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#5 | |
(deceased)
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Portugal
Posts: 9,694
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![]() Quote:
![]() Not that my eyes are sharper than yours (much older than you ![]() ![]() I agree that Portuguese (and Spanish) guns would have more decoration, Royal insignias and all. But when you think about great conflicts requiring gun casting under emergency needs, i don't know. One non solid possibility is that this cannon was equiping a ship of the Invencible Armada which, after all odds, ended up wrecking all over. The basic fleet departure was Lisbon and the return of the surviving ships was in Galicia, not far from my hometown. ... And it is assumed that a great number of the Spanish cannons were made in a hurry and assumedly of low quality. Yes, we had foundries in Asia (Goa and so), but i don't see them cannons coming all the way to wreck in my shore; and those would be also decorated all the same ... or again, not. One detail that would put some light into this is the lower short inscription; not being the casting date, as the figures look more like letters than numbers, it could be the foundry place. Not sure whether the trunions are not centered, or passive of optical ilusion in the pictures; will go around the place where it stays (close from my habitat), to check it at naked eye. I thank you anyway for your input; it keeps the thing warm ![]() ![]() . |
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