Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Veuglaire> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 48 of
48
with 100 triples per page.
- Veuglaire abstract "The Veuglaire (derived from the German Vogler and Vogelfänger, and the Flemish Vogheler, after a gun manufacturer named Vögler. English: Fowler) was a wrought iron cannon, and part of the artillery of France in the Middle Ages. There, guns were initially called acquéraux, sarres or spiroles.The Veuglaire was up to 2 meters (8 feet) long, and weighing from 150 kg to several tonnes, and compares to the Crapaudins or Crapaudaux, which were shorter (4 to 8 feet) and lighter than the Veuglaires. The Veuglaires were usually breech-loading, and therefore used a separate \"powder chamber\" (boîte à poudre) in which powder and ball were located upon loading, and the main body of the cannon was formed of a tube opened at both ends.Veuglaires, together with Crapaudins, were considered medium-sized weapons and tended to have smaller chambers than bombards. They belonged to a category of weapons developed from the late 14th century, which had smaller bore and flatter trajectory. The category includes the culverin, curtall, serpentines, falcon and arquebus.".
- Veuglaire thumbnail Canon.XIVe.siecle.png?width=300.
- Veuglaire wikiPageID "23486223".
- Veuglaire wikiPageLength "2695".
- Veuglaire wikiPageOutDegree "16".
- Veuglaire wikiPageRevisionID "701337987".
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Arquebus.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Artillery_of_France_in_the_Middle_Ages.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Bombard_(weapon).
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Breech-loading_weapon.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Cannon.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Category:Artillery_of_France.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_artillery.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Crapaudins.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Culverin.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Curtall.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Falcon.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Vögler.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink Wrought_iron.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink File:Canon.XIVe.siecle.png.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLink File:Veuglaire_powder_box_caliber_130_length_107_early_15th_century_La_Fere.jpg.
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLinkText "Veuglaire".
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLinkText "fowler".
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLinkText "fowlers".
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLinkText "iron fowler".
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLinkText "serpentines".
- Veuglaire wikiPageWikiLinkText "type of cannon".
- Veuglaire wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Artillery_of_France.
- Veuglaire wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Artillery_of_the_Middle_Ages.
- Veuglaire wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Early_firearms.
- Veuglaire wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Veuglaire subject Category:Artillery_of_France.
- Veuglaire subject Category:Medieval_artillery.
- Veuglaire hypernym Cannon.
- Veuglaire type Weapon.
- Veuglaire type Firearm.
- Veuglaire comment "The Veuglaire (derived from the German Vogler and Vogelfänger, and the Flemish Vogheler, after a gun manufacturer named Vögler. English: Fowler) was a wrought iron cannon, and part of the artillery of France in the Middle Ages. There, guns were initially called acquéraux, sarres or spiroles.The Veuglaire was up to 2 meters (8 feet) long, and weighing from 150 kg to several tonnes, and compares to the Crapaudins or Crapaudaux, which were shorter (4 to 8 feet) and lighter than the Veuglaires.".
- Veuglaire label "Veuglaire".
- Veuglaire sameAs Q3182378.
- Veuglaire sameAs Фоглер.
- Veuglaire sameAs Veuglaire.
- Veuglaire sameAs Veuglaire.
- Veuglaire sameAs Foglerz.
- Veuglaire sameAs m.06w472g.
- Veuglaire sameAs Q3182378.
- Veuglaire wasDerivedFrom Veuglaire?oldid=701337987.
- Veuglaire depiction Canon.XIVe.siecle.png.
- Veuglaire isPrimaryTopicOf Veuglaire.