Also known as gonne, handgonne
earliest form of firearm used in 13th century China, 14th century Europe
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Swiss soldier firing a hand cannon, with powder bag and ramrod at his feet, c. 15th century (produced in 1874)
The hand cannon (simplified Chinese: 火铳; traditional Chinese: 火銃; pinyin: huǒchòng or 手铳; 手銃; shǒuchòng), also known as the gonne or handgonne, is the first true firearm and the successor of the fire lance. It is the oldest type of small arms, as well as the most mechanically simple form of metal barrel firearms. Unlike matchlock firearms it requires direct manual external ignition through a touch hole without any form of firing mechanism. It may also be considered a forerunner of the handgun. The hand cannon was widely used in China from the 13th century onward and later throughout Eurasia in the 14th century. In 15th century Europe, the hand cannon evolved to become the matchlock arquebus, which became the first firearm to have a trigger.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).