Posts: 669 Location: Dinuba, CA
Tue 11 Sep, 2007 11:53 pm
It looks to me like an early
Petronel, which is I believe a gun of French origin. These were designed to be held against the chest, and the example I have a diagram of is dated from 1575, is matchlock and is highly decorated. But the stock is not quite so large at the butt, so I assume this may just be a difference between makers.
EDIT: Actually, I found a page displaying almost exactly the same weapon I was describing to you, which came from a description in
Weapons, An International Encyclopedia... Here's the page I found:
French Petronel
[ Linked Image ]
Continuing my research, in George Stone's
Glossary... of Arms and Armour there's a decent description of these weapons~
Petronel, Petrinal, Poitrinal. A firearm of the 16th century intermediate in size between the pistol and the arquebus. It was short but of large caliber and heavy. It had a peculiarly curved stock and was fired with the butt against the chest, from qhich practice it derives its name. (Grose I, 105, Planche 394.)
The book shows an image (Figure 634) of a wheel lock petronel that's from Germany and in the Metropolitan Museum.
-Gregory-