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Has anyone found a website showing examples of flintlock or percussion rifles produced in France?
Wes/Tex said:Except for the sporting area, the French didn't use many rifles militarily. There was, in fact, the 1793 "Versailles"-'carabine d'infanterie' plus another "Model of the Year Twelve"-'carabine d'infanterie', (a chunky, 8 pound rifle with good sights, which fired "forced balls, twenty-eight to the pound"), these were initially designed for officers and sergeants to help overcome the German and some early British rifle armed troops. The latter version was to also include issue to 'fourriers' of 'voltigeur' companies as well but Napoleon quickly ordered rifles out of service. Some officers carried these or sporting rifles in spite of the Imperial command. Captain Bonnet of the 18th Ligne(Line Regiment) and Lieutenant Begos of the 2nd Swiss Regiment both carried double-barreled, flintlock, sporting rifles into combat. Begos is noted for jumping into a situation in Portugal to save one of the stragglers of his company and dropped the guerrilla soldier at 120 paces! Not a lot of rifles in the French Army at that time but a few did make a difference. Wonder what the voltigeurs thought about Napoleon's Imperial edict when they were being peppered by the riflemen of the 95th?
Wes/Tex said:Except for the sporting area, the French didn't use many rifles militarily. There was, in fact, the 1793 "Versailles"-'carabine d'infanterie' plus another "Model of the Year Twelve"-'carabine d'infanterie', (a chunky, 8 pound rifle with good sights, which fired "forced balls, twenty-eight to the pound"), these were initially designed for officers and sergeants to help overcome the German and some early British rifle armed troops.
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