Fauconneau
A Fauconneau was a small type of cannon used during the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance. A typical fauconneau weighed about 25 kg and had a length of about 1 meter. It was a semi-portable weapon. It was mainly an anti-personnel weapon to be used on fixed fortifications.[1] and was used from the 15th to 16th centuries.
Gallery
- Fauconneau, Musée de l'Armée, Paris. Length: 1.06m, cal 32mm, weight: 25.4kg, iron projectile. c. 1510.
- A sketch of a fauconneau with a rack for adjusting the angle of the barrel
Notes
- ^ The King's Army: Warfare, Soldiers and Society During the Wars of Religion James B. Wood, p.157 [1]
- v
- t
- e
- Arquebus
- Bâton à feu
- Bombard
- Culverin
- Fauconneau
- Pot-de-fer
- Perrier à boîte
- Ribauldequin
- Veuglaire
- Pumhart von Steyr
- Dulle Griet
- Faule Mette
- Faule Grete
- Grose Bochse
- Mons Meg
- Dardanelles Gun