Gunpowder Weapons of the Late Fifteenth Century


Gunpowder weapons were the 'leading edge' of technology in the late medieval era. Gunpowder weapons took two forms: artillery, and hand-held guns. The two systems were employed tactically in sieges and battles, and in offense and defense operations. All forms of gunpowder weapons relied on chemical and metal-working advancements of the time, and their effective exploitation in warfare relied upon new thinking of the military commanders.

For some time, there appears not to have been a distinction between artillery pieces, operated by a crew, and smaller weapons capable of being operated by an individual. Even though there have been a few examples of images and even hand-held weapons found from the earliest times, the emphasis was on developing the cannon to blast holes in walls or to shatter fortress gates by what would be considered an 'artillery' role, and complementary to what non-gunpowder siege engines had been doing for centuries. Handguns were complementary to other missile weapons, mainly the crossbow. Initially, the awkwardness in firing handguns limited their use as a 'marksman's' missile weapon, but they had a role, when employed in numbers, to deliver suppressive and harassment fire.

The earliest employment of gunpowder weapons may not have been recorded, as such incidents in battle were most likely experiments. The first few reports of guns in chronicles are often questioned. Modern scholars distinguish between combustible objects being hurled from non-gunpowder machines, and the actual use of gunpowder as an explosive to propel objects from a gun. Many of the early accounts lack sufficient precision to make a reliable determination if a 'true' gunpowder weapon were being described. The earliest reliable reports of guns suggest that their use had been ongoing. Initially guns were most used in sieges, in which they did not become decisive until the late part of the Hundred Years' War. Early gunpowder weapons were awkward in open battles. They were first effectively used during the battles of The Hussite Wars (1419-34). Though they were present on many battlefields, beginning in the late fourteenth century, guns' first effective employment [distinctly contributing to the conduct of the battle] in the Hundred Years' War was at Formigny (1450). At Castillon (1453) guns were a major factor in deciding the outcome of the battle.

The use of gunpowder weapons in the Hundred Years' War did not produce a revolution in tactics, but it did spur the technological development and logistical support systems for such. In the war, guns were used along with the older non-gunpowder weapons. The introduction of gunpowder weapons was an evolutionary process that required progress in technology and in understanding of commanders (the best of whom were not the traditional knight, or noble men-at-arms, who were the main subjects of the contemporary chronicles).

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Events Relating to Use of Early Gunpowder Weapons
in Western Europe

Mention and knowledge of gunpowder:

c.1044
The essential ingredients of 'gunpowder' were recorded in a formula in China. Its explosive qualities had obviously been known for some time in the Sung Dynasty. Its use in Chinese firework demonstrations is certain. Though it is evident that the Chinese, and later the Arab civilizations, experimented with a wide-range of mixtures, there is some doubt if either society used the mixture as a propellant of projectiles.
c.1268
The thirteenth-century transmission of the gunpowder formula to Western Europe has not been documented.
Roger Bacon's Opus tretium provided a recipe with the components of gunpowder and suggested awareness of the mixture's explosive power. He had made a cryptic reference to the mixture in an earlier document, Epistolae de secretis operibus, in 1249.
c.1270-80
Albertus Magnus (d.1280) left a manuscript (dated c.1270) that included the work attributed to a 'Marcus Graecus' of an earlier time. The Graecus' work was titled Liber Igneum ad comburendos hostes [Book of Fires for Burning enemies] and contained workable recipes for explosive gunpowder.

Reports, records, or evidence of guns:

1284
Records of Italian use of sclopi (handguns) at town of Forli is suspected to be a later insertion.
1313
Records reported that bussen met kruyt ('cannons with powder'?), were kept at the town of Ghent. Interpretation is questioned by some English authors.
1324
Guns were reportedly used at a siege of Metz. The report is questioned due to the chroniclers' use of the term 'serpentines', believed to be a premature convention.
Nasrid Sultan, Ismail I, of Granada reportedly used gunpowder artillery to capture Huéscar in Spain. Reports of early Spanish Muslims' use of guns are questioned by some who claim the accounts are of incendiaries being launched by non-gunpowder machines and not of projectiles being propelled through a barrel by a gunpowder explosion.
1326
Council of Florence directed the manufacture of metal cannon and bullets (pilas seu pallectas ferreas et canones de metallo). Considered by many to be the first 'indisputable' record of such items.
The image of a pot-de-fer gun, that shot an arrow-like bolt, was in a manuscript (by Walter de Milemete) presented to Edward III on his accession to the throne of England.
1327
English reportedly used guns ('crakys') in Scotland.
1331
Guns, vasi e scioppi, were used at siege of Cividale, in Friuli, Italy.
1338
French document described acquiring iron arrows and sulfur, with which to make powder to shoot the arrows.
French used pot-de-fer, firing bolts with iron feathers, in a naval raid against Southampton.
1339
French used cannon [pot-de-fer] at Perigord; and at Cambrai against Edward III.
1340
French used pot-de-fer at Quesnoy in 1340.
Italian painting of this date shows handguns.
1341
At Lucca, there was reported use of a 'thunderer', and of iron cannon firing iron balls.
1342
Spanish Muslims used cannon against Casilian army at Siege of Algeciras.
1343
Spanish muslims used gunpowder against Alfonso XI of Castile.
1345
French had 24 cannon made at Cahors for the siege of Aiguillon.
Edward III had a hundred cannons at the Tower of London.
1346
Some accounts state that cannon was used at the battle of Crécy. Though the account is stated without qualification in many modern writings, it is disputed by several historians.
Edward III reportedly used 22 cannon his campaign in France.
1370
Reference to gun foundry at Augsburg.
1375
French employed 32 cannon and fired 100 pound stone balls during siege at Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte.
1376
Reference to gun foundry at Venice.
1378
First mention of cannon used in Balkan lands relates to 13 August 1378 defense of Kotor firing three bombards at Venetian warships.
1382
A militia from Ghent, in a defensive position approximately an hour's march from the city of Bruges, employed small cannon in routing the Bruges' militia that marched out to engage them. The 3 May encounter is called 'the battle of Beverhoudsveld'.
1386
Reportedly Swiss used some handguns at Battle of Sempach.
1389
Ottoman Turks reportedly used canon at 'First' Battle of Kossovo.
1399
Richard II of England reportedly took eight 'gunnes' with stands and 200 rounds of shot to Ireland.
1400
Konrad Kyeser's Bellifortis (c.1400) contained an illustration of a gunner firing a small, culverin-like gun supported by an upright pole and a long shaft extending from its breech. The gun is being positioned by the gunner's one hand as his other hand is aligning a hot rod to the gun's touchhole.
1411
First known image of a Z-shapped trigger-lever 'matchlock' gun is in a manuscript of this date.
1419
Initial battle, near Prague, of the 'Hussite Wars' began a series of engagements (lasting until 1434) which evidenced a definite tactical scheme for the employment of guns (small artillery pieces and handguns). The Hussites' employment provided undeniable effectiveness of guns in combat when (as with the English longbow) a missile weapon was used, supported by combined arms (other disciplined infantry and cavalry) and in an offensive-defensive tactical posture.
1429
At the English siege of Orléans, the French gunner Jean de Montesiler demonstrated remarkable marksmanship in targeting individual enemy targets. The accounts suggest that his individual firearm may have been a matchlock equipped couleuvrin.
1435
Handguns (culverins ad manum), supported on stands, were reported used at Rouen.
1442
French established artillery parks: at Dax in 1442, at Mauléon in 1449, and at Guissen in 1449.
1448
At the second Battle of Kossovo (17 Oct 1448), the Hungarians under Hunyadi reportedly employed German and Bohemian mercenary handgunners against the Turkish Janissary archers. The infantry on both sides used palisades while exchanging missile fire at an interim distance of about 91 meters. Though the far more numerous Turks won the battle, Sultan Murad II (1421-1451) was sufficiently impressed by the encounter to incorporate soon after handgunners in his Janissary.
1449
Mons Meg, a famous 'giant' iron bombard was made for Philip the Good, duke of Burgundy. This followed the trend set by the acquisition of another giant, Dulle Griet, a few years earlier.
The French artillery under the direction of Bureau brothers demonstrated striking success in sieges without use of the 'giant' bombards. The French emphasis was on a large number of regular and smaller guns [particularly longer barrel length-to-bore size ratios], and a highly organized supply and support base. There is the possibility that they were making use of the newly developed and more powerful 'corned' gunpowder.
1450
French employed two culverin-type guns that forced English longbowmen to break their traditional, defensive battle formation at the battle of Formigny. The issue was not decided by guns, which the English managed to capture, but by the French heavy cavalry that attacked the English exposed from their defenses.
1453
French employed about 300 guns (artillery and handguns) at the battle of Castillon. This engagement was a close replica of Hussites' tactical use of guns, without the wagons, but skillfully adapting to favorable defensive terrain. The guns had largely decided the outcome by the time the French cavalry charged in.
Constantinople fell to Sultan Mohammed II, who had employed a large number of 'giant', mostly cast-bronze, bombards in his siege of the city. However, the large guns' contribution to the victory is often exaggerated.
1454
Cannon reported to be mounted on two-wheeled gun-carriages at Rouen.
1470-80
Believed actual timeframe of the 'Hussite Manuscript', whch explains the relatively advanced [for time era of the Hussite wars (1419-34)] images of gun-carriages in the document.
1474-77
The Burgundian-Swiss wars evidenced that the Charles 'the Rash', duke of Burgundy's, fascination with and promotion of artillery was not matched with a skill for its employment in combat.
1483
Berner Chronicles contains creditable images of two-wheeled gun-carriages.
1481-92
Ferdinand and Isabella exhibit a strong artillery arm in their conquest of Granada. Although the technological status of the Castilian-Aragonise artillery did not seem to have advanced much beyond that of the Hundred Years' War, their infantry evidenced a significant increase in use of matchlock handguns -- the espingardas.
1494
Charles VIII's French army invaded Italy with a highly developed artillery train and guns mounted on carriages with trunions.

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Gunpowder Artillery

Artillery may be roughly placed in two general categories according to tactical employment: indirect fire (throwing or lobbing) objects (projectiles) toward a target area, and directly shooting a missile at a target. Contrary to the impression given in many general histories, medium-size guns were the most effective for bombardment. Guns of great size induced a degree of psychological fear, but often failed during intense use.
Earliest gunpowder artillery shot metal arrows (bolts) [grands carreaux] from iron or cast bronze, vase-shaped 'guns', or pots de fer. Italian espression was 'vasi'. It is suspected that a tampion, or some sort of wadding, was wrapped around the shaft of the projectile to enhance the thrusting eneregy of gases released by the explosion of the gunpowder.

First image of these vase-configured guns was in the Milemete Manuscript of 1326 presented to Edward III of England. Some accounts suggest that such guns were the 'crakys of war' used in Edward III's 1327 campaign in Scotland. It is also speculated that these were the French 'bombards' used at Quesnoy in 1340.

Early bombards, that shot stone-hewed projectles were fastened to wood platforms or trestles and positioned on earth mounds. Simple devices were used to make slight adjustments in elevation.

Initially the guns were shaped like buckets, wide at the open mouth and narrowed at the rear (where the gunpowder was packed) and a small hole (touchhole) was located for the insertion of a hot wire, or lit coal, to ignite the gunpowder. These very early bombards would in the following century be called 'mortars' to distinguish them from the longer barreled guns that are more typical of the major bombards of the fifteenth century.

Bombard was a term that could be a generic, early medieval artillery piece. However, as time passed, the term was applied to the larger cannon. As specific sizes were not standard, one could say that guns which shot projectiles larger than a human's head were generally 'bombards'.

The larger bore diameter guns usually shot stone balls and were muzzle-loaded. Some bombards were large at the mouth end, but narrowed to the rear (breech), where they might have had removable fire chambers -- making them 'breech loaders'. Excluding the few very large guns (which were usually given individual names), the following data would generally apply for the average bombards:
Crew: about a 10 to 20
Rate of fire: 2 per hour (muzzle loaded)
Projectile: up to 100 kg (about max for the average gun)
Range: 220 meters (very rough average estimate)

Example of a siege bombard ca. 1450

This is a cutaway of one of the ca. 1450 bombards kept at the Musée de l'Armée, Paris, France.
This is a rather typical configuration of bombards of the fifteenth century. They consisted of two distinct tube-like sections: a long barrel sections and short powder-chamber sections. The barrel had considerably large bore caliber size compared to that of the powder chamber.

Most of the bombards of the early fifteenth century were hamered-forged, wrought-iron pieces. Their powder chambers and barrel sections were made separately, and then the chambers were rigidly attached to the barrel. Some authors have mistakenly assumed that these were screwed together after a practice of manufacture in the very late fifteenth-century with cast-bronze guns. As many of the remaining iron bombards are too corroded to asses the difference without x-ray examination, this distinction has only been recently confirmed. The deteroiated condition if the guns also conceals the forged manufacture of many of the chambers, which otherwise have been mistakenly assumed to have been cast.

Cast bronze guns were known to be safer from explosion, and as gunpowder imporved in explosive power in the latter part of the fifteenth century, more bronze guns were made, though they were more expensive. Not many of the bronze bombards remain as they were melted down in later eras for more modern artillery, church bells, etc.

Smaller bombards, mounted on wooden sleds, provided a degree of tactical mobility before the development of suitable two-wheeled gun-carriages late in the fifteenth century.

Culverin and veuglaire were cannon of narrower diameter and considerably greater ratio of barrel-length to bore-diameter than that for bombards. They shot projectiles about the size of a human fist. The culverins and veuglaire type guns proved to be versatile and effective guns in the late medieval period. It became economical to use cast iron shot with them, which enhanced the guns' effectivness.

Cannon of this design were most all breech-loaded. Beer-mug shaped chambers were pre-loaded with powder charges and then wedged tightly into the open rear of the piece. This allowed for a more rapid rate of fire than for the muzzle-loading guns. This factor, along with their more managable size, caused culverins and veuglaires to be the first types of gunpowder pieces to be used in open-field battles.
To be effective, guns had to be place close to walls. Gun crews had to be protected from the enemy counter missile fire (guns and arrows) and large shields were erected at the gun sites.

Removable firing chambers, in which powder was loaded, allowed for safer and more rapid firing rates. This system was more prictical on the smaller bore guns and not adopted for most bombards. There is some question whether the shot was placed in the removable chambers along with the powder and wadding, or was the shot placed at the breech end of the barrel and the removable chamber loaded merely with powder and wadding.

Culverin/veuglaire type cannons were given many other names that had particular meanings to the chroniclers and operators at the time. There is no record of a systematic labeling of guns until the sixteenth century. However, the French artillery under the Bureau brothers attempted to 'standardize' the diameters of the guns to a few specific sizes, as part of their logistical measures in managing the large artillery inventories of Charles VII, and later of Louis XI. Eventually, the 'culverin' became associated with the very narrow diameter [small caliber] guns and with the smaller hand-held weapons.

ribauldequin, or 'rabaud', or 'organ guns', were in use during the first part of the fifteenth century, and continued as a mostly anti-personal gun.

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Handguns

Handguns had developed considerably by the late fifteenth century. They began by mounting very small, culverin-like cannon on long staves (or stocks). These small guns were usually called 'cannon or culverin à main'. The gunner was called a coulevrinier. The earliest handguns had to be supported and were fired by a hand-held lit match being brought to the touchhole. Sometimes this was done by an assistant.

Earliest illustration of a 'handgun' from Konrad Kyeser's Bellifortis (c.1400).

During the early fifteenth century the pole became shorter and took the form of a stock that rested on the gunner's shoulder, or under his arm. About mid century, the invention of the matchlock firing system allowed the hand-held weapon to be completely operated by one individual. Around the second quarter of the century, improvements in gunpowder made small guns firing lead bullets more effective. However, in the course of the Hundred Years' War no tactical innovations emerged that were unique to the weapon. Handguns were employed much like crossbows, which they were beginning slowly to replace.

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Early handguns in museums

Hand-gunner (or arqubusier) shown here with the arquebus, which appeared just about at the end of the Hundred Years War. [Some evidence suggests its earliest forms were available in the Hussite armies of 1419-34.] It was distinctive for the primitive matchlock system, where the lit match was held by one end of a large 'serpentine' [S- or Z-shaped] bar which, when the gunner moved the other end (like a trigger lever), aligned the lit match to the touchhole. The device allowed the small gun to be a true individual's missile weapon.

The employment of handgunners resembled that of crossbowmen. They used the large shield (mantelet or pavise) when firing from a non-protective cover position. The low rate-of-fire meant that they had to be employed in large numbers to be effective in infantry tactical situtations. However, handguns were cheaper to produce than crossbows and took less training to operate.

Handguns were not the weapon of nobleman and the gunners are generally ignored in the medieval chronicles. However, the extensive documented material spawned by Jeanne d'Arc's dramatic episode provides a noteworthy description of one remarkable marksman. For a discussion of what might have been his weapons, see the webpage on Maitre Jehan de Montesiler.

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Links to Information on Some Museum Pieces

Some Fifteenth-Century Gunpowder Artillery Pieces in museums. Select examination of some Fifteenth-Century Iron Bombards.
Reconstructed Gunpowder Artillery
of the Middle Ages.

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This page was last updated 16 May 2001. Comments can be sent to the Société de l'Oriflamme.