Jezail

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Jezail (Sometimes Jezzail from the Pashto language) is an Afghan matchlock or flintlock musket fired from a forked rest.

Contents

[edit] Features

The jezail is a simple, cost-efficient and often hand-made musket common to Central Asian and some Middle Eastern Muslim lands of the time. The stocks, barrels, and other simple components were often hand made and sometimes beautifully decorated. The more complex parts were often taken from damaged foreign muskets, most notably the British Brown Bess. Jezails usually have what seem to be unusually long barrels and of a higher calibre than other frontier guns - as a result of their purely military use. Some jezails are rifled. The jezail was fired using a horn bipod, and it has been speculated that the highly curved stock was tucked under the arm and cradled tightly against the body, as opposed to being held to the shoulder like a standard musket or rifle. Typical jezails were effective at 500 yards.

[edit] The Jezail in the Anglo-Afghan Wars

During this period the jezail was the primary ranged weapon of Afghan warriors and was used with great effect against British troops. British Brown Bess smoothbore muskets were effective at only 150 yards and accurate at 50 yards. Because of their advantage in range, Afghan rebels typically used the jezail from the tops of cliffs along valleys and defiles during ambushes. This tactic repeatedly devastated the British during their doomed retreat from Kabul to Jalalabad.

In the First Anglo-Afghan War the British established a cantonment outside of Kabul with dirt walls approximately waist high. Surrounding the cantonment were several abandoned forts which, although out of range of British muskets, were close enough for jezail fire. When ghazi and other Afghan forces besieged Kabul and the cantonment, they occupied the forts and used them to snipe British forces from a safe range.

Despite the advantages over the Brown Bess, British forces were typically able to defeat jezail armed Afghans when they fought on relatively flat terrain.

[edit] The Jezail in British Literature

The jezail is most famous, at least in Western literature, as the weapon which wounded Dr. Watson - the fictional biographer of the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes - in the Battle of Maiwand during his military service in Afghanistan.

The jezail weapon was also mentioned in the George MacDonald Fraser adventure Flashman, whose protagonist describes the awful slaughter of British Army troops retreating from Kabul to Jalalabad by Afghan jezailchis.

It is used as a metaphor of a cheap and primitive weapon in Rudyard Kipling's poetry describing British casualties in colonial wars:

A scrimmage in a Border Station
A canter down some dark defile
Two thousand pounds of education
Drops to a ten-rupee jezail.

[edit] References

    • Tanner, Stephen, (2002) Afghanistan: A Military History From Alexander the Great to the Fall of the Taliban, Da Capo Press, ISBN 0-306-81233-9

[edit] External links

This firearms-related article is a stub. You can help by expanding it