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- The artillery shell was in use by the 15th century, at first as a simple container for metal or stone shot, which was dispersed by the bursting of the container after leaving the gun. Explosive shells came into use in the 16th century or perhaps even earlier. These were hollow cast-iron balls filled with gunpowder and called bombs.www.britannica.com/technology/shell-ammunition
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Taken from a 1592 manuscript, these drawings illustrate the three main classes of artillery used by Spain during the early colonial period in the New World. a—Culverin (Class 1). b—Cannon (Class 2). c—Pedrero (Class 3). d—Mortar …
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Early grenades were hollow cast-iron balls filled with gunpowder, and "shells" were similar devices designed to be shot from artillery in place of solid cannonballs ("shot"). Metonymically, the term "shell", from the casing, came …
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Nov 25, 2015 · Some of the first records of gunpowder artillery are found in the 14th century, and as far from China as they could practically get – in the hands of English armies. An English manuscript of 1327 shows an early depiction of …
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