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Old 16th November 2010, 06:47 PM   #1
Spiridonov
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fernando
Lower tier of choir stalls in the Coro, which were carved by Rodrigo Alemán in 1495 and feature 54 historical scenes from the conquest of Granada in remarkable detail. Each seat shows the defeat of a village.

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It is a very interesting infomation, Fernando! Do you have all of 54 historical scenes?
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Old 16th November 2010, 07:36 PM   #2
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Maybe this will do.

You will find here 144 images, covering both low and high choir.

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Old 16th November 2010, 08:18 PM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by fernando
Maybe this will do.

You will find here 144 images, covering both low and high choir.

LINK
Thanks, Fernando. I have found else images of handgonners from these resourse (unfortunatli there's too low resolution):









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Old 17th November 2010, 08:33 AM   #4
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Thank you so much, Alexender, for sharing these!

m
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Old 26th November 2010, 12:19 PM   #5
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Fascinating stuff, Michael! I'm especially captivated by the few I see where the user seems to be gripping the butt-stock beneath the crook of his arm - gets me wondering about "jezail grip" again, y'see.

Interesting also is the subject of sights. I recall a conversation on the Nihonto Message Board, in which I asked essentially a similar question to one mentioned earlier: "Why put fore and backsights on something so inaccurate as a smoothbore muzzle-loader?" The answer has yet to be found, but one fellow suggested that it might be partially explained by the near-constant Japanese desire to improve on their wares, no matter how fractionally. I'd certainly call putting fore, intermediate and back sights on a Tanegashima an improvement - and a fractional one, at that. Might we be seeing something similar here: early European gunsmiths (at their own impulse, or the instigation of their buyers) attempting to improve the breed?
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Old 26th November 2010, 04:20 PM   #6
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RDGAC
Might we be seeing something similar here: early European gunsmiths (at their own impulse, or the instigation of their buyers) attempting to improve the breed?
Thank you, RDGAC,

Fascinating point. I just can't actually imagine how to do it. Do you have an idea?

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Michael
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Old 3rd December 2010, 10:00 AM   #7
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With contemporary technology? Not a single clue Rifling the bore would help improve accuracy at the price of a severe penalty to rate of fire; decreasing the windage might help a little and slow you down a little less, but the bullet will still fly in a fairly random manner and still not do too much beyond, say, a couple of hundred yards. Even the jezail, anecdotally renowned for accuracy at what were, by contemporary standards, longish ranges, has to obey the laws of physics.

The only good reason I can see for adding all this panoply of sights to the guns is as a sort of "on the off-chance" measure. Most of the time, the thing's far too inaccurate to make use of them (especially if it's got a dodgy stock design, as in the Tanegashima), but occasionally you might just happen to encounter the right set of circumstances for them to be useful.
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