundred Years' War would be more effective at 200–240 yards (180–220 m) than arquebusiers or musketeers, but by that point there were no longer enough skilled archers in England to properly test his theories.[80]

Perhaps the most important advantage of the arquebus over muscle-powered weapons like longbows was sheer power. A shot from a typical 16th century arquebus boasted between 1,300 to 1,750 J (960 to 1,290 ft⋅lbf) of kinetic energy, depending on the powder quality. A longbow arrow by contrast was about 80 J (59 ft⋅lbf), while crossbows could vary from 100 to 200 J (74 to 148 ft⋅lbf) depending on construction. Thus, arquebuses could easily defeat armor that would be highly effective against arrows or bolts, and inflict far greater wounds on flesh. The disparity was even greater with a 16th-century heavy musket, which were 2,300 to 3,000 J (1,700 to 2,200 ft⋅lbf).[81]

Most high-skilled bowmen achieved a far higher rate of shot than the matchlock arquebus, which took 30–60 seconds to reload properly.[76] The arquebus did, however, have a faster rate of fire than the most powerful crossbow, a shorter learning curve than a longbow, and was more powerful than either. The arquebus did not rely on the physical strength of the user for propulsion of the projectile, making it easier to find a suitable recruit. It also meant that, compared to an archer or crossbowman, an arquebusier lost less of his battlefield effectiveness due to fatigue, malnutrition or sickness. The arquebusier also had the added advantage of frightening enemies (and horses) with the noise. Wind could reduce the accuracy of archery, but had much less of an effect on an arquebus. During a siege it was also easier to fire an arquebus out of loopholes than it was a bow and arrow. It was sometimes advocated that an arquebusier should load his weapon with multiple bullets or small shot at close ranges rather than a single ball.[76] Small shot did not pack the same punch as a single round ball but the shot could hit and wound multiple enemies.

An arquebus also has superior penetrating power to a bow or crossbow. Although some plate armors were bulletproof, these armors were unique, heavy, and expensive. A cuirass with a tapul was able to absorb some musket fire due to being angled. Otherwise, most forms of armor a common soldier would wear (especially cloth, light plate, and mail) had little resistance against musket fire. Arrows, however, were relatively weaker in penetration, and heavier than bows or crossbows that required more skill and reload time than the standard bows.

Producing an effective arquebusier required much less training than producing an effective bowman. Most archers spent their whole lives training to shoot with accuracy, but with drill and instruction, the arquebusier was able to learn his profession in months as opposed to years. This low level of skill made it a lot easier to outfit an army in a short amount of time as well as expand the small arms ranks. This idea of lower skilled, lightly armoured units was the driving force in the infantry revolution that took place in the 16th and 17th centuries and allowed early modern infantries to phase out the longbow.[82]

An arquebusier could carry more ammunition and powder than a crossbowman or longbowman could with bolts or arrows. Once the methods were developed, powder and shot were relatively easy to mass-produce, while arrow making was a genuine craft requiring highly skilled labor.

However, the arquebus was more sensitive to rain, wind, and humid weather. At the Battle of Villalar, rebel troops experienced a significant defeat partially due to having a high proportion of arquebusiers in a rainstorm which rendered the weapons useless.[83] Gunpowder also ages much faster than a bolt or an arrow, particularly if improperly stored. Also, the resources needed to make gunpowder were less universally available than the resources needed to make bolts and arrows. Finding and reusing arrows or bolts was a lot easier than doing the same with arquebus bullets. This was a useful way to reduce the cost of practice, or resupply oneself if control of the battlefield after a battle was retained. A bullet must fit a barrel much more precisely than an arrow or bolt must fit a bow or crossbow, so the arquebus required more standardization and this made it harder to resupply by looting bodies of fallen soldiers. Gunpowder production was also far more dangerous than arrow or bolt production.

An arquebus was also significantly more dangerous to its user. The arquebusier carries a lot of gunpowder on his person and has a lit match in one hand. The same goes for the soldiers next to him. Amid the confusion, stress and fumbling of a battle, arquebusiers are potentially a danger to themselves. Early arquebuses tended to have a drastic recoil. They took a long time to load making them vulnerable while reloading unless using the 'continuous fire' tactic, where one line would shoot and, while the next line shot, would reload. They also tended to overheat. During repeated firing, guns could become clogged and explode, which could be dangerous to the gunner and those around him.

Furthermore, the amount of smoke produced by black-powder weapons was considerable, making it hard to see the enemy after a few salvos, unless there was enough wind to disperse the smoke quickly. (Conversely, this cloud of smoke also served to make it difficult for any archers to target the opposing soldiers who were using firearms.) Prior to the wheellock, the need for a lit match made stealth and concealment nearly impossible, particularly at night. Even with successful concealment, the smoke emitted by a single arquebus shot would make it quite obvious where the shot came from, at least in daylight. While with a bow or crossbow a soldier could conceivably kill silently, this was of course impossible with an explosion-driven projectile weapon, such as the arquebus. The noise of arquebuses and the ringing in the ears that it caused could also make it hard to hear shouted commands. In the long run, the weapon could make the user permanently hard of hearing. Though bows and crossbows could shoot over obstacles by firing with high-arcing ballistic trajectories they could not do so very accurately or effectively. Sir John Smythe blamed the declining effectiveness of the longbow in part on English commanders who would place firearms at the front of their formations and bowmen at the back, where they could not see their targets and aim appropriately.[75]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Friedrich Kluge, Elmar Seebold (Hrsg.): Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache. 23. Aufl., de Gruyter: Berlin/New York 1999, pp. 52.
  2. ^ a b Needham 1986, p. 426.
  3. ^ Chase 2003, p. 61.
  4. ^ a b Khan, Iqtidar Alam (1991). "The Nature of Handguns in Mughal India: 16th and 17th Centuries". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 52: 378–389. JSTOR 44142632.
  5. ^ a b c Needham 1986, p. 443.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 27 October 2012. Retrieved 11 February 2013. Smoothbore Musketry
  7. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Arquebus" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 641–642.
  8. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChambers, Ephraim, ed. (1728). "ARQUEBUSS". Cyclopædia, or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences (1st ed.). James and John Knapton, et al. p. 342.
  9. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Caliver" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 54.
  10. ^ Bargigia, Fabio; Romanoni, Fabio (2017). "La diffusione delle armi da fuoco nel dominio visconteo (secolo XIV)". Revista Universitaria de Historia Militar (in Italian). 6: 144. ISSN 2254-6111. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  11. ^ a b Purton 2010, p. 422.
  12. ^ hagbut (1913 reprint ed.). Springfield, Massachusetts: G. & C. Merriam. 1909. OCLC 51981071. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |work= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Purton 2010, p. 427.
  14. ^ Purton 2010, p. 117.
  15. ^ Ágoston 2008, p. 19.
  16. ^ Ágoston 2008, p. 58.
  17. ^ Lidin 2002, p. 3.
  18. ^ a b Chase 2003, p. 92.
  19. ^ a b Adle 2003, p. 475.
  20. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 165.
  21. ^ Peterson 1965, pp. 12–14.
  22. ^ a b Arnold 2001, p. 75.
  23. ^ Chase 2003, p. 24.
  24. ^ a b Chase 2003, p. 25.
  25. ^ Andrade 2016, pp. 176–75.
  26. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 144.
  27. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 157.
  28. ^ Andrade 2016, p. 149.
  29. ^ a b Andrade 2016, p. 173.
  30. ^ a b c d Andrade 2016, p. 169.
  31. ^ Ed Donald A Yerxa (2008). Military Revolutions, Past and Present by Geoffrey Parker in Recent Themes in Military History. University of South Carolina Press, p. 13
  32. ^ Geoffrey Parker (2008), footnote 4, p. 21
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External links edit

    arquebus, redirects, here, type, cavalry, harquebusier, arquebus, ɑːr, form, long, that, appeared, europe, ottoman, empire, during, 15th, century, infantryman, armed, with, arquebus, called, arquebusier, 17th, century, arquebus, château, foix, museum, franceth. Arquebusier redirects here For the type of cavalry see Harquebusier An arquebus ˈ ɑːr k w ɪ b e s AR k w ib es is a form of long gun that appeared in Europe and the Ottoman Empire during the 15th century An infantryman armed with an arquebus is called an arquebusier 17th century arquebus at the Chateau de Foix museum FranceThe term arquebus is derived from the Dutch word Haakbus hook gun 1 The term arquebus was applied to many different forms of firearms from the 15th to 17th centuries but it originally referred to a hand gun with a hook like projection or lug on its under surface useful for steadying it against battlements or other objects when firing 2 These hook guns were in their earliest forms of defensive weapons mounted on German city walls in the early 15th century 3 The addition of a shoulder stock priming pan 4 and matchlock mechanism in the late 15th century turned the arquebus into a handheld firearm and also the first firearm equipped with a trigger The exact dating of the matchlock s appearance is disputed It could have appeared in the Ottoman Empire as early as 1465 and in Europe a little before 1475 5 The heavy arquebus which was then called a musket was developed to better penetrate plate armor and appeared in Europe around 1521 6 Heavy arquebuses mounted on war wagons were called arquebus a croc 7 These carried a lead ball of about 3 5 ounces 100 g 8 A standardized arquebus the caliver was introduced in the latter half of the 16th century The name caliver is an English derivation from the French calibre a reference to the gun s standardized bore 9 The caliver allowed troops to load bullets faster since they fit their guns more easily whereas before soldiers often had to modify their bullets into suitable fits or were even forced to make their own prior to battle The matchlock arquebus is considered the forerunner to the flintlock musket Contents 1 Terminology 1 1 Musket 2 Mechanism and usage 3 History 3 1 Origins 3 2 Ottomans 3 3 Europe 3 4 Mamluks 3 5 Asia 3 5 1 Iran 3 5 2 Southeast Asia 3 5 3 China 3 6 European arquebus formations 3 7 Use with other weapons 4 Comparison to bows 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksTerminology edit nbsp A double arquebus 15th centuryThe word arquebus is derived from the Dutch word Haakbus hook gun 1 which was applied to an assortment of firearms from the 15th to 17th centuries It originally referred to a hand gun with a hook like projection or lug on its under surface useful for steadying it against battlements or other objects when firing 2 The first certain attestation of the term arquebus dates back to 1364 when the lord of Milan Bernabo Visconti recruited 70 archibuxoli although in this case it almost certainly referred to a hand cannon 10 The arquebus has at times been known as the harquebus harkbus hackbut 11 hagbut 12 archibugio haakbus schiopo 13 sclopus 14 tufenk 15 tofak 16 matchlock and firelock 17 Musket edit The musket essentially a large arquebus was introduced around 1521 but fell out of favor by the mid 16th century due to the decline of armor The term however remained and musket became a generic descriptor for smoothbore gunpowder weapons fired from the shoulder shoulder arms into the mid 19th century 18 At least on one occasion musket and arquebus were used interchangeably to refer to the same weapon 19 and even referred to as an arquebus musket 20 A Habsburg commander in the mid 1560s once referred to muskets as double arquebuses 18 The matchlock firing mechanism also became a common term for the arquebus after it was added to the firearm Later flintlock firearms were sometimes called fusils or fuzees 21 Mechanism and usage editSee also Hand cannon nbsp Depiction of an arquebus fired from a fork rest Image produced in 1876 nbsp A serpentine matchlock mechanism source source source source source source Demonstration of Tanegashima in Himeji CastlePrior to the appearance of the serpentine lever by around 1411 handguns were fired from the chest tucked under one arm while the other arm maneuvered a hot pricker to the touch hole to ignite the gunpowder 22 The matchlock which appeared roughly around 1475 changed this by adding a firing mechanism consisting of two parts the match and the lock The lock mechanism held within a clamp a two to three feet long length of smoldering rope soaked in saltpeter which was the match 22 Connected to the lock lever was a trigger which lowered the match into a priming pan when squeezed igniting the priming powder causing a flash to travel through the touch hole also igniting the gunpowder within the barrel and propelling the bullet out the muzzle 23 While matchlocks provided a crucial advantage by allowing the user to aim the firearm using both hands it was also awkward to utilize 24 To avoid accidentally igniting the gunpowder the match had to be detached while loading the gun In some instances the match would also go out so both ends of the match were kept lit This proved cumbersome to maneuver as both hands were required to hold the match during removal one end in each hand The procedure was so complex that a 1607 drill manual published by Jacob de Gheyn in the Netherlands listed 28 steps just to fire and load the gun 24 In 1584 the Ming General Qi Jiguang composed an 11 step song to practice the procedure in rhythm One clean the gun Two pour the powder Three tamp the powder down Four drop the pellet Five drive the pellet down Six put in paper stopper Seven drive the paper down Eight open the flashpan cover Nine pour in the flash powder Ten close the flashpan and clamp the fuse Eleven listen for the signal then open the flashpan cover Aiming at the enemy raise your gun and fire 25 Reloading a gun during the 16th century took anywhere from 20 seconds to a minute under the most ideal conditions 26 The development of volley fire by the Ottomans the Chinese the Japanese and the Dutch made the arquebus more feasible for widespread adoption by the military The volley fire technique transformed soldiers carrying firearms into organized firing squads with each row of soldiers firing in turn and reloading in a systematic fashion Volley fire was implemented with cannons as early as 1388 by Ming artillerists 27 but volley fire with matchlocks was not implemented until 1526 when the Ottoman Janissaries utilized it during the Battle of Mohacs 28 The matchlock volley fire technique was next seen in mid 16th century China as pioneered by Qi Jiguang and in late 16th century Japan 29 30 Qi Jiguang elaborates on his volley fire technique in the Jixiao Xinshu All the musketeers when they get near the enemy are not allowed to fire early and they re not allowed to just fire everything off in one go because whenever the enemy then approaches close there won t be enough time to load the guns 銃裝不及 and frequently this mismanagement costs the lives of many people Thus whenever the enemy gets to within a hundred paces distance they the musketeers are to wait until they hear a blast on the bamboo flute at which they deploy themselves in front of the troops with each platoon 哨 putting in front one team 隊 They the musketeer team members wait until they hear their own leader fire a shot and only then are they allowed to give fire Each time the trumpet gives a blast they fire one time spread out in battle array according to the drilling patterns If the trumpet keeps blasting without stopping then they are allowed to fire all together until their fire is exhausted and it s not necessary in this case to divide into layers 29 Jixiao Xinshu In Europe William Louis Count of Nassau Dillenburg theorized that by applying to firearms the same Roman counter march technique as described by Aelianus Tacticus matchlocks could provide fire without cease 31 In a letter to his cousin Maurice of Nassau Prince of Orange on 8 December 1594 he said I have discovered evolutionibus a term that would eventually be translated as drill a method of getting the musketeers and others with guns not only to practice firing but to keep on doing so in a very effective battle order that is to say they do not fire at will or from behind a barrier Just as soon as the first rank has fired then by the drill they have learned they will march to the back The second rank either marching forward or standing still will then fire just like the first After that the third and following ranks will do the same When the last rank has fired the first will have reloaded as the following diagram shows 32 Once volley firing had been developed the rate of fire and efficiency was greatly increased and the arquebus went from being a support weapon to the primary focus of most early modern armies 33 The wheellock mechanism was utilized as an alternative to the matchlock as early as 1505 34 but was more expensive to produce at three times the cost of a matchlock and prone to breakdown thus limiting it primarily to specialist firearms and pistols 35 The snaphance flintlock was invented by the mid 16th century and then the true flintlock in the early 17th century but by this time the generic term for firearms had shifted to musket and flintlocks are not usually associated with arquebuses 36 Firing sequence nbsp Placing the weapon on its rest nbsp Aiming finger on the trigger nbsp The lock ignites the primer nbsp The main propellant is ignited and much smoke ensues History editSee also History of gunpowder and Timeline of the Gunpowder Age nbsp Two soldiers on the left using arquebuses 1470 nbsp Early matchlocks as illustrated in the Baburnama 16th century nbsp Musketeer from Jacob van Gheyn s Wapenhandelingen van Roers Musquetten ende Spiesen 1608 nbsp Tanegashima arquebus of the Edo period nbsp Illustration of a 1639 Ming musketry volley formationOrigins edit The earliest known examples of an arquebus date back to 1411 in Europe and no later than 1425 in the Ottoman Empire 5 This early firearm was a hand cannon whose roots trace back to China with a serpentine lever to hold matches 37 However it did not have the matchlock mechanism traditionally associated with the arquebus The exact dating of the matchlock addition is disputed The first references to the use of what may have been arquebuses tufek by the Janissary corps of the Ottoman army date them from 1394 to 1465 5 However it is unclear whether these were arquebuses or small cannons as late as 1444 but according to Gabor Agoston the fact that they were listed separate from cannons in mid 15th century inventories suggest they were handheld firearms 38 In Europe a shoulder stock probably inspired by the crossbow stock 4 was added to the arquebus around 1470 and the appearance of the matchlock mechanism is dated to a little before 1475 The matchlock arquebus was the first firearm equipped with a trigger mechanism 34 39 It is also considered to be the first portable shoulder arms firearm 40 Ottomans edit The Ottomans made use of arquebuses as early as the first half of the fifteenth century During the Ottoman Hungarian wars of 1443 1444 it was noted that Ottoman defenders in Vidin had arquebuses Based on the earliest known contemporary written sources Godfrey Goodwin dates the first use of the arquebus by the Janissaries to no earlier than 1465 41 According to contemporary accounts 400 arquebusiers served in Sultan Murad II s campaign in the 1440s when he crossed Bosporus straits and arquebuses were used in combat by the Ottomans at the second battle of Kosovo in 1448 Ottomans also made some use of Wagon Fortresses which they copied from the Hussites which often involved the placing of arquebusiers in the protective wagons and using them against the enemy Arquebusiers were also used effectively at the battle of Bashkent in 1473 when they were used in conjunction with artillery 42 Europe edit The arquebus was used in substantial numbers for the first time in Europe during the reign of king Matthias Corvinus of Hungary r 1458 1490 43 One in four soldiers in the infantry of the Black Army of Hungary wielded an arquebus and one in five when accounting for the whole army 44 which was an unusually high proportion at the time Although they were present on the battlefield King Mathias preferred enlisting shielded men instead due to the arquebus s low rate of fire While the Black Army adopted arquebuses relatively early the trend did not catch on for decades in Europe and by the turn of the 16th century only around 10 of Western European infantrymen used firearms 45 46 Arquebuses were used as early as 1472 by the Portuguese at Zamora Likewise the Castilians used arquebuses as well in 1476 47 The French started adopting the arquebus in 1520 48 However arquebus designs continued to develop and in 1496 Philip Monch of the Palatinate composed an illustrated Buch der Strynt un d Buchsse n on guns and harquebuses 49 The effectiveness of the arquebus was apparent by the Battle of Cerignola of 1503 which is the earliest recorded military conflict where arquebuses played a decisive role in the outcome of battle 50 In Russia a small arquebus called pishchal Russian pishal appeared in 1478 in Pskov The Russian arquebusiers or pishchal niki were seen as integral parts of the army and one thousand pishchal niki participated in the final annexation of Pskov in 1510 as well as the conquest of Smolensk in 1512 The Russian need to acquire gunpowder weaponry bears some resemblance to the situation the Iranians were in In 1545 two thousand pishchal niki one thousand on horseback were levied by the towns and outfitted at treasury expense Their use of mounted troops was also unique to the time period The pishchal niki eventually became skilled hereditary tradesmen farmers rather than conscripts 51 Arquebuses were used in the Italian Wars in the first half of the 16th century Frederick Lewis Taylor claims that a kneeling volley fire may have been employed by Prospero Colonna s arquebusiers as early as the Battle of Bicocca 1522 52 However this has been called into question by Tonio Andrade who believes this is an over interpretation as well as mis citation of a passage by Charles Oman suggesting that the Spanish arquebusiers knelt to reload when in fact Oman never made such a claim 53 This is contested by Idan Sherer who quotes Paolo Giovio saying that the arquebusiers kneeled to reload so that the second line of arquebusiers could fire without endangering those in front of them 54 Mamluks edit The Mamluks in particular were conservatively against the incorporation of gunpowder weapons When faced with cannons and arquebuses wielded by the Ottomans they criticized them thus God curse the man who invented them and God curse the man who fires on Muslims with them 55 Insults were also levied against the Ottomans for having brought with you this contrivance artfully devised by the Christians of Europe when they were incapable of meeting the Muslim armies on the battlefield 55 Similarly musketeers and musket wielding infantrymen were despised in society by the feudal knights even until the time of Miguel de Cervantes 1547 1616 56 Eventually the Mamluks under Qaitbay were ordered in 1489 to train in the use of al bunduq al rasas arquebuses However in 1514 an Ottoman army of 12 000 soldiers wielding arquebuses devastated a much larger Mamluk army 55 The arquebus had become a common infantry weapon by the 16th century due to its relative cheapness a helmet breastplate and pike cost about three and a quarter ducats while an arquebus only a little over one ducat 11 57 Another advantage of arquebuses over other equipment and weapons was its short training period While a bow potentially took years to master an effective arquebusier could be trained in just two weeks 58 Asia edit The arquebus spread further east reaching India by 1500 Southeast Asia by 1540 and China sometime between 1523 and 1548 59 30 They were introduced to Japan in 1543 by Portuguese traders who landed by accident on Tanegashima 種子島 an island south of Kyushu in the region controlled by the Shimazu clan 30 By 1550 arquebuses known as tanegashima teppō 鉄砲 or hinawaju 火縄銃 were being produced in large numbers in Japan The tanegashima seem to have utilized snap matchlocks based on firearms from Goa India which was captured by the Portuguese in 1510 60 Within ten years of its introduction upwards of three hundred thousand tanegashima were reported to have been manufactured 61 The tanegashima eventually became one of the most important weapons in Japan Oda Nobunaga revolutionized musket tactics in Japan by splitting loaders and shooters and assigning three guns to a shooter at the Battle of Nagashino in 1575 during which volley fire may have been implemented However the volley fire technique of 1575 has been called into dispute in recent years by J S A Elisonas and J P Lamers in their translation of The Chronicle of Oda Nobunaga by Ota Gyuichi In Lamers Japonius he says that whether or not Nobunaga actually operated with three rotating ranks cannot be determined on the basis of reliable evidence 62 They claim that the version of events describing volley fire was written several years after the battle and an earlier account says to the contrary that guns were fired en masse 63 Even so both Korean and Chinese sources note that Japanese gunners were making use of volley fire during the Japanese invasions of Korea from 1592 to 1598 64 Iran edit In regard to Iranian use of the arquebus much of the credit for their increase in use can be attributed to Shah Ismail I who after being defeated by the firearm using Ottomans in 1514 began extensive use of arquebuses and other firearms himself with an estimated 12 000 arquebusiers in service less than 10 years after his initial defeat by the Ottomans 65 According to a 1571 report by Vincentio d Alessandri Persian arms including arquebuses were superior and better tempered than those of any other nation suggesting that such firearms were in common use among middle eastern powers by at least the mid 16th century 19 While the use of 12 000 arquebusiers is impressive the firearms were not widely adopted in Iran This is in no small part due to the reliance on light cavalry by the Iranians 65 Riding a horse and operating an arquebus are incredibly difficult which helped lead to both limited use and heavy stagnation in the technology associated with firearms 65 These limitations aside the Iranians still made use of firearms and Europe was very important in facilitating that as Europeans supplied Iran with firearms and sent experts to help them produce some of the firearms themselves 65 Iran also made use of elephant mounted arquebusiers which would give them a clear view of their targets and better mobility 66 Southeast Asia edit Southeast Asian powers started fielding arquebuses by 1540 30 Đại Việt was considered by the Ming to have produced particularly advanced matchlocks during the 16 17th century surpassing even Ottoman Japanese and European firearms European observers of the Le Mạc War and later Trịnh Nguyễn War also noted the proficiency of matchlock making by the Vietnamese The Vietnamese matchlock was said to have been able to pierce several layers of iron armour kill two to five men in one shot yet also fire quietly for a weapon of its caliber 67 China edit The arquebus was introduced to the Ming dynasty in the early 16th century and was used in small numbers to fight off pirates by 1548 There is however no exact date for its introduction and sources conflict on the time and manner in which it was introduced Versions of the arquebus introduction to China include the capture of firearms by the Ming during a battle in 1523 68 the capture of the pirate Wang Zhi who had arquebuses in 1558 which contradicts the usage of arquebuses by the Ming army ten years earlier and the capture of arquebuses from Europeans by the Xu brother pirates which later came into possession of a man named Bald Li from whom the Ming officials captured the arquebuses About 10 000 muskets were ordered by the Central Military Weaponry Bureau in 1558 and the firearms were used to fight off pirates 69 Qi Jiguang developed military formations for the effective use of arquebus equipped troops with different mixtures of troops deployed in 12 man teams The number of arquebuses assigned to each team could vary depending on the context but theoretically in certain cases all members of the team could have been deployed as gunners These formations also made use of countermarch volley fire techniques Firearm platoons deployed one team in front of them at the blast of a bamboo flute They started firing after their leader fired and fired once at the blast of a trumpet and then spread out according to their drilling pattern Each layer could also fire once at the blowing of a horn and were supported by close quarters troops who could advance should the need arise To avoid self inflicted injuries and ensure a consistent rate of fire in the heat of battle Qi emphasized drilling in the procedure required to reload the weapon Qi Jiguang gave a eulogy on the effectiveness of the gun in 1560 It is unlike any other of the many types of fire weapons In strength it can pierce armor In accuracy it can strike the center of targets even to the point of hitting the eye of a coin i e shooting right through a coin and not just for exceptional shooters The arquebus 鳥銃 is such a powerful weapon and is so accurate that even bow and arrow cannot match it and nothing is so strong as to be able to defend against it 70 Jixiao Xinshu European arquebus formations edit nbsp Diagram of a 1594 Dutch musketry volley formationIn Europe Maurice of Nassau pioneered the countermarch volley fire technique After outfitting his entire army with new standardized arms in 1599 Maurice of Nassau made an attempt to recapture Spanish forts built on former Dutch lands In the Battle of Nieuwpoort in 1600 he administered the new techniques and technologies for the first time The Dutch marched onto the beach where the fort was located and fully utilized the countermarching tactic By orienting all of his arquebusiers into a block he was able to maintain a steady stream of fire out of a disciplined formation using volley fire tactics The result was a lopsided victory with 4 000 Spanish casualties to only 1 000 dead and 700 wounded on the Dutch side Although the battle was principally won by the decisive counterattack of the Dutch cavalry and despite the failure of the new Dutch infantry tactic in stopping the veteran Spanish tercios the battle is considered a decisive step forward in the development early modern warfare where firearms took on an increasingly large role in Europe in the following centuries 71 Musket eventually overtook arquebus as the dominant term for similar firearms starting from the 1550s Arquebuses are most often associated with matchlocks 72 Use with other weapons edit The arquebus had many advantages but also severe limitations on the battlefield This led to it often being paired up with other weaponry to mitigate these weaknesses Qi Jiguang from China developed systems where soldiers with traditional weaponry stayed right behind the arquebusiers to protect them should enemy infantry get too close 73 Pikemen were used to protect the arquebusiers by the English and the Venetians often used archers to lay down cover fire during the long reloading process 74 The Ottomans often supported their arquebusiers with artillery fire or placed them in fortified wagons a tactic they borrowed from the Hussites 42 Comparison to bows edit nbsp Early arquebuses the hook gunsSixteenth century military writer John Smythe thought that an arquebus could not match the accuracy of a bow in the hands of a highly skilled archer 75 other military writers such as Humfrey Barwick and Barnabe Rich argued the opposite 76 77 An arquebus angled at 35 degrees could throw a bullet up to 1 000 m 3 300 ft or more 78 much farther than any archers could shoot An arquebus shot was considered deadly at up to 400 yards 360 m while the heavier Spanish musket was considered deadly at up to 600 yards 550 m 77 During the Japanese Invasions of Korea Korean officials said they were at a severe disadvantage against Japanese troops because their arquebuses could reach beyond several hundred paces 79 In 1590 Smythe noted that arquebusiers and musketeers firing at such extreme distances rarely seemed to hit anything and instead decided to argue effective range claiming that English archers like the ones from the Hundred Years War would be more effective at 200 240 yards 180 220 m than arquebusiers or musketeers but by that point there were no longer enough skilled archers in England to properly test his theories 80 Perhaps the most important advantage of the arquebus over muscle powered weapons like longbows was sheer power A shot from a typical 16th century arquebus boasted between 1 300 to 1 750 J 960 to 1 290 ft lbf of kinetic energy depending on the powder quality A longbow arrow by contrast was about 80 J 59 ft lbf while crossbows could vary from 100 to 200 J 74 to 148 ft lbf depending on construction Thus arquebuses could easily defeat armor that would be highly effective against arrows or bolts and inflict far greater wounds on flesh The disparity was even greater with a 16th century heavy musket which were 2 300 to 3 000 J 1 700 to 2 200 ft lbf 81 Most high skilled bowmen achieved a far higher rate of shot than the matchlock arquebus which took 30 60 seconds to reload properly 76 The arquebus did however have a faster rate of fire than the most powerful crossbow a shorter learning curve than a longbow and was more powerful than either The arquebus did not rely on the physical strength of the user for propulsion of the projectile making it easier to find a suitable recruit It also meant that compared to an archer or crossbowman an arquebusier lost less of his battlefield effectiveness due to fatigue malnutrition or sickness The arquebusier also had the added advantage of frightening enemies and horses with the noise Wind could reduce the accuracy of archery but had much less of an effect on an arquebus During a siege it was also easier to fire an arquebus out of loopholes than it was a bow and arrow It was sometimes advocated that an arquebusier should load his weapon with multiple bullets or small shot at close ranges rather than a single ball 76 Small shot did not pack the same punch as a single round ball but the shot could hit and wound multiple enemies An arquebus also has superior penetrating power to a bow or crossbow Although some plate armors were bulletproof these armors were unique heavy and expensive A cuirass with a tapul was able to absorb some musket fire due to being angled Otherwise most forms of armor a common soldier would wear especially cloth light plate and mail had little resistance against musket fire Arrows however were relatively weaker in penetration and heavier than bows or crossbows that required more skill and reload time than the standard bows Producing an effective arquebusier required much less training than producing an effective bowman Most archers spent their whole lives training to shoot with accuracy but with drill and instruction the arquebusier was able to learn his profession in months as opposed to years This low level of skill made it a lot easier to outfit an army in a short amount of time as well as expand the small arms ranks This idea of lower skilled lightly armoured units was the driving force in the infantry revolution that took place in the 16th and 17th centuries and allowed early modern infantries to phase out the longbow 82 An arquebusier could carry more ammunition and powder than a crossbowman or longbowman could with bolts or arrows Once the methods were developed powder and shot were relatively easy to mass produce while arrow making was a genuine craft requiring highly skilled labor However the arquebus was more sensitive to rain wind and humid weather At the Battle of Villalar rebel troops experienced a significant defeat partially due to having a high proportion of arquebusiers in a rainstorm which rendered the weapons useless 83 Gunpowder also ages much faster than a bolt or an arrow particularly if improperly stored Also the resources needed to make gunpowder were less universally available than the resources needed to make bolts and arrows Finding and reusing arrows or bolts was a lot easier than doing the same with arquebus bullets This was a useful way to reduce the cost of practice or resupply oneself if control of the battlefield after a battle was retained A bullet must fit a barrel much more precisely than an arrow or bolt must fit a bow or crossbow so the arquebus required more standardization and this made it harder to resupply by looting bodies of fallen soldiers Gunpowder production was also far more dangerous than arrow or bolt production An arquebus was also significantly more dangerous to its user The arquebusier carries a lot of gunpowder on his person and has a lit match in one hand The same goes for the soldiers next to him Amid the confusion stress and fumbling of a battle arquebusiers are potentially a danger to themselves Early arquebuses tended to have a drastic recoil They took a long time to load making them vulnerable while reloading unless using the continuous fire tactic where one line would shoot and while the next line shot would reload They also tended to overheat During repeated firing guns could become clogged and explode which could be dangerous to the gunner and those around him Furthermore the amount of smoke produced by black powder weapons was considerable making it hard to see the enemy after a few salvos unless there was enough wind to disperse the smoke quickly Conversely this cloud of smoke also served to make it difficult for any archers to target the opposing soldiers who were using firearms Prior to the wheellock the need for a lit match made stealth and concealment nearly impossible particularly at night Even with successful concealment the smoke emitted by a single arquebus shot would make it quite obvious where the shot came from at least in daylight While with a bow or crossbow a soldier could conceivably kill silently this was of course impossible with an explosion driven projectile weapon such as the arquebus The noise of arquebuses and the ringing in the ears that it caused could also make it hard to hear shouted commands In the long run the weapon could make the user permanently hard of hearing Though bows and crossbows could shoot over obstacles by firing with high arcing ballistic trajectories they could not do so very accurately or effectively Sir John Smythe blamed the declining effectiveness of the longbow in part on English commanders who would place firearms at the front of their formations and bowmen at the back where they could not see their targets and aim appropriately 75 See also editBlunderbuss TanegashimaNotes edit a b Friedrich Kluge Elmar Seebold Hrsg Etymologisches Worterbuch der deutschen Sprache 23 Aufl de Gruyter Berlin New York 1999 pp 52 a b Needham 1986 p 426 Chase 2003 p 61 a b Khan Iqtidar Alam 1991 The Nature of Handguns in Mughal India 16th and 17th Centuries Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 52 378 389 JSTOR 44142632 a b c Needham 1986 p 443 Smoothbore Musketry ScotWars Archived from the original on 27 October 2012 Retrieved 11 February 2013 Smoothbore Musketry Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Arquebus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 641 642 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chambers Ephraim ed 1728 ARQUEBUSS Cyclopaedia or an Universal Dictionary of Arts and Sciences 1st ed James and John Knapton et al p 342 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Caliver Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 54 Bargigia Fabio Romanoni Fabio 2017 La diffusione delle armi da fuoco nel dominio visconteo secolo XIV Revista Universitaria de Historia Militar in Italian 6 144 ISSN 2254 6111 Retrieved 8 February 2023 a b Purton 2010 p 422 hagbut 1913 reprint ed Springfield Massachusetts G amp C Merriam 1909 OCLC 51981071 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Purton 2010 p 427 Purton 2010 p 117 Agoston 2008 p 19 Agoston 2008 p 58 Lidin 2002 p 3 a b Chase 2003 p 92 a b Adle 2003 p 475 Andrade 2016 p 165 Peterson 1965 pp 12 14 a b Arnold 2001 p 75 Chase 2003 p 24 a b Chase 2003 p 25 Andrade 2016 pp 176 75 Andrade 2016 p 144 Andrade 2016 p 157 Andrade 2016 p 149 a b Andrade 2016 p 173 a b c d Andrade 2016 p 169 Ed Donald A Yerxa 2008 Military Revolutions Past and Present by Geoffrey Parker in Recent Themes in Military History University of South Carolina Press p 13 Geoffrey Parker 2008 footnote 4 p 21 Geoffrey Parker 2007 The Limits to Revolutions in Military Affairs Maurice of Nassau the Battle of Nieuwpoort 1600 and the Legacy Journal of Military History Vol 71 No 2 pp 333 40 a b Phillips 2016 From the Arquebus to the Breechloader How Firearms Transformed Early Infantry Tactics Piers Platt 10 December 2015 Needham 1986 p 429 Needham 1986 p 425 Agoston Gabor 2011 Military Transformation in the Ottoman Empire and Russia 1500 1800 Kritika Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History 12 2 281 319 294 doi 10 1353 kri 2011 0018 S2CID 19755686 Initially the Janissaries were equipped with bows crossbows and javelins In the first half of the 15th century they began to use matchlock arquebuses although the first references to the Ottomans use of tufek or hand firearms of the arquebus type 1394 1402 1421 1430 1440 1442 are disputable Petzal 2014 p 5 Partington 1999 p xxvii Godfrey Goodwin The Janissaries saqu Books 2006 p 129 ISBN 978 0 86356 740 7 a b Agoston Gabor 2014 Firearms and Military Adaptation The Ottomans and the European Military Revolution 1450 1800 Journal of World History 25 1 85 124 doi 10 1353 jwh 2014 0005 ISSN 1527 8050 S2CID 143042353 Bak 1982 pp 125 40 Janin 2013 p 41 Vajna Naday Warhistory p 40 Courtlandt Canby A History of Weaponry Recontre and Edito Service London p 62 Partington 1999 p 123 Stevenson Cornelius 1909 Wheel Lock Guns and Pistols Bulletin of the Pennsylvania Museum 7 25 6 9 doi 10 2307 3793657 JSTOR 3793657 Partington 1999 p 160 Andrade 2016 p 167 Michael C Paul 2004 The Military Revolution in Russia 1550 1682 Journal of Military History Vol 68 No 1 pp 24 25 Taylor Frederick 1921 The Art of War in Italy 1494 1529 p 52 Andrade 2016 p 350 Sherer 2017 p 190 a b c Partington 1999 p 208 Khan 2004 Arnold 2001 p 44 Arnold 2001 p 74 Khan 2004 p 131 Rainer Daehnhardt 1994 The bewitched gun the introduction of the firearm in the Far East by the Portuguese p 26 Nagayama 1997 Andrade 2016 p 354 Andrade 2016 p 170 Andrade 2016 p 181 a b c d Nourbakhsh Mohammad Reza Farhad 2008 Iran s Early Encounter with Three Medieval European Inventions 875 1153 AH 1470 1740 CE Iranian Studies 41 4 549 558 doi 10 1080 00210860802246242 JSTOR 25597489 S2CID 144208564 Khan Iqtidar Alam 1995 Firearms in Central Asia and Iran During the Fifteenth Century and the Origins and Nature of Firearms Brought by Babur Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 56 435 46 JSTOR 44158646 Matchlock firearms of the Ming Dynasty retrieved 25 February 2017 Xiaodong Yin 2008 Western Cannons in China in the 16th 17th Centuries Icon 14 41 61 JSTOR 23787161 Andrade 2016 p 171 Andrade 2016 p 172 Parker 347 353 Needham 1986 p 428 Andrade 2016 Phillips Gervase 1999 Longbow and Hackbutt Weapons Technology and Technology Transfer in Early Modern England Technology and Culture 40 3 576 593 doi 10 1353 tech 1999 0150 JSTOR 25147360 S2CID 108977407 a b Sir John Smythe 1590 Certain Discourses a b c Barwick Humfrey 1594 A Breefe Discourse a b Rich Barnabe 1574 A right exelent and pleasaunt dialogue Krenn Peter Kalaus Paul Hall Bert 1995 Material Culture and Military History Test Firing Early Modern Small Arms Material Culture Review in English and French 42 Chase 2003 p 186 E G Heath 1973 Bow versus Gun Alan Williams The Knight and the Blast Furnace A History of the Metallurgy of Armour in the Middle Ages amp the Early Modern Period Brill Academic Publishing 2003 p 924 Clifford J Rodgers 1993 The Military Revolutions of the Hundred Years War The Journal of Military History Vol 57 No 2 p 257 Seaver Henry Latimer 1966 1928 The Great Revolt in Castile A study of the Comunero movement of 1520 1521 New York Octagon Books p 325 References editAdle Chahryar 2003 History of Civilizations of Central Asia Vol 5 Development in Contrast From the Sixteenth to the Mid Nineteenth Century Agoston Gabor 2008 Guns for the Sultan Military Power and the Weapons Industry in the Ottoman Empire Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60391 1 Agrawal Jai Prakash 2010 High Energy Materials Propellants Explosives and Pyrotechnics Wiley VCH Andrade Tonio 2016 The Gunpowder Age China Military Innovation and the Rise of the West in World History Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 13597 7 Arnold Thomas 2001 The Renaissance at War Cassell amp Co ISBN 978 0 304 35270 8 Bak J M 1982 Hunyadi to Rakoczi War and Society in Late Medieval and Early Modern Hungary Barwick Humphrey 1594 Breefe Discourse Concerning the Force and Effect of all Manuall of Weapons of Fire Benton Captain James G 1862 A Course of Instruction in Ordnance and Gunnery 2 ed West Point New York Thomas Publications ISBN 978 1 57747 079 3 Brown G I 1998 The Big Bang A History of Explosives Sutton Publishing ISBN 978 0 7509 1878 7 Bachrach David Stewart 2006 Buchanan Brenda J ed Gunpowder Explosives and the State A Technological History Technology and Culture Aldershot Ashgate 49 3 785 786 doi 10 1353 tech 0 0051 ISBN 978 0 7546 5259 5 S2CID 111173101 Chase Kenneth 2003 Firearms A Global History to 1700 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82274 9 Cocroft Wayne 2000 Dangerous Energy The archaeology of gunpowder and military explosives manufacture Swindon English Heritage ISBN 978 1 85074 718 5 Cowley Robert 1993 Experience of War Laurel Cressy David 2013 Saltpeter The Mother of Gunpowder Oxford University Press Crosby Alfred W 2002 Throwing Fire Projectile Technology Through History Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 79158 8 Curtis W S 2014 Long Range Shooting A Historical Perspective WeldenOwen Earl Brian 1978 Cornish Explosives Cornwall The Trevithick Society ISBN 978 0 904040 13 5 Easton S C 1952 Roger Bacon and His Search for a Universal Science A Reconsideration of the Life and Work of Roger Bacon in the Light of His Own Stated Purposes Basil Blackwell Ebrey Patricia B 1999 The Cambridge Illustrated History of China Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 43519 2 Eltis David 1998 The Military Revolution in Sixteenth Century Europe Grant R G 2011 Battle at Sea 3 000 Years of Naval Warfare DK Publishing Hadden R Lee 2005 Confederate Boys and Peter Monkeys Armchair General January 2005 Adapted from a talk given to the Geological Society of America on 25 March 2004 Harding Richard 1999 Seapower and Naval Warfare 1650 1830 UCL Press Limited al Hassan Ahmad Y 2001 Potassium Nitrate in Arabic and Latin Sources History of Science and Technology in Islam retrieved 23 July 2007 Hobson John M 2004 The Eastern Origins of Western Civilisation Cambridge University Press Janin Hunt 2013 Mercenaries in Medieval and Renaissance Europe Johnson Norman Gardner explosive Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Chicago Kelly Jack 2004 Gunpowder Alchemy Bombards amp Pyrotechnics The History of the Explosive that Changed the World Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 03718 6 Khan Iqtidar Alam 1996 Coming of Gunpowder to the Islamic World and North India Spotlight on the Role of the Mongols Journal of Asian History 30 41 5 Khan Iqtidar Alam 2004 Gunpowder and Firearms Warfare in Medieval India Oxford University Press Khan Iqtidar Alam 2008 Historical Dictionary of Medieval India The Scarecrow Press Inc ISBN 978 0 8108 5503 8 Kinard Jeff 2007 Artillery An Illustrated History of its Impact Nagayama Kōkan 1997 The Connoisseur s Book of Japanese Swords Konstam Angus 2002 Renaissance War Galley 1470 1590 Osprey Publisher Ltd Liang Jieming 2006 Chinese Siege Warfare Mechanical Artillery amp Siege Weapons of Antiquity Singapore Republic of Singapore Leong Kit Meng ISBN 978 981 05 5380 7 Lidin Olaf G 2002 Tanegashima The Arrival of Europe in Japan Nordic Inst of Asian Studies ISBN 978 8791114120 Lorge Peter A 2008 The Asian Military Revolution from Gunpowder to the Bomb Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 60954 8 Lu Gwei Djen 1988 The Oldest Representation of a Bombard Technology and Culture 29 3 594 605 doi 10 2307 3105275 JSTOR 3105275 McNeill William Hardy 1992 The Rise of the West A History of the Human Community University of Chicago Press Morillo Stephen 2008 War in World History Society Technology and War from Ancient Times to the Present Volume 1 To 1500 McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 052584 9 Needham Joseph 1980 Science amp Civilisation in China vol 5 pt 4 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 08573 1 Needham Joseph 1986 Science amp Civilisation in China vol V 7 The Gunpowder Epic Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 30358 3 Nicolle David 1990 The Mongol Warlords Genghis Khan Kublai Khan Hulegu Tamerlane Nolan Cathal J 2006 The Age of Wars of Religion 1000 1650 an Encyclopedia of Global Warfare and Civilization Vol 1 A K vol 1 Westport amp London Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 33733 8 Norris John 2003 Early Gunpowder Artillery 1300 1600 Marlborough The Crowood Press Partington J R 1960 A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder Cambridge UK W Heffer amp Sons Partington J R 1999 A History of Greek Fire and Gunpowder Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 5954 0 Patrick John Merton 1961 Artillery and warfare during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries Utah State University Press Pauly Roger 2004 Firearms The Life Story of a Technology Greenwood Publishing Group Perrin Noel 1979 Giving Up the Gun Japan s Reversion to the Sword 1543 1879 Boston David R Godine ISBN 978 0 87923 773 8 Peterson Harold L 1965 Arms and Armor in Colonial America 1526 1783 Petzal David E 2014 The Total Gun Manual Canadian ed Weldon Owen Phillips Henry Prataps 2016 The History and Chronology of Gunpowder and Gunpowder Weapons c 1000 to 1850 Notion Press Purton Peter 2010 A History of the Late Medieval Siege 1200 1500 Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 449 6 Robins Benjamin 1742 New Principles of Gunnery Rose Susan 2002 Medieval Naval Warfare 1000 1500 Routledge Roy Kaushik 2015 Warfare in Pre British India Routledge Schmidtchen Volker 1977a Riesengeschutze des 15 Jahrhunderts Technische Hochstleistungen ihrer Zeit Technikgeschichte 44 2 153 173 153 157 Schmidtchen Volker 1977b Riesengeschutze des 15 Jahrhunderts Technische Hochstleistungen ihrer Zeit Technikgeschichte 44 3 213 237 226 228 Sherer Idan 2017 Warriors for a Living The Experience of the Spanish Infantry During the Italian Wars 1494 1559 Brill Tran Nhung Tuyet 2006 Viet Nam Borderless Histories University of Wisconsin Press Turnbull Stephen 2003 Fighting Ships Far East 2 Japan and Korea AD 612 1639 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 478 8 Urbanski Tadeusz 1967 Chemistry and Technology of Explosives vol III New York Pergamon Press Villalon L J Andrew 2008 The Hundred Years War part II Different Vistas Brill Academic Pub ISBN 978 90 04 16821 3 Wagner John A 2006 The Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War Westport amp London Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 32736 0 Watson Peter 2006 Ideas A History of Thought and Invention from Fire to Freud Harper Perennial 2006 ISBN 978 0 06 093564 1 Willbanks James H 2004 Machine Guns An Illustrated History of Their Impact ABC CLIO Inc de Andagoya Pascual Narrative of the Proceedings of Pedrarias Davila The Hakluyt Society retrieved 21 June 2019 via WikisourceExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arquebus nbsp Look up arquebus in Wiktionary the free dictionary Handgonnes and Matchlocks History of firearms to 1500 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arquebus amp oldid 1186822171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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