Engineering:Dragon (firearm)

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Short description: Short version of a blunderbuss
A pair of early dragons from Poland fitted with the miquelet lock
A dragon, found at a battlefield in Cerro Gordo, Veracruz, Mexico

A dragon is a shortened version of blunderbuss, a firearm with a short, large caliber barrel which is flared at the muzzle and frequently throughout the entire bore.[1][2] Dragons were typically issued to dragoon cavalry, who needed a lightweight, easily handled firearm to use while mounted.[3]

Etymology

The term dragon is taken from the fact that early versions were decorated with a carving in the form of a mythical dragon's head around the muzzle; the muzzle blast would then give the impression of a fire-breathing dragon.[2]

History and description

Early dragons were short wheellock firearms. It is called a dragon because the muzzle is decorated with a dragon's head. The practice comes from a time when all gunpowder weapons had distinctive names, including the culverin, serpentine, falcon, and falconet.[4] The dragon was effective only at short range, lacking accuracy at long range.[1][2]

In the Nusantara archipelago, the weapon is called a tarkul, terakul, or terakol, and seems to have been preferred by cavalry due to its size. The term may refer to a blunderbuss in pistol form, but can also refer to the flintlock musket.[5]:211[6]:5 They used a flintlock mechanism, and might be derived from Dutch flintlocks which entered the area in the 17th century.[7]:64 However, it is possible that this weapon was only popular among local warriors in more recent times — the terakul was only recorded in Tuhfat al-Nafis from the 1860s.[8][5]:211–212 The manuscript mentioned that Bugis troops with chain mail and armed with terakul pemburas (dragon-blunderbusses) defeated Raja Kechil's troops armed with cannons and swords in 1721 CE.[9]:318

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Sibbald Mike Lier (1868). The British Army: Its Origin, Progress, and Equipment. Cassell, Petter, Galpin. pp. 33, 302–304. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 George Elliot Voyle, G. de Saint-Clair-Stevenson (1876). A Military Dictionary. W. Clowes & Sons. pp. 43, 114. https://archive.org/details/militarydictiona00voyliala. 
  3. Charles Francis Hoban (1853). Pennsylvania Archives. , page 324, from a letter dated March 7, 1778
  4. p. 333, Bismark
  5. 5.0 5.1 Ismail, Norain B.T. (2012). Peperangan dalam Historiografi Johor: Kajian Terhadap Tuhfat Al-Nafis. Kuala Lumpur: Akademi Pengajian Islam Universiti Malaya. 
  6. Wan Hasbullah, Wan Mohd Dasuki (4 April 2019). Istinggar dalam Manuskrip Melayu: Tradisi Ilmu dan Teknologi Minangkabau. Pusat Dagangan Dunia Putra (PWTC), Kuala Lumpur. A workshop paper in Wacana Manuskrip Melayu Siri 1 (2019).
  7. Wan Hasbullah, Wan Mohd Dasuki (2014). "Manuskrip Ilmu Bedil Sebagai Sumber EtnosejarahTeknologi Senjata Api Melayu". Kemanusiaan 21 (1): 53–71. 
  8. See information about Tuhfat al-Nafis in Malay Concordance Project.
  9. Winstedt, R. O. (1932). "A Malay History of Riau and Johore". Journal of the Malayan Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 10 (2). 

Further reading