Naval Guns (1400 to 1650) - Things that make you go Boom

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  • čas přidán 24. 03. 2020
  • A look at the origins of naval artillery, covering the early period up to the start of the classic Age of Sail.
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Komentáře • 753

  • @Drachinifel
    @Drachinifel  Před 4 lety +116

    Pinned post for Q&A :)

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz Před 4 lety +9

      What would be your idea for a modern increase to the Royal Navy? With one caveat it would have to be at least practical, with public support and not OTT like rebuilding Warspite or giving everyone a personal aircraft carrier (although I do admit those would probably be popular with the public). Mine would be 2 cruisers (some sort of modern Kirov equivilant), 4 destroyers, 3 frigates, 1 helicopter carrier (bascially HMS Ocean), 6 submarines, 9 mine warfare vessels and 4 auxiliary vessels. And possibly the introduction of some AShM equipped corvette sized vessels would be a nice addition.

    • @GetWarded
      @GetWarded Před 4 lety +4

      A US carrier battlegroup sails into a wormhole, is teleported to mid 1942 and is scattered to the four winds. What happens?

    • @tommasobalconi
      @tommasobalconi Před 4 lety

      'Morning Drach, I just have a technical question: I've recently joined Discord but I'm still very unfamiliar with it, how can I find you there? Thanks!

    • @double4345
      @double4345 Před 4 lety +5

      If Battleships were to be implemented into the modern-day, what do you think their armament would be and what role would they play in modern naval warfare?

    • @mor4y
      @mor4y Před 4 lety

      What battle was the picture of the exploding scottish cannon from? I've a feeling I saw it at school some years ago.... us Scots did have a few of them explode on us though! And anyone who's visited Edinburgh knows all about our 1 o'clock gun, a great device to tell the locals from the tourists 😁

  • @LAG09
    @LAG09 Před 4 lety +545

    Funny anecdote about the reliability of early cannons: Tsar Russia at one point got so fed up with cannons that would just blow up when fired dictated that canon builders who wanted to sell cannons to the state had to personally sit on every cannon as it was fired for the first time before they'd agree to receive that particular cannon. Story says that this caused both the death of a prominent cannon maker by his creation and a marked improvement in the quality of cannons used by the Russians.

    • @CharChar2121
      @CharChar2121 Před 2 lety +80

      I knew a helicopter mech whose pilot refused to fly the helicopter without him in it, too, following repairs or maintainace

    • @someguy5492
      @someguy5492 Před 2 lety +14

      I swear that is awesome

    • @Wings_of_foam
      @Wings_of_foam Před 2 lety +15

      Not only the Russians.

    • @nanorider426
      @nanorider426 Před 2 lety +27

      A Danish king made the same "request". ;)

    • @Plastikdoom
      @Plastikdoom Před rokem +4

      @@CharChar2121 ha, when I was still in the USMC, I worked on Huey’s and Cobra’s, Avionics, and our best/most awesome CO, told my shop I was the only one he wanted working on his bird from Avionics, I was still a Lance Corporal then, ahah.

  • @EvilTimNum666
    @EvilTimNum666 Před 4 lety +423

    "Actively distributing themselves and their crews across the surrounding landscape on a worryingly frequent basis ..." LOL

  • @Knihti1
    @Knihti1 Před 4 lety +473

    Vincent: "You know what they call a Quarter Pounder Cannon in Paris?
    Jules: "What'd they call it?"
    Vincent: "They call it Cannon Royale."

    • @Horseshoecrabwarrior
      @Horseshoecrabwarrior Před 4 lety +44

      *with cheese*

    • @TribuneAquila
      @TribuneAquila Před 4 lety +13

      Horseshoecrabwarrior I mean if it’s French that’s just assumed

    • @rembrandt972ify
      @rembrandt972ify Před 4 lety +19

      @@Horseshoecrabwarrior A cannon royale is useless without cheese.

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Před 4 lety +22

      Hand me my falconet. It's the one that has bad mother*cker engraved on it.

    • @Knihti1
      @Knihti1 Před 4 lety +33

      -What'd they call a Culverin?
      -Culverin's a Culverin, but they call it Le Culverin.
      -Le Culverin. What do they call a Hand cannon?
      -I dunno, I didn't go into a small arms shop.

  • @Kevin_Kennelly
    @Kevin_Kennelly Před 4 lety +711

    "scare horses and, somewhat decisively, bypass armor"
    "discover new and interesting ways to disassemble their enemy"
    "surrounded....by smarter crews in swifter ships"
    "vaguely legitimate, but mostly piratical"
    19:50 "Let's just say, shipboard guns, of the period, included, but were not limited to, the following: (he names 26....i'm not doing that...the exhausting thoroughness of the list is it's own humor)
    (i've said this before. this type of video, tracing the evolution of a particular technology, is my favorite. thanks and well done, Drach.)

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před 4 lety +13

      When the Stovepipe hat was introduced one man was convicted of scaring the horses with his hat. Bet you didn't know horses were fashion conscious.

    • @tinafoster8665
      @tinafoster8665 Před 4 lety +3

      I liked the smarter crews in swifter ships xx

    • @haakonsteinsvaag
      @haakonsteinsvaag Před 4 lety +8

      I love brittish understatements.

    • @tinafoster8665
      @tinafoster8665 Před 4 lety +3

      @Jonathan Stiles this man (Drach) DESERVES a larger audience xx

    • @gregwright5704
      @gregwright5704 Před 4 lety +7

      British humor is the best!
      (Except in Britain, where it magically becomes "humour.")

  • @Yuzral
    @Yuzral Před 4 lety +229

    Once again we are reminded that the sciences of metallurgy and chemistry are frequently advanced through the roof and at a significant fraction of Mach 1.

    • @Ealsante
      @Ealsante Před 4 lety +42

      Onward and upward! Also sideways. All around, really.

    • @Loweko1170
      @Loweko1170 Před 4 lety +16

      @@Ealsante FOR SCIENCEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE *ting*

    • @Jfk2Mr
      @Jfk2Mr Před 4 lety +21

      I know ballistics, very interesting subject - things go up, things go down

    • @demonmonsterdave
      @demonmonsterdave Před 4 lety +7

      Is that a Terry Pratchett quote?

    • @rolfs2165
      @rolfs2165 Před 3 lety +3

      @@demonmonsterdave While it certainly reads like one, it's not.

  • @almartin4
    @almartin4 Před rokem +34

    Sorry to be so late...
    I was stationed in Germany with the US Army during the 1970’s. I took some vacation trips to England; especially to visit a hobby shop there in Dover and to see the famous Waterloo diorama. On one of the castle caissons there were some artillery pieces from the time of Queen Elizabeth I (1500’s?). To this day I can recall the inscription on the barrels:
    Keepe mye bore bryte and kleene
    And I’ll fyre yore ball to the Calais greene
    Approximate spelling there!
    Regards

  • @jeffreytilton4253
    @jeffreytilton4253 Před 4 lety +75

    Saw that breastplate around 1970 it was in the Tower of London. With typical English understatement the label said “breastplate damaged by cannon fire”

  • @grifter3680
    @grifter3680 Před 4 lety +304

    A brief summary of weapons
    Ancient Man: Throw rock
    Man before discovering gunpowder: Throw sticks and shoot arrows at enemy
    Man after discovering gunpowder: Throw rock but FASTER

    • @nicholasavasthi9879
      @nicholasavasthi9879 Před 4 lety +76

      Man after discovering rocketry: Make rock throw itself.

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před 4 lety +30

      Germany 1945. Sir we are running out of rocks

    • @ARandomTroll
      @ARandomTroll Před 4 lety +39

      man after 1952: throw sun at enemy

    • @aitchisondaniel
      @aitchisondaniel Před 4 lety +6

      Getting the gunpowder to do all the hard work.

    • @ArchaeopteryxStudios
      @ArchaeopteryxStudios Před 4 lety +27

      Now we throw Arrows, but faster. Its called APDSFS Ammunition. Standard for modern Tanks

  • @ykonoclast2851
    @ykonoclast2851 Před 4 lety +292

    I found out recently about this channel. Thought it was absolutely marvelous and decided to binge it, after all "5 minutes guides" are not long right? Right?
    WHAT? About a hundred drydock videos each about an hour long? 30 minutes long "5 minutes guides" about incredibly specific (and damn interesting...) naval history subjects?
    Well, "recently" means "several weeks ago" and I am still binging!

    • @vonskyme9133
      @vonskyme9133 Před 4 lety +19

      He ended up with a couple of 3 hour videos the other month... poor Drach.

    • @darrellsmith4204
      @darrellsmith4204 Před 4 lety +30

      It's like finding a bottomless toy chest..

    • @bluemarlin8138
      @bluemarlin8138 Před 4 lety +11

      Plenty of quarantine entertainment!

    • @davidturner7577
      @davidturner7577 Před 4 lety +8

      @@darrellsmith4204 Until you reach the bottom...kind of wish I could do a brain wipe about now so I could do a fresh watch.

    • @jamesb4789
      @jamesb4789 Před 4 lety +7

      Drach is perfect for the current house arrest situation here.

  • @Kowalski089
    @Kowalski089 Před rokem +5

    “Guns of the Age of Steel”
    That is a hardcore phrase.

  • @matthewmcneany
    @matthewmcneany Před 4 lety +357

    "Vaguely legitimate but mostly piratical" : A history of the British and Dutch Navies.

    • @DreadX10
      @DreadX10 Před 4 lety +34

      Yep, a piece of parchment with an autograph makes it buccaneering and that, somehow, makes it totally different from pirateering.

    • @neilwilson5785
      @neilwilson5785 Před 4 lety +27

      I take offense at that, sir, I am a privateer! I have my documents here somewhere, wait a minute. Oh, here they are. See, not a pirate at all.

    • @nomadicjam4792
      @nomadicjam4792 Před 4 lety +6

      @@steyn1775 Laughs in Pilfered Doubloons!

    • @tlw4237
      @tlw4237 Před 4 lety +7

      @@DreadX10The big - only - difference between pirate and privateer was that the English monarch and state were investors in privateering ships and crew and expected to make a nice profit from their activities. Much of the capital that funded 16th century English mercantilism, which eventually led to the Industrial Revolution, probably came from privateered Spanish gold transports.
      European armies were often raised in a similar way to privateers, mercenaries raised as entire companies and regiments by a kind of military entrepreneur who then sold their service. Often to the highest bidder, with some mercenary companies changing sides quite regularly.
      They were different times...

    • @kinsmart7294
      @kinsmart7294 Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@tlw4237The amount of gold stolen by the brits is largely overstated by anglo historians to cope for the spanish golden century, at most it amounted to 5% of the total gold coming from the new world.
      Just like the "Uboat threat" in WW2 barely made an scratch in cargo coming to and from the british isles.

  • @Big_E_Soul_Fragment
    @Big_E_Soul_Fragment Před 4 lety +446

    Gun: *is inaccurate*
    Some engineer: If that don't work, use more gun.

    • @shaun1293
      @shaun1293 Před 4 lety +39

      I wonder if his name was Jebediah Kerman...

    • @victorstr9396
      @victorstr9396 Před 4 lety +22

      Yep, that's why they built three-decker gun ships with over a hundred guns on them.

    • @frostedcat
      @frostedcat Před 4 lety +35

      the history of dakka dakka is truly fascinating

    • @MarktheRude
      @MarktheRude Před 4 lety +21

      "haha WAAAAAAAAAAGH goes the engineer"

    • @jajanka10
      @jajanka10 Před 4 lety +10

      @@frostedcat I have 'If Emperor of Man had text-to-speech device' flashbacks.

  • @willbxtn
    @willbxtn Před 4 lety +226

    Me: I've finally got my working from home self-discipline down!
    Drach: Here's some naval guns.
    Me: :O

    • @angelolorilla2050
      @angelolorilla2050 Před 4 lety +8

      "Navel Guns"
      Me: sounds kinda kinky...

    • @willbxtn
      @willbxtn Před 4 lety +9

      @@angelolorilla2050 Whatever floats your boat!
      (Sneaky edits float mine)

    • @jasonreed1631
      @jasonreed1631 Před 4 lety +11

      Drach: Roll Willpower for self control.
      Eveyone: *Rolls a 1*
      Drach: Looks like you Critically Failed.

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před 4 lety +5

      most days it's just easier to start with Plan B

  • @jameslawrie3807
    @jameslawrie3807 Před 4 lety +129

    Adding a few things:
    - Viewers will note Drach refers to the various cannonry as 'bronze' whereas you'll often hear cannonry referred to as 'brass'. They are in fact bronze, the term brass was just a common term for the alloy at the time.
    - A weapon mentioned early on in the video is the ribauld, and is mentioned alongside the ribauldquin. The ribauld was a light gun and the ribauldquin was a battery of ribaulds on a single carriage, often termed an 'organ gun'.
    - Finally, terminology. Our modern way of thinking is strongly at variance with pre-industrial thinking. Everything changes with time and place and these classifications are very slippery so be careful if you read sources, see these terms and immediately assume it refers to these particular weapons. Period writers were often not intimately familiar with classifications and just used any old name for a weapon, something they did for nearly everything from ships, to fortifications, armour, hand and missile weapons and so on. It can be intensely frustrating :)

  • @shannonrhoads7099
    @shannonrhoads7099 Před 4 lety +55

    Also, when you consider the size of these guns and the two-wheel mounts, you can imagine the chaos caused by a slipped friction block in high seas. In other words, a 'loose cannon'...

  • @TheWampam
    @TheWampam Před 4 lety +49

    Fun fact: Emperor Maximilian ordered that the first three shots had to be done by the gunmaker. He also created guns himself. And insisted on testing them.
    And I think that the reason for the amount of different guns was that there is a mix of original siege-weapons (everything with cannon in its name) and field guns, as well as the habit of using outdated guns.

    • @ulrikschackmeyer848
      @ulrikschackmeyer848 Před 4 lety +11

      Yes, The testning of a new gun was to be performed by the producer. Furthermore, to avoid producere taking their chance with mere statistics, the common practice, as I've heard it, meant that the 3 test shots were performed with DOUBLE POWDER CHARGE! Just to be sure. No need for later malpractice suits😏

    • @coltonregal1797
      @coltonregal1797 Před 4 lety +19

      @@ulrikschackmeyer848 Using a super hot load to test a gun barrel is called proofing, and it's still done today with modern firearms.

  • @hallamhal
    @hallamhal Před 2 lety +9

    I believe the painting at 2:40 is of James II of Scotland, whose cannon exploded at the siege of Roxburgh shattering his thigh and killing him pretty much instantly

  • @hosmerhomeboy
    @hosmerhomeboy Před 4 lety +245

    haven't watched yet, but i hope the title "things that make you go boom" is a deliberate dig at how often they exploded during action. Thus making you, and not your enemy, go boom.
    spoiler warning!!!!!
    totally not dissapointed

    • @powdermonkey7697
      @powdermonkey7697 Před 4 lety +2

      boom boom

    • @stanklepoot
      @stanklepoot Před 4 lety +3

      My first thought was a song reference. Things That Make You Go Hmmm....by C+C Music Factory.

    • @Zaluskowsky
      @Zaluskowsky Před 4 lety

      MARK AS SPOILER PLEASE
      READING THIS WHILE AD IS RUNNING

    • @hosmerhomeboy
      @hosmerhomeboy Před 4 lety +3

      @@Zaluskowsky okay. will do, although i didn't think suspense was an important part of drachinifels videos. to each their own i suppose.

    • @gangfire5932
      @gangfire5932 Před 4 lety +1

      NAILED it.

  • @methanbreather
    @methanbreather Před 4 lety +45

    luckily this was only a 5minute guide, or I would have been overwhelmed by all the information.

  • @christiancobb5309
    @christiancobb5309 Před 4 lety +56

    Yeah, so first read of the title and my thought is “Yes, that time period, I suppose my chances of going boom when I use those are indeed quite high.”

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 4 lety +5

      Not _that_ high, just higher than any other conceivable profession... farming, for example. Mining is the only thing that comes to mind as having the _possibility._

    • @daredaemon8878
      @daredaemon8878 Před 4 lety +4

      @@absalomdraconis Chemistry is another classic.

  • @MM22966
    @MM22966 Před 4 lety +32

    Early iron cannon: when zip-guns were big enough to stick your hand down the barrel...I mean, that one stone-firing tube was secured to the carriage with ROPES! Yeesh. Thanks for doing this, Drach!

  • @jankopransky2551
    @jankopransky2551 Před 4 lety +25

    "New ways to disassamble their enemies" That's awsome way how to put it :))

  • @anatolib.suvarov6621
    @anatolib.suvarov6621 Před 4 lety +43

    Suggestion for ship classes to review:
    Soviet Great Patriotic War era riverine vessels.

  • @ondrejfrancik4013
    @ondrejfrancik4013 Před 4 lety +12

    I agree that 17th century artillery pieces naming is very funny topic. I spent quite a long time making a comparison of different types of land artillery pieces according to english, spanish and german nomenclature - and I didn't find even two sources, which would list same ranges of bore diameter for any class of artillery. In addition, knowing that some piece is for example 12pdr, does not mean much if you do not know in which country it was made, as one pound in this period can mean anything between 0.35 and 0.6 kg. At the end I came to conclusion, that "about 5 inches" is the most accurate value I will ever have for mentioned 12pdr, and I stopped trying to make the table more accurate. Many thanks for showing how the situation was at naval realm, as a person from Czech Republic my access to naval stuff is quite limited.

  • @John-ru5ud
    @John-ru5ud Před 4 lety +18

    In more (relatively speaking) modern times there was the explosion of the Peacemaker gun on the USS Princeton in 1844, killing among others the Secretary of the Navy.

    • @davidberriman5903
      @davidberriman5903 Před 4 lety +9

      John it was obviously a simple case of poor spelling. It should have been Piecemaker.

    • @jefferyindorf699
      @jefferyindorf699 Před 4 lety +1

      Not a good career move for the designer of that gun. 😒

    • @davidberriman5903
      @davidberriman5903 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jefferyindorf699 if he was present to witness the test firing it would certainly have ended his career. Those sorts of mistakes you don't get to make twice.

  • @rayhilchey6706
    @rayhilchey6706 Před 4 lety +11

    WOW thank you for the great research and the museum class illustrations. To have all this available online!! What a wonderful time to be alive in this universe 45 years ago I was winnowing the Edmonton Centennial and University Libraries catalogs to sift out information.

  • @73honda350
    @73honda350 Před 4 lety +11

    Fascinating account of early naval guns. It's always interesting as early technology and its use evolves over time, and in this case also led changes in ship design, which continues to this day.

  • @stevenwatson7668
    @stevenwatson7668 Před 4 lety +5

    How brutal it must've been, waves and all trying to get a accurate shot and timing, can you imagine the stressful nature of the job back then? Amazing.

  • @Breca
    @Breca Před 4 lety +25

    Hello Drach…...Just sat down with coffee and found this : ) Besafe 2020 everyone !

  • @CB-fn3me
    @CB-fn3me Před 4 lety +8

    My dear friend, your irony is wonderful! Facts and irony in perfect harmony!!! Live long and prosper!🖖

  • @OutboundFlight87
    @OutboundFlight87 Před 4 lety +13

    Putting a humorous spin on an oft-forgotten part of history
    Can't wait to see the rest of this series

  • @turbowolf302
    @turbowolf302 Před 4 lety +62

    ...When early cannon fired stone shot
    "You haven't got the stones."

    • @Echowhiskeyone
      @Echowhiskeyone Před 4 lety +10

      Followed by later cannons.
      "You haven't got the balls."

    • @aitchisondaniel
      @aitchisondaniel Před 4 lety

      Barrel rips open like a banana at groin height.
      "Not now."

    • @graham2631
      @graham2631 Před 4 lety +2

      Followed by 'you haven't got the parts'

    • @turbowolf302
      @turbowolf302 Před 4 lety +1

      @@aitchisondaniel Don't worry, I hear that happens to lots of guys.

    • @Otokichi786
      @Otokichi786 Před 4 lety +1

      No stones? Let them Eat Cheese! (That stuff is too hard for us to eat, anyway.) Frommage attack!

  • @beanlord4347
    @beanlord4347 Před 4 lety +39

    The Mark Felton of the sea

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před 4 lety +10

      Does that make Mark Felton the Drach of the land?

  • @Maddog3060
    @Maddog3060 Před 4 lety +11

    17:02 The stern of that ship looks like a man wearing a silly hat is angry at the boat following him.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 4 lety +3

      Says the ship, "I shall murder thee, and slowly."

  • @tcofield1967
    @tcofield1967 Před 4 lety +2

    That's what I love about your videos. You somehow make a subject that would put the average person to sleep and make it entertaining.

  • @AmsterdamKayakGuy
    @AmsterdamKayakGuy Před 4 lety +11

    Thank you Drach, hope you're doing well with everything going on!

  • @daver6699
    @daver6699 Před 4 lety +3

    Complete landlubber here, the nearest salt water to me is over 1000 km.'s away. Have you, or would you, consider doing a video about fire control system(s)? As a shooter of conventional firearms I find it amazing that a weapon of any kind could fire even close to accurately on an unpredictably moving platform.

  • @maxkennedy8075
    @maxkennedy8075 Před 4 lety +144

    19:53 Meh, still not as many gun types as French pre dreadnoughts

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před 4 lety +27

      Gun maker: which type of guns do you want.
      French: All of them.

    • @WojciechP915
      @WojciechP915 Před 4 lety +12

      @@bigblue6917 *all of zhem

    • @lesliemarsh6729
      @lesliemarsh6729 Před 4 lety +3

      Do some research then..... .

    • @nebufabu
      @nebufabu Před 4 lety +22

      But they're also more accurate than guns of the Kamchatka... (IIRC, Ottomans actually scored a hit on a British cruiser with a stone ball from a medieval cannon during the whole Dardanelles/Galliopoli campaign in WWI. It didn't do much damage, but... It hit.)

    • @hanselsihotang
      @hanselsihotang Před 4 lety +18

      @@nebufabu the thought of Ottomans were still mantaining a set of ancient artillery batteries up until WWI, in service condition nonetheless, in kinda surprising ,but also interesting.
      And they manage to hit modern warship using that damn thing....
      Do u have any source link for this?

  • @davidbrennan660
    @davidbrennan660 Před 4 lety +10

    Another light in the darkness of these strange times we are currently in.... thanks Drach.

  • @SuperMauserMan
    @SuperMauserMan Před 4 lety +26

    Artillery - The last argument of kings.

  • @Ratdaddy752
    @Ratdaddy752 Před 11 měsíci

    This channel really changed my life. I’ve never been so interested in a single subject

  • @davidbrennan660
    @davidbrennan660 Před 4 lety +10

    Guns,Guns,Guns!
    Looking forward to this future mini series Drach, loved the Armour and Boiler Videos too, you know how to make an old Engineer happy with how stuff works and why it was made to work like that.
    Glory to Croydon!

  • @sparklemanuk4495
    @sparklemanuk4495 Před 4 lety +6

    a great way to spend time in lockdown. GOOD SHOW!

  • @DeadBaron
    @DeadBaron Před 4 lety +7

    2:33 god bless you and your dry British humor

  • @sharlin648
    @sharlin648 Před 4 lety +7

    I recall reading in the very good book "Confident Hope of a Miracle" was that Iron guns were cheaper and were less rust prone compared to Bronze guns, but as you said Drak, they exploded when they went wrong. A Bronze gun when they failed would bulge and would obviiously be broken, rather than spreading itself across a gun deck and very high speed which Iron cannons did when they went wrong. But Iron cannons were generally better, and newer forging techniques made them way more reliable.

    • @aebirkbeck2693
      @aebirkbeck2693 Před 4 lety +2

      the big break through with iron guns was casting them solid and then boring them rather than casting them with the bore in them as this caused a differential in the rate in cooling down causing potential fractures, this gave more strength to the gun during casting and boring reduced windage thus greatly improving accuracy.

    • @samiamrg7
      @samiamrg7 Před 4 lety +3

      I thought Bronze was pretty resistant to corrosion such as oxidation. Certainly more resistant than iron.
      Though I guess these guns could be so thick that a little rust wouldn’t do much damage right away, but would absolutely contribute to wear on the thickness over time.

    • @sharlin648
      @sharlin648 Před 4 lety +2

      @@aebirkbeck2693 Aye and they took to forging/casting Iron guns upright, making sure that the purest metals would be in the base where the boom took place. Allowing it to take the shock of said boom.

    • @sharlin648
      @sharlin648 Před 4 lety

      @@samiamrg7 Ya probably right :) I do recommend reading the book Confident Hope of a Miracle, its about the Armada and all the stuff going on beforehand and after. Its not a Britwank book either that heaps praise on the British either, its a very balanced book and isn't a huge wall of TLDR text as its damn well paced and written :)

    • @ab299019
      @ab299019 Před 3 lety

      According to 16th century literature by professionnals, for most of the century bronze was favoured - lighter (very important, likely deciding factor), more resistant as @samiamrg7 says. Besides improvement in the iron guns, the bronze-gun price increase - and the overall increase in the number of guns per ship - was certainly a factor that contributed to their end.

  • @arniejohanson8153
    @arniejohanson8153 Před 4 lety +1

    The variety of cannon at 20 minutes is mind blowing!

  • @thecrazyfarmboy
    @thecrazyfarmboy Před 4 lety +7

    I can't wait to watch this after work! So glad that I found your channel, A+ content in my opinion

  • @seaape1070
    @seaape1070 Před 4 lety +5

    I'm going to really enjoy this series. Thank you again Drach!

  • @nicktombs1876
    @nicktombs1876 Před 4 lety +8

    That was a very well thought out, well researched and well presented film.

  • @HansLasser
    @HansLasser Před 4 lety +12

    15:18 Vaguely legitimate activities... I like your comment style so much. 😎

  • @rpchan
    @rpchan Před 4 lety +4

    I am happy this video has been made. I was vaguely aware of this information, but always have a hard time finding the info when I want to reference it.

  • @bacarnal
    @bacarnal Před 4 lety

    Great video as usual, Drach!!! What better thing to do in these dire times than review the even more dire times of the past. Tripping through the names and explanations of the Naval pieces was particularly entertaining. I can't wait for the follow up vids (since we all seem to have plenty of spare time right now). Cheers and stay safe and healthy!!!

  • @juggy666
    @juggy666 Před 4 lety

    Thank you so much for the effort you put into this channel. It is quite something, your treading the line between huge levels of detail and wry humour is a marvel. Thank you. Jonathan

  • @taiyoctopus2958
    @taiyoctopus2958 Před 4 lety +3

    2:55 imagine you travel on land and maybe sea... hundreds of miles maybe taking days or weeks to arrive to your destination... finally there both armies take days to assemble and finally they line up on the battlefield and then your king dies when the cannon he stood next to explodes catastrophically.
    That's gotta do a number on troop morale

  • @cpt.batteryacid8682
    @cpt.batteryacid8682 Před 4 lety +6

    Ah yes a magnificent video on those long things that go bang. Yesssssssss

  • @derfelcadarn85
    @derfelcadarn85 Před 3 lety

    Just found this channel mate thankyou and keep it coming
    It's good to know there are ppl out there who are still interested in this history
    And thankyou for all the viewers and the comments too

  • @slartybartfarst55
    @slartybartfarst55 Před 4 lety +3

    I am completely excited for part 2 as it covers the age of sail I most love. I grew up reading about Nelson, read all of the Hornblower books again & again, & now am on my 2.5 read-through of the Patrick O'Brien series. I know this takes a massive lot of work to put together, but stuck at Home with no work for the foreseeable future, things to look forward to keep me going

  • @simonamos5426
    @simonamos5426 Před 4 lety +11

    i was just thinking "i need a new Drachinifel Video" and low & behold it appears.

  • @GrasshopperKelly
    @GrasshopperKelly Před 3 lety +2

    13:00 Portuguese in Shogun 2: "Oh no! Bune sir! Thousands of 'em!

  • @onelyone6976
    @onelyone6976 Před 4 lety +3

    Yes! More videos from the age of sail would be really appreciated. I think the age of sail is a naval timeframe many don’t know so much about

  • @tinafoster8665
    @tinafoster8665 Před 4 lety +5

    CZcams person : u can't make a show about naval stuff interesting, let alone funny."
    Drach : hold my ale a pop what, there's a good chap
    It's old but couldn't resist xx

  • @richardkarlgood
    @richardkarlgood Před 4 lety +3

    This is going to fill a void in my understanding of the evolution of boomsticks that I've yearned for so long, Thanks Drach!

  • @mysss29
    @mysss29 Před 4 lety +2

    So **that's** why we call them cannon!
    Having encountered these terms before and been bewildered, I'm actually amazed that you explained them in a way that makes having so many names make sense.

  • @caracal2455
    @caracal2455 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you so much for this video! :) I was looking for such a video for a long time.

  • @viesturssilins858
    @viesturssilins858 Před 4 lety

    This is an absolutely wonderful series, thank you!

  • @chocksaway100
    @chocksaway100 Před 3 lety

    Great video ..thanks for all your work in the making.

  • @kalif404
    @kalif404 Před 2 lety

    I Love how you take the time to learn the proper pronunciation of the various languages of the names of ships. Excellent and very classy.

  • @nateweter4012
    @nateweter4012 Před 4 lety +1

    Ok, so we need to first acknowledge that this video is a world class presentation. Nothing comes close to this, (that I’ve found), on the subject. Excellent material. Well done.

  • @coldwarmotors
    @coldwarmotors Před 4 lety

    Another great video! Enjoyed as usual; looking forward to more on this very interesting (and huge) topic...Cheers!

  • @kaymish6178
    @kaymish6178 Před 4 lety +4

    omg i am so excited for the rest of the series

  • @richardsleep2045
    @richardsleep2045 Před 4 lety +1

    Entertaining and scholarly, nice touch, thanks.

  • @JacatackLP
    @JacatackLP Před 4 lety

    Excellent video! Just discovered your channel and I’m on a binge!

  • @dropdead234
    @dropdead234 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks, Drac! Now I can't get that C&C song out of my head!

  • @sylvainprigent6234
    @sylvainprigent6234 Před 4 lety +1

    Great entertainment to look at your videos in theese troubled times

  • @DannyHanny_
    @DannyHanny_ Před 4 lety

    Excellent video, and I'm looking forward to the rest of the series.

  • @bartekszczerbal2670
    @bartekszczerbal2670 Před 4 lety

    Great work as always! With your videos quarantine is much more bearable.

  • @donaldrobertson117
    @donaldrobertson117 Před 4 lety

    Yay, plus a promise of more quality episodes to follow. Cheered up.

  • @daveshrum1749
    @daveshrum1749 Před 4 lety +1

    I love your channel I learn something new all the time. I also love the way you deliver this knowledge," actively distribute themselves and their crews across the battlefield ". Ie they explode🙃🤪

  • @alejandroarredondo5859

    Do more videos like this! I've already watched it several times. It's great fun and very informative.

  • @powellmountainmike8853

    Excellent video ! I look forward to the next 3 sections.

  • @davidmcmanamy1386
    @davidmcmanamy1386 Před 4 lety +2

    Well done my friend, You made this old hippie's day and he is looking forwards to the next 3

  • @CD-ek3iq
    @CD-ek3iq Před 4 lety

    Quarantining with Drach! Thanks for the vid!

  • @string-bag
    @string-bag Před 4 lety

    Superb video Drach.

  • @abyssminiaturestudios6103

    Making the Santa Caterina 140 gun Carrack from 1540, this is most helpful, a subject I've had hard time trying to find information on.

  • @viktork706
    @viktork706 Před 4 lety +1

    Great vid Drac

  • @gabrielwottrichdobrachinsk6333

    0:22
    " Wtf Michael, you broke the freakin gun again"

  • @aldenconsolver3428
    @aldenconsolver3428 Před 3 lety +1

    Worth watching twice. I'm pretty good with steel and breach loading but there is a whole lot here I didn't pick up on before. I had even off-hand thought that iron would just be better than bronze in all ways (lighter stronger cheaper more available) when iron at this time was only cheaper. It was harder to work, harder to make an adequate bore for, and harder to make safe.

  • @martinroth1263
    @martinroth1263 Před 3 lety

    Now I've been watching this video for like 6 times... I doesn't grow boring (it gets more and more interesting) and I still can smirk about the style. Simply charming.

  • @Gabryal77
    @Gabryal77 Před 4 lety

    This is amazingly well done

  • @DarkVeghetta
    @DarkVeghetta Před 3 lety

    Saw the intro, listened to your voice for ~15 seconds, and subscribed.
    I can spot quality content a mile away, provided I can hear its voice.

  • @rollwax2646
    @rollwax2646 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks it's very interisting ! Impatient to see more...😉

  • @battlements7649
    @battlements7649 Před 4 lety

    Loving this one- thank you man!

  • @tadasdovii8262
    @tadasdovii8262 Před 4 lety +1

    Sir Drachinifel - Could You make video about sickness and pandemia issues, caunter measures of them and rules for sick on ships?

  • @ab299019
    @ab299019 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent video, and thanks for the nuance on the Armada! Some more additional points: 1) Spanish galleons were actually limited to about 10 in the armada and were quite flush-decked (~2m forecastle (and one deck only, not the 2 or 3 of carracks), ~2m aft castle, plus ~2m for poop deck - a set-up that would endure until approx the late 17ths century. The "invention" of flush decked ships (in comparison to carracks) seems to have been a European invention, featuring first Spanish attempts in the 1550s (Bazan's galleons and galleasses), Baker's galleons and Spanish ordenanza-built galleons as well as those built in 1582 and 1589. And, of course, the Dutch ships. The Portuguese galleons gained in 1580 after the unification were "galleonised" by the Spanish admiral at the time, e.g. their superstructures reduced. Cross-country learning was probably crucial for those developments 2) In the video, @drachinifel, you mention the Reggazzona, the San Martin and Trinidad in a breath, but all were actually very different ships. San Martin was a Portuguese warship, very resistent, and galleonised the Spanish way in 1580. The Regazona was a giant merchant ship built in Venice. The Trinidad Valencera was a huge grain merchant, whose properties were unsuited for heavy artillery (the hull was designed to withstand the outward pressure of grain, but not inward-pressure of a gun-recoil). The actual warships in the Armada were between 20 (Portuguese galleons, galleasses, Castillian galleons built in 1582, Florencia and one French galleon) and 46 (includes some armed merchantmen as warships), depending on the author. The ships closest to galleons were the Portuguese, Florencia, French and Castilian galleons (which all fared excellently). 3) The question of gun loading and carriage performance remains highly debated, but some points seem likely: loading after pulling a fixed gun inward (e.g. no recoil use for inward hauling) was the preferred method of professionals, both Spanish and English. Indeed, some Spanish ship designers attempted to design recoil-using , for two-wheel carriages (Bazan in 1550s, "the other invention being that two guns be used at the bow and paired such that when one gun fires, it hauls the other out, while itself going in" - implying that there were those two positions for gun use in battle, one for loading, one for firing. Palacio in 1587, who proposes ropes that are shorter on one side of the gun carriage, "so that when it goes back [with recoil], it is held back such as to rotate pointing parallel to the ship (e.g. forward)" and then can be loaded). The two-vs four wheel performance remains to be proven, and over the years several arguments have been made. The heaviest guns were placed as bow- (attack ability) and stern (defend-ability) chasers, and if possible one gun in the centre, and other guns in/around the fore-castle so as to point forward; line-abreast was the standard formation, and according to Rodger 1996, the goal of naval designers in the 16ths cent was to emulate the galley, i.e. the ability to place heavy guns pointing forward. The measure for sailing ships performance was their ability to defeat galleys (which could point 5 guns in the same direction, with relatively high precision - taking into account that broadsides on sailing ships would feature 8 to 16 guns on two-gun deck ships... which not all faced in exactly the same direction), and the 1596 English victory in Lisbon against galleys was as much, if not more celebrated, than the 1588 outcome. 4) The "massive" use of hull-smashing ordinance, with the goal of sinking a ship was certainly not an English invention, nor a standard tactic (as often credited to Drake). It would have been quite illogical for a privateer to invent a tactic based on sinking a ship, as your goal as a privateer is generally to board and capture the cargo. If I remember correctly, no ship was actually sunk by the English in 1588 due to gunfire. That boarding tactics remained prevalent is also shown by the Revenge's own demise: its crew resisted heroically to Spanish assaults, which was possible due to its fore and aftcastles, where the crew had taken refuge to repel assaults.

  • @comradeklar5749
    @comradeklar5749 Před 4 lety

    This is why I watch Drachinifel. Details, details, details. My inner history herd is thoroughly satisfied right now lol

  • @lesliemarsh6729
    @lesliemarsh6729 Před 4 lety

    Very good program 👍 interesting and informative I look forward to the next installment :-)

  • @TheDancingHyena
    @TheDancingHyena Před 4 lety

    These are the best kinds of Drachinifel videos.

  • @matchrocket1702
    @matchrocket1702 Před 4 lety

    Looking forward to more from this excellent series.

  • @tallonhunter3663
    @tallonhunter3663 Před rokem +1

    "Many a king lost their lives when their favorite guns decided to fire themselves instead of a projectile"
    Anyone else seeing an animated king lighting the fuse, the cannon exploding, the ball and wadding hanging in mid air for a three count before dropping and the besinged, besooted, and bewildered sovereign turns to the camera and blinking as their beard smolders.