Capt. Jas.
58 Cal.
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2005
- Messages
- 3,049
- Reaction score
- 1,352
This is a smoothbore I made with a 72" barrel
First rate Booshways arn't 'Pilgrims' .I find the very long barrels interesting but impractical for the kind of shooting I do. Worst of all is the magnified chore of cleaning such a long tube.
In the 19th Century the Regular Chinese Army had units armed with guns like this. There was a two man crew with one man supporting the barrel and the other man who fired the gun. The gun was called a jingall. The first ones were matchlock but by the 1860's they moved to flintlock. {sorry to be pedantic but I was a Professor of Classical Chinese History and I just can't help myself !}That appears to be a wall gun.
I have known the up scalelng of Ml;s by the Boxers . But I thought' Jingles' where temple guns mostly on swivels and not partcularly Chinees but far East at least .In the 19th Century the Regular Chinese Army had units armed with guns like this. There was a two man crew with one man supporting the barrel and the other man who fired the gun. The gun was called a jingal. The first ones were matchlock but by the 1860's they moved to flintlock. {sorry to be pedantic but I was a Professor of Classical Chinese History and I just can't help myself !}
The top picture is a fellow called Snowden Sleights, and he definitely used his a lot, a well known character, and professional shot and eel hunter, there is quite a good stained window of him in the church where he is buried, i do have a small biography of him some where
as the girls say longer is better. you get more bang for your buck.
Yes, the Boxer [ "Righteous Fists"] did indeed still use them . Temple guns were to make noise, fire and smoke to scare evil spirts away. This concept was imported to the USA by Germanic settlers and is still practiced at New Years in places like Cherryville NCI have known the up scalelng of Ml;s by the Boxers . But I thought' Jingles' where temple guns mostly on swivels and not partcularly Chinees but far East at least .
Rudyard
I'd like to see how they made the ramrod.
If you ever saw the Film' Lord Jim' A ships officer who gets accidently disgraced in a storm on a Pilgrim ship with a run away steam roller . So goes' Tropo' /Native. But he defends the village against bandits by firing coins from a Jingle . ( Well they wanted the coins so he gave them to them!) .Hardly documentation of course .But I once was deck passage on a pilgrim ship the ' SS Sardona' Kararchi to Bombay British India Line ..Just slept on the hatch covers under a big awning 42 R/- with a few hippy travellers in 1966 you could do that. But today I doubt you can , but it saved my bacon it was my last last rupees but I had money in Bombay but in those days no border bods demanded onward tickets nor would question even so umpecunious a ' Sahab ' (Never could spell it ). I have photo of me on the deck in the' roads' off Bombay looking very spiffy ile try include them later , I was 21 Id'e reached Karachi on 15 pounds from Milan via Yugoslavia, Greece, Turkey, Persia ,& into Baluchistan to Quetta thence rail to Karachi Non of them questioned my funds . India was at war with Pakistan or ide gone via Lahore/ Rawlpindi crossing . Any way I digress I tend to get carried away .
Regards Rudyard
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