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Difference between revisions of "Flintlock Musket"

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'''This page features Flintlock Muskets used in media ''other'' than [[Brown Bess Flintlock Musket|Brown Bess]], [[Charleville Musket|Charleville]], [[Jezail musket|Jezail]] and [[Kabyle Musket|Kabyle]] (and all it's variants) which is the most popular flintlock muskets seen on screen.'''
 
'''This page features Flintlock Muskets used in media ''other'' than [[Brown Bess Flintlock Musket|Brown Bess]], [[Charleville Musket|Charleville]], [[Jezail musket|Jezail]] and [[Kabyle Musket|Kabyle]] (and all it's variants) which is the most popular flintlock muskets seen on screen.'''
  
'''Flintlock Musket''' is the long firearms, that completely replaced [[Wheellock Musket]]s and mostly replaced [[Matchlock Musket]]s (in some regions of Asia and Africa matchlocks were used until the 19th century).
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'''Flintlock Muskets''' are long firearms, that completely replaced [[Wheellock Musket]]s and mostly replaced [[Matchlock Musket]]s (in some regions of Asia and Africa, matchlocks were used until the 19th century). The name comes from the use of a piece of flint wedged into the hammer that, when the trigger is pulled, strikes the frizzen and creates a spark that ignites the gunpowder.  
  
 
''N.B. Virtually all {{PAGENAME}}s seen in films or television productions are modern reproductions, due to historical specimens being highly expensive and unsafe to fire due to age- or conservation-related concerns.''
 
''N.B. Virtually all {{PAGENAME}}s seen in films or television productions are modern reproductions, due to historical specimens being highly expensive and unsafe to fire due to age- or conservation-related concerns.''

Revision as of 18:08, 16 October 2020

Crafted in the Swedish style, this was the first dog lock style or "English lock" introduced into English forces and was used in the English Civil War.
Muszkiet wałowy z zamkiem skałkowym (Polish, roughly "musket barrel with flint lock")
Modern reproduction of 17th Century English Doglock muskets.

This page features Flintlock Muskets used in media other than Brown Bess, Charleville, Jezail and Kabyle (and all it's variants) which is the most popular flintlock muskets seen on screen.

Flintlock Muskets are long firearms, that completely replaced Wheellock Muskets and mostly replaced Matchlock Muskets (in some regions of Asia and Africa, matchlocks were used until the 19th century). The name comes from the use of a piece of flint wedged into the hammer that, when the trigger is pulled, strikes the frizzen and creates a spark that ignites the gunpowder.

N.B. Virtually all Flintlock Muskets seen in films or television productions are modern reproductions, due to historical specimens being highly expensive and unsafe to fire due to age- or conservation-related concerns.

Specifications

  • Weight: Various
  • Length: Various
  • Barrel length: Various
  • Cartridge: Various
  • Caliber: Various
  • Capacity: Usually 1, some revolving rifles and repeaters with more
  • Action: Flintlock
  • Rate of fire: User-dependent; usually 2-5 rounds a minute with muzzleloading long muskets, most soldiers were drilled to manage 3 under combat conditions
  • Muzzle velocity: Variable
  • Effective range: Variable
  • Feed system: Usually muzzle-loaded
  • Fire Modes: Single Shot

The Flintlock Musket and variants can be seen in the following films, television series, video games, and anime used by the following actors:


Film

Title Actor Character Note Date
A Pistol Shot (Vystrel) Imperial Russian Army soldiers 1966
Kidnapped Michael Caine Alan Breck Stewart Doglock 1971
Jack Watson James Stewart
British soldiers
Osceola Seminole warriors, Raynes' men 1971
Tecumseh Gojko Mitic Tecumseh 1972
Rolf Römer Simon McKew
Minja Vojvodic Black Eagle
American and British soldiers, Indians
The Deluge (Potop) Ryszard Filipski Soroka 1974
Blue Bird (Blauvogel) Gheorghe Patru Raccoon 1979
Robin Jaeger Blue Bird
Iroquois warriors
Boris Godunov Seen on the ground 1986
Snapphanar Ramunas Abukevicius Jensen 2006
Jörgen Persson Räddstor
Danish and Swedish soldiers
The Golden Compass Gyptian man 2007
Kingdom of War Santisuk Promsiri King Mahinthrathirat Doglock 2007
Pratcha Sananwatananont Young Naresuan
Jirayu La-ongmanee Young Boonthing
The Legend of Naresuan: Declaration in Independence Wanchana Sawatdee King Naresuan Doglock 2007
Jirayu La-ongmanee Rachamanu aka Boonthing
The Sovereign's Servant (Sluga Gosudarev) Swedish and Russian soldiers 2007
Beauty and the Beast Nicolas Gob Maxime de Beaufremont 2014
The Duelist (Duelyant) Pyotr Fyodorov Kolychev custom made 2014
Pyotr Skvortsov escaped convict

Television

Show Title Actor Character Note / Episode Air Date
In Search for Captain Grant (V poiskakh kapitana Granta) Nikolai Yeryomenko, Jr. Lord Glenarvan Trade 1986
In Search for Captain Grant (V poiskakh kapitana Granta) Vladimir Gostyukhin Major McNabbs Trade 1986
In Search for Captain Grant (V poiskakh kapitana Granta) Oleg Shtefanko Capt. John Mangles Trade 1986
Lewis English Civil War reenactors "The Dead of Winter" (S04E01) 2010
Midsomer Murders James Callis Toby DeQuetteville "The Dark Rider" (S15E1) 2012
Members of historical reenactment club

Video Games

Game Title Appears as Mods Notation Release Date
Nosferatu: The Wrath of Malachi 2003
Civilization IV 2005
Uncharted 4: A Thief's End On The Wall 2016

Anime

Film Title Character Note Date
The Strange Case Files of Ryoko Yakushiji Imperial Russian Army soldiers 2008

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