- what is more
common are
mentions of the "swivel guns". In the Far East, a
jingal,
gingal or
gingall (/ˈdʒɪnɡɔːl/), from
Hindi janjal, was a type of large...
- Guns of
similar size or
application Anti-materiel
rifle Anti-tank
rifle Jingal Elephant gun Wall gun
Organ gun
Volley gun
Zamburak Java
arquebus ""Irish...
-
Qiang hand
cannon (Chinese)
Veuglaire cannon (French) Wall gun, janjal,
jingal,
gingal (European,
Middle Eastern, Chinese) ****ou
Chong cannon (Chinese)...
- War. He was
severely wounded when he was shot in the left
thigh with a
jingal bullet on 19
March 1853 in the
attack on Donabyu, and was
mentioned in despatches...
- forces. The
Siamese Army
continued utilising war
elephants armed with
jingals up
until the Franco-Siamese
conflict of 1893,
while the
Vietnamese used...
- observation; two
British soldiers were
wounded by
bullets from a
Chinese jingal. The
whole force was as**** by 7
August and a few days
later on 12 August...
-
rifles and the
remainder with
muskets and
Enfield rifles,
melee weapons and
jingals were
still common. The
artillery possessed a few
batteries of
foreign guns...
- Lauk Thein. (Phayre 1967: 69,
footnote 1): The "gun" here
probably was "a
jingal, a
metal tube
about three feet long,
mounted on a
wooden stand, and throwing...
-
protected by
magnificent forts with big
modern guns, or
behind mudwalls with
jingals,
conducted themselves always with
scarcely a
redeeming feature.
Their forces...
-
force with
rifles and
instead asked for
permission to make
breech loaded jingals a
weapon similar in cost.
General Nie
Shicheng took 30
battalions of the...