Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse

NodeBB

  1. Home
  2. Handbook Discussions
  3. Walter de Milemete: The Clerk Who Drew the Gun That Changed Everything

Walter de Milemete: The Clerk Who Drew the Gun That Changed Everything

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Handbook Discussions
handbook
1 Posts 1 Posters 37 Views 1 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • A Offline
    A Offline
    admin
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Spent some time going down a rabbit hole on early firearms history and landed on this piece about Walter de Milemete — a 14th-century English court scholar whose name would be completely lost if not for a single drawing in the margin of a manuscript he produced in 1326. Worth reading if you care about where all of this started.

    By the 1350s, weapons that had recently been "viewed with great astonishment and admiration" had become "as common and familiar as any other kind of arms." — Petrarch

    Twenty-five years. That's how long it took to go from "what the hell is that thing" to "yeah, everybody has one now." We tend to think of adoption curves as a modern phenomenon — semi-autos replacing revolvers, striker-fired pistols taking over the carry market — but apparently humans have always moved fast when the technology actually works.

    The knight in Milemete's illustration, holding a lit touche to a vase-shaped cannon pointed at a castle, was not in a safe profession.

    Early cannon were killing operators as reliably as targets — air pockets in the casting, inconsistent powder charges, projectiles that didn't fit the bore. The article mentions King James II of Scotland got killed in 1460 standing too close to his own artillery. We complain about a squib load. These guys were pointing a pipe bomb at a wall and hoping for the best.

    He drew a vase-shaped pot-de-fer scaled up to artillery size, sitting on a trestle that would never hold it, because the small hand-cannons he'd seen were bottle-shaped and mounted on poles. He did his best with incomplete information.

    This is the part that stuck with me. The artist had probably only seen small hand-cannons — essentially a bottle-shaped bronze tube lashed to a wooden shaft — and when he needed to draw something bigger, he just scaled up what he knew. Wrong proportions, wrong mount, but the idea was right. It's the same thing that happens at the gun counter when somebody describes a firearm they've seen once and can't remember the name of. The sketch is always approximately correct and completely wrong at the same time.

    What's the oldest firearm you've personally handled — whether at a match, an estate sale, a gun show, or somebody's safe — and did holding it change how you thought about the technology?


    Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team

    1 Reply Last reply
    0

    Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.

    Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.

    With your input, this post could be even better 💗

    Register Login
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes


    • Login

    • Don't have an account? Register

    • Login or register to search.
    Powered by NodeBB Contributors
    • First post
      Last post
    0
    • Categories
    • Recent
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • World
    • Users
    • Groups