UPDATED MAY 4, 2022, minor update NOVEMBER 10, 2023
10 November 2014
Matchlock firearms of the Ming Dynasty
Labels:
arquebus and musket,
common,
European influence,
featured,
firearm,
Japanese influence,
Kingdom of Tungning,
late Ming Dynasty,
matchlock,
mid Ming Dynasty,
photo,
Qing Dynasty,
rare,
Turkish influence,
uncommon,
Zhao Shi Zhen
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Matchlock firearms of the Ming Dynasty
21 August 2014
Unique weapon of the Ming Dynasty — Huo Jian Liu (火箭溜)
UPDATED APRIL 29, 2022
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| Drawing of a Huo Jian Liu and its rack-and-pinion matchlock mechanism (highlighted), from 'Shen Qi Pu (《神器譜》)'. |
During the late 16th century, Ming firearms specialist Zhao Shi Zhen (趙士楨) proposed a much more refined solution to early rocket's accuracy problem in the form of Huo Jian Liu (火箭溜, lit. 'Fire arrow slide'). Huo Jian Liu was, for all intents and purposes, a matchlock gun that shot rocket instead of the usual lead ball, and featured the same barrel, front and rear sight, shoulder stock as well as trigger as an ordinary musket. However, instead of a standard matchlock mechanism, Zhao Shi Zhen equipped the weapon with a Chinese rack and pinion matchlock mechanism identical to that of late Ming variant Lu Mi Chong (嚕密銃). To ensure gunner safety, the matchlock mechanism was mounted at the middle portion of the gun (farther away from the gunner), with a large gun shield installed behind it to deflect rocket backblast.
Huo Jian Liu allowed its user to aim and launch rocket with greater accuracy. It also had greater range, less recoil, and significantly faster rate of fire than typical musket (due to the elimination of pouring powder charge, loading and ramming the ball down the barrel, and priming the flash pan steps in the reloading process). On top of that, the gun was cheaper to manufacture, as it did not need a strong barrel to withstand high chamber pressure, nor ramrod (although this was offset by its more costly rocket ammunition).
Regrettably, Zhao Shi Zhen's invention failed to catch the attention of Ming government, and never went beyond prototype stage.
Regrettably, Zhao Shi Zhen's invention failed to catch the attention of Ming government, and never went beyond prototype stage.
Labels:
experimental,
firearm,
matchlock,
mid Ming Dynasty,
rocket launcher,
unique weapon,
weapon,
Zhao Shi Zhen
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Unique weapon of the Ming Dynasty — Huo Jian Liu (火箭溜)
17 August 2014
Unique weapon of the Ming Dynasty — Lang Xian (狼筅)
UPDATED SEPTEMBER 27, 2023
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| Drawing of a Lang Xian, from a Korean print of 'Ji Xiao Xin Shu (《紀效新書》)'. |
Lang Xian (狼筅, can be written as 筤筅, lit. 'Wolf brush'), sometimes translated as "wolf bamboo" and "multiple tipped bamboo spear", was arguably the MOST uniquely Chinese weapon ever devised, and one of the most effective weapons if used right. Essentially a long bamboo spear with layers of branches still attached, there was much more to this unassuming weapon than meets the eye.
Labels:
common,
late Ming Dynasty,
mid Ming Dynasty,
polearm,
Qi Ji Guang,
unique weapon,
weapon
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Unique weapon of the Ming Dynasty — Lang Xian (狼筅)
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