As one of my favorite
Military leaders, Napoleon Bonaparte died on this date, 5 May 1821, I will post
the Musket Model 1777 as the weapon of the fortnight. This weapon was one of
Napoleon’s weapons. The information is from Wikipedia.
Type
|
|
Place of origin
|
France
(M/77), French Republic
(M/77 corrigé)
|
Service
history
|
|
In service
|
French Army 1777–1826
|
Used by
|
France, Confederation
of the Rhine, other client states of the French Empire
|
Wars
|
French
Revolutionary Wars, Napoleonic Wars and others in the
european Theatre
|
Production
history
|
|
Designed
|
1777
|
Manufacturer
|
Charleville armoury and others
|
Produced
|
1777–1839 (all variants)
|
Number built
|
7 million
|
Variants
|
Modèle 1777 corrigé en l'an IX
|
Specifications
|
|
Weight
|
4.5 kilograms (9.9 lb)
|
Length
|
1.51 metres (59 in)
|
Barrel length
|
113 centimetres (44 in)
|
17.5mm (.69 inch) musket ball
|
|
User dependent; usually 3
rounds a minute
|
|
Variable
|
|
Effective range
|
Variable (50–100 yards)
|
Feed system
|
The
musket Modèle 1777, and later Modèle 1777 corrigé en l'an IX
(Model 1777 corrected in the year 1800, or IX in the French Revolutionary
Calendar) was one of the most widespread weapons on the European continent.
It
was part of a weapon family with numerous variants, e.g. for the light infantry,
artillery and a musketoon for the cavalry.
Modèle
1777 corrigé en l' an IX
After
the French Revolutionary Wars, first consul Napoleon Bonaparte commissioned a
rework; some minor modifications on the lock, bayonet and stock resulted in
1800 in the "corrected" model, also called "Modèle 1777
corrigé".
Other
improvements
The
Musket was further improved in 1816 and 1822.
Impact
7
million muskets were produced, including variants 1800 (an IX), 1816 and 1822,
but not including muskets like the Austrian 1798 or the Prussian 1809, which
were mere clones of the French 1777. Until World War I, no other firearm was
produced in such large numbers.
Properly
trained French infantry were expected to be able to fire three volleys a minute
with the 1777. A trained infantryman could hit a man sized target at 80 yards
but anything further required an increasing amount of luck and the musket
became wildly inaccurate at long range.
The
Grande Armée marched into the German countries and left approx. 750,000 muskets
retreating in 1815; until about 1840, French weapons were used in Germany.
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