Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick
Michael, is it that the Igniting Irons were kept red hot during actions ?
That being the case; no wonder ones with their original tips are rare.
|
Hi Rick,
As I stated formerly in another thread, igniting irons had to be kept resting in a bowl with glowing coal on a fire all the time during action - and that right next to the cannon and the powder barrels!!!
http://www.vikingsword.com/vb/showth...ight=linstocks
Attached please find the most exact period representation known to me, from Jean Mansel's illuminated Late-Gothic manuscript
La fleur des histoires, France, 1453-63, Geneva Library, Ms fr. 64, fol 196r.
I posted these scans earlier; they also depict the earliest form of an igniting iron, sharply angled and still without the reinforced bulbous head and only featuring a long, thin prick; this type was first represented in Konrad Kyeser's 1405 manuscript
Bellifortis (two attachments below), and the only known surviving sample is preserved in my collection, in excavated condition but retaining a portion of its original haft (the one on top in the last attachment).
Best,
Michael