Entry tags:
English Civil War Society
I just found a short video of the 'Battle for Wimborne'. Also shows the evening life on the campsite at a big muster, which looks like something I'll probably enjoy too.
I'll be taking the train to my first muster. But my tent, air bed, bags, etc. are travelling north with the aid of a lady who lives quite close to me.
She taking a trailer, because she's towing <cut>
Just in case the photo doesn't work, it's a full size working canon!
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A canon, depending on the type, has to have either a shotgun or a firearm licence.
(I think it's the muzzle velocity and barrel length that determine which.)
Which has resulted in occasional interesting discussions with police officers checking to see if a firearm is securely stored in a locked cabinet...
Muskets also need a licence, but at least police officers don't get quite as big a shock!
It goes without saying (I've just been reading their health and safety document), that the ECWS has detailed rules on handing firearms, both during and outside battles.
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But I doubt wooden wheels - even with iron tyres - would be upto the speed on modern roads.
I'm guessing they use a trailer, but it would need to be a pretty robust one for that weight, and with some way of rolling/winching the cannon up a ramp. It's an interesting problem. Maybe they dismantle it?
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Unlike the familiar naval cannon on their permanent little four-wheeled trucks, field guns don't operate on a predictable flat surface so need much bigger wheels.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_carriage
If you watch the King's Troop doing one of their displays you can get an idea of the role of the limbers (and "unlimbering"/"limbering up") on the battlefield. The idea was to be able to shift the battery to a new position at a gallop and return fire almost immediately.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGZUM5wm0BA
Of course the King's Troop use the most modern remaining horse-drawn guns (WW1 vintage), but seventeenth-century cannon did have limbers, albeit probably much heavier and clumsier:
https://www.empressminiatures.com/ecw110-limber-for-large-and-medium-guns-157-p.asp
And you're right, you couldn't possibly take a gun and limber up the motorway on wooden wheels...!