This is a question I have been thinking about for a while, and a recent discussion on terminology prompted me to make a post about it.
We can probably all agree that this is a handgonne:
And this is an arquebus:
There is an ambiguous period where guns have a stock, like what we are used to seeing, but no lock.
Would we call these arquebuses or handgonnes?
Does the lock make the arquebus, or the stock and overall shape? To confuse the issue even more, there are very primitive “locks” on some handgonnes
This question is not so much what the period correct term is, because the word “arquebus” evolved from “Haakbus” (and similar terms) for large hook guns, but more of what we would classify them today.
We can probably all agree that this is a handgonne:
And this is an arquebus:
There is an ambiguous period where guns have a stock, like what we are used to seeing, but no lock.
Would we call these arquebuses or handgonnes?
Does the lock make the arquebus, or the stock and overall shape? To confuse the issue even more, there are very primitive “locks” on some handgonnes
This question is not so much what the period correct term is, because the word “arquebus” evolved from “Haakbus” (and similar terms) for large hook guns, but more of what we would classify them today.