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410

CIVIL HISTORY, 1485-1603.

[1545.

the subject, to endeavour to indicate how and where the different heavy guns were mounted; but some particulars as to the guns themselves can and should be attempted. In this we are assisted by the fact that several guns which went down in the above-mentioned Mary Rose in 1545, off Portsmouth, have been recovered, and are still in existence, and by the further fact that little change in the size and nature of ships' heavy guns took place during the sixteenth century. A table of the principal guns of that period, compiled from extant specimens, and from what appear to be the most trustworthy ancient authorities,[1] is therefore appended: —

Name of Piece. Calibre. Length.[2] Weight of Gun. Weight of Shot. Charge of Powder.
  Ins. Ft. Ins. Lbs. Lbs. Lbs.
Cannon Royal8.54868,0007430
Cannon8.0 ..6,0006027
Cannon Serpentine7.0 ..5,5004225
Bastard Cannon7.0 ..4,5004220
Demi-Cannon6.41104,0003218
Cannon Pedro, or Petro[3]6.0 ..3,8002614
Culverin[4]5.210114,8401812
Basilisk5.0 ..4,000149
Demi-Culverin4.0 ..3,40086
Culverin Bastard4.56863,000115.7
Saker[5]3.656111,40064
Minion3.5661,0505.23
Falcon2.56068021.2
Falconet[6]2.0395001.4
Serpentine1.5 ..400.5.3
Rabinet or Robinet1.0 ..300.3.18

[1]

  1. See Sir W. Monson's 'Tracts' in Churchill's Voyages, iii.; 'Archæologia,' vi. 189, xi. 170, xiii. 27, etc. Tartaglia's 'Three Books of Colloquies,' translated by Lucar (London, 1588); and S. P. Dom. Eliz. ccxlii. 64. Hardly any two of these agree. The paper Dom. Eliz. ccxlii, 64, is printed at length as an appendix to the 'State
  2. Monson puts the length of the guns mentioned by him at 8 ft. 6 in.; but specimens still extant, dating from about his time, indicate that this was not always correct.
  3. "Cannon Pedro" was the English form of "canon pierrier," and means a gun primarily intended for throwing stone shot.
  4. I.e. couleuvrine — serpent. Compare Basilisk.
  5. Named after the Saker hawk. Compare Falcon.
  6. In the grounds of the Seigneurie, Sark, is a well-preserved brass gun, apparently a falconet, 57 inches in length, and 1⅞ inches in calibre, bearing the following inscription: — "Don de sa Majesté la Royne Elizabeth au Seigneur de Sarcq, A.D. 1572." See p. 412.
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