If you read up on pike and shot warfare/matchlock, you will probably come across a statement on the operation of the matchlock like: "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." wikipedia. The Osprey book, Imperial Armies of the 30 Years War (1): Infantry and Artillery, by Vladimir Brnardic, has a similar quote: "The musket loading and firing drill was long and complicated, comprising 99 positions directed by 163 orders." p.13.
However, Peter H. Wilson, in The Thirty Years War: Europe's Tragedy makes the provocative claim: "Contemporary drill books convey a false impression that an elaborate sequence of hand, arm, and body movements was necessary to load and fire. In fact, the carefully itemized movements reflected the prevailing scientific concern to fix and understand human movement, rather than actual practice." p.87. The operation of matchlocks does not look too ridiculously complicated, outside of avoiding blowing up your bandoliers, so his argument is convincing. It is also my understanding that complicated drill has the primary role of building unit cohesion and discipline. Can anyone with practical experience or insight speak to this? Or as practical experience as anyone can have, assuming no one here is 500 years old.
However, Peter H. Wilson, in The Thirty Years War: Europe's Tragedy makes the provocative claim: "Contemporary drill books convey a false impression that an elaborate sequence of hand, arm, and body movements was necessary to load and fire. In fact, the carefully itemized movements reflected the prevailing scientific concern to fix and understand human movement, rather than actual practice." p.87. The operation of matchlocks does not look too ridiculously complicated, outside of avoiding blowing up your bandoliers, so his argument is convincing. It is also my understanding that complicated drill has the primary role of building unit cohesion and discipline. Can anyone with practical experience or insight speak to this? Or as practical experience as anyone can have, assuming no one here is 500 years old.