- Queen Elizabeth's Pocket Pistol
Queen Elizabeth's Pocket Pistol is a cannon built in 1544 in Utrecht by Jan Tolhuys, before Elizabeth came to the throne. [http://www.doverpages.co.uk/dover/pocket_pistol.htm] The gun was presented to
Henry VIII byMaximiliaan van Egmond , Count ofBuren andStadtholder ofFriesland as a gift for his young daughter Elizabeth. [http://www.panoramio.com/photo/5381732]The cannon measures 24ft in length and fired 4.75 inch calibre cannon balls. The cannon is decorated with engravings of fruit, flowers, grotesques, and figures symbolizing Liberty, Victory and Fame. [http://www.dover.freeuk.com/garrison/pistol.htm] There is also a Tudor coat of arms which includes a verse in Dutch, which translates in English as "Break, tear every wall and rampart, Am I called, Across mountain and valley, pierces my ball, By me striken".
Between 1613 and 1622 the gun was used and was found to be capable of firing a 10lb ball a distance of 2000 yards. ["Treasures of Britain" by Drive Publications Limited, for the Automobile Association. P.167] Before the
English Civil War it guarded the cliffs of Dover ["The History of the Castle, Town and Port of Dover" by Reverend S. P. H. Statham, Rector of St Mary-in-the-Castle (ie St Mary-in-Castro) (Longmans, Green, and Co., 1899] and propaganda of the time claimed it could fire a 12lb ball seven miles. [http://www.flickr.com/photos/jorolat/1621805950/] Some even said its shot could reach France if the gun was properly maintained [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=50925] though this is an exaggeration; tests done in the 1970s with similar basilisks have a more realistic range of 1200 yards with a 10lb ball. [http://www.panoramio.com/photo/5381732]In 1644 King Charles I's forces in Cornwall reported capturing from the
Earl of Essex '49 Peeces of faire Brasse Ordnance (taken then and the day before) among which was the great Basilisco of Dover …' ["Mercurius Aulicus" Week 36, British Library, Thomason Tracts E.10 [20] ] . This cannon has since been identified as Queen Elizabeth's Pocket Pistol. [W. Y. Carmen, 2004. "A History of Firearms: From Earliest Times to 1914". Dover Publications, p.45] Later that year the gun saw action at the siege of Hull where it was recaptured by theRoundheads and used at the Siege ofSheffield . ["Dover Castle" by R. Allen Brown (Her Majesty's Stationery Office, HMSO 1974]The cannon can be seen at
Dover Castle on a replacement carriage made in the 18th century from captured French guns. [http://www.panoramio.com/photo/5381732]References
External links
* [http://riv.co.nz/rnza/shrapnel/qepp/qepp1.htm http://riv.co.nz/rnza/shrapnel/qepp/qepp1.htm]
* [http://doversoul.tripod.com/id38.html http://doversoul.tripod.com/id38.html]
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