Felix the Cat
40 Cal
Hi Folks..
On the Bench today... A Turkish Shushana musket!
This was given to me in a terrible state. It looked like it had been hanging over a coal fireplace for several generations, and was covered with a crusty black coating. The stock was in several pieces and is missing some barrel bands...
As you can see it has a Miquelet lock although it is probably not that old. The Ottoman/Turks used matchlocks far longer than most folk and then took a shine to Miquelet locks for some reason in the early 19thC. These originated in Spain in the 16th C and spread east...
I managed to get all the parts separated and gave the lock my usual "boil in washing soda" treatment which cleaned it up nicely. It turned out to be covered in silver, and still works, although it is a beast to cock and the trigger almost needs to be hit with a mallet to fire..
The whole of the top of the stock was covered with a black crust, which I have just gently removed to reveal..
I have also pinned the stock togeter and it is now at least in one piece. It is missing barrel bands and the butt is short by about six inches. I think I will probably just repair these with "obvious" replacements which will show to future observers which bits are original and which replacement. I don't think I'm good enough to reproduce the age and original decoration.. It would have been a real looker in it's day!
At least I have saved it from the trash, which was where it was heading!
On the Bench today... A Turkish Shushana musket!
This was given to me in a terrible state. It looked like it had been hanging over a coal fireplace for several generations, and was covered with a crusty black coating. The stock was in several pieces and is missing some barrel bands...
As you can see it has a Miquelet lock although it is probably not that old. The Ottoman/Turks used matchlocks far longer than most folk and then took a shine to Miquelet locks for some reason in the early 19thC. These originated in Spain in the 16th C and spread east...
I managed to get all the parts separated and gave the lock my usual "boil in washing soda" treatment which cleaned it up nicely. It turned out to be covered in silver, and still works, although it is a beast to cock and the trigger almost needs to be hit with a mallet to fire..
The whole of the top of the stock was covered with a black crust, which I have just gently removed to reveal..
I have also pinned the stock togeter and it is now at least in one piece. It is missing barrel bands and the butt is short by about six inches. I think I will probably just repair these with "obvious" replacements which will show to future observers which bits are original and which replacement. I don't think I'm good enough to reproduce the age and original decoration.. It would have been a real looker in it's day!
At least I have saved it from the trash, which was where it was heading!