musketry - significado y definición. Qué es musketry
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Qué (quién) es musketry - definición

FIREARM
Muskets; Musket ball; Boom stick; Musketball; Musketry; Musket balls; Smoothbore musket
  • Diagram of a 1594 Dutch musketry volley formation
  • Illustration of a 1639 Ming musketry volley formation. From Bi Maokang 畢懋康, ''Jun qi tu shuo'' ''軍器圖說'', ca. 1639.
  • 17<sup>th</sup> century bandolier
  • Early matchlocks as illustrated in the [[Baburnama]] (16th century)
  • Tanegashima]].
  • Flintlock mechanism
  • Heavy muskets, image produced 1664.
  • Iron ball mould
  • Unhyeon Palace]] with Korean cannon [[Hongyipao]] (Culverin).
  • Minié balls

musketry         
¦ noun
1. musket fire.
2. musketeers collectively.
3. the art or technique of handling a musket.
Musketry         
·noun The fire of muskets.
II. Musketry ·noun Muskets, collectively.
Musket         
·noun The male of the sparrow hawk.
II. Musket ·noun A species of firearm formerly carried by the infantry of an army. It was originally fired by means of a match, or matchlock, for which several mechanical appliances (including the flintlock, and finally the percussion lock) were successively substituted. This arm has been generally superseded by the rifle.

Wikipedia

Musket

A musket is a muzzle-loaded long gun that appeared as a smoothbore weapon in the early 16th century, at first as a heavier variant of the arquebus, capable of penetrating plate armour. By the mid-16th century, this type of musket gradually disappeared as the use of heavy armour declined, but musket continued as the generic term for smoothbore long guns until the mid-19th century. In turn, this style of musket was retired in the 19th century when rifled muskets (simply called rifles in modern terminology) using the Minié ball (invented by Claude-Étienne Minié in 1849) became common. The development of breech-loading firearms using self-contained cartridges (introduced by Casimir Lefaucheux in 1835) and the first reliable repeating rifles produced by Winchester Repeating Arms Company in 1860 also led to their demise. By the time that repeating rifles became common, they were known as simply "rifles", ending the era of the musket.

Ejemplos de uso de musketry
1. After taking courses in musketry, physical training and a general course at Aldershot, I was appointed battalion instructor and seconded to the Queen‘s Own Yorkshire Dragoons.
2. Once an Austrian column, with levelled bayonets, led by officers in front waving caps and sabres, went straight at the wood around Klum and drove back the Prussian Tirailleurs, but were staggered by fearful volleys of musketry.
3. At the end of the proceedings, around 400 soldiers from the Household Division will perform a ‘feu de joie‘, a synchronised ‘discharge of musketry‘ which will involve each man firing his gun a split second after the next.
4. Mildmay pushed on with his boats, and as they got within range of the slavers, they all opened a heavy fire of canister and grapeshot and musketry; but as nothing could withstand the coolness and undaunted courage of our seamen, all the vessels were soon in their possession.
5. Rembrandt painted the men of one such musketry club, whose chief officer was a rich young man of 37 named Frans Banning Cocq, marching about and ceremonially preening themselves, deploying their banners, pikes and halberds and firing off their guns, just for show.