Culverin


A culverin was a relatively simple ancestor of the musket, and later a medieval cannon, adapted for use by the French as the "couleuvrine" in the 15th century, and later adapted for naval use by the English in the late 16th century. The culverin was used to bombard targets from a distance. The weapon had a relatively long barrel and a light construction. The culverin fired solid round shot projectiles with a high muzzle velocity, producing a relatively long range and flat trajectory. Round shot refers to the classic solid spherical cannonball.

Hand culverins

The term culverin is derived from the Latin, colubrinus, or "of the nature of a snake". It was originally the name of a medieval ancestor of the musket, used in the 15th and 16th centuries.
The hand culverin consisted of a simple smoothbore tube, closed at one end except for a small hole designed to allow ignition of the gunpowder. The tube was held in place by a wooden piece which could be held under the arm. The tube was loaded with gunpowder and lead bullets. The culverin was fired by inserting a burning slow match into the hole.
These hand culverins soon evolved into heavier portable culverins, around in weight, which required a swivel for support and aiming. Such culverins were further equipped with back-loading sabots to facilitate reloading, and were often used on ships. Many were immobile due to their heavy weight.

Field culverins

There were three types of culverin in use, distinguished by their size: the "culverin extraordinary", the "ordinary", and the "least-sized".
NameBore diameterLengthWeightShot diameterShot weight
Culverin extraordinary32 calibers
Ordinary culverin25 calibers
Culverin of the least size29 calibers

There were also smaller versions, including the "bastard culverin", shot and the "demi-culverin" or "culverin-moyen", shot.
Overall, the culverin was a significant advance. Since it fired a ball of iron and relied on gunpowder for propulsion, the heavy ball meant a relatively stable flight and the gunpowder propulsion meant a fast and long-range. A replica culverin extraordinary has achieved a muzzle velocity of 408 m/s, and a range over using only minimal elevation. This velocity and mass imply that the cannonball had a kinetic energy of roughly when leaving the muzzle.
The culverin was later replaced by the field gun once technology had advanced to the point where cannonballs had become explosive.