great help

by the way, I got to talk to my professor today, and he pointed out a simple fact that made me feel so stupid
"picture of opium war? camera wasn't even invented back then" LOL
This is a French Mitrailleuse, a multi-barrel piece of the kind that was not successful in the Franco-Prussian War. A cartridge clip for it (37 rounds in a hexagonal loading?) lies next to the trail here, in an arsenal setting to judge from the shot pyramid.Peter H wrote:Gatling gun,date unknown
So it seems that maybe the gun in this photo wasn't a museum piece...Peter H wrote:Gingal seized in Manchuria 1931.Must be a museum piece.
Hello twraia, Your professor is very wrong about the cameras around 1860. Cameras were in use from around 1840-1845. And just consider the many photos from the American Civil War which occurred shortly after the Opium Wars. Granted, the photo system and cameras differed, the cameras being much larger and slower, but photos definitely did exist at that time. Regards, Harrytwraia wrote:Thank you Peter H
great help![]()
by the way, I got to talk to my professor today, and he pointed out a simple fact that made me feel so stupid
"picture of opium war? camera wasn't even invented back then" LOL