Arsenal

View of the Entrance to the Arsenal, by Canaletto, 1732.
Cannons and mortars of Napoleon's Army exhibited along the wall of the Kremlin Arsenal.
Armory of Swiss Guard
The Kansas Army National Guard armory in Concordia, Kansas is a typical building used for the National Guard programs in the United States.

An arsenal is a place where arms and ammunition are made, maintained and repaired, stored, or issued, in any combination, whether privately or publicly owned. Arsenal and armoury (British English) or armory (American English; see spelling differences)[1][2] are mostly regarded as synonyms, although subtle differences in usage exist.

A sub-armory is a place of temporary storage or carrying of weapons and ammunition, such as any temporary post or patrol vehicle that is only operational in certain times of the day.[3]

Etymology

From Italian: arsenale, and French: arsenal, from Arabic: دار الصناعة, dār aṣ-ṣināʕa, meaning "manufacturing shop".[4][5][6][7][8][9]

Types

A lower-class arsenal, which can furnish the materiel and equipment of a small army, may contain a laboratory, gun and carriage factories, small-arms ammunition, small-arms, harness, saddlery tent and powder factories; in addition, it must possess great store-houses. In a second-class arsenal, the factories would be replaced by workshops. The situation of an arsenal should be governed by strategic considerations. If of the first class, it should be situated at the base of operations and supply, secure from attack, not too near a frontier, and placed so as to draw in readily the resources of the country. The importance of a large arsenal is such that its defences would be on the scale of those of a large fortress.

In the early twentyfirst century the term "floating armoury" described a ship storing weapons to be supplied to merchant vessels in international waters subject to piracy, so that the weapons do not enter territorial waters where they would be illegal.

Operational subdivision

The branches in a great arsenal are usually subdivided into storekeeping, construction and administration.

In the manufacturing branches are required skill, and efficient and economical work, both executive and administrative; in the storekeeping part, good arrangement, great care, thorough knowledge of all warlike stores, both in their active and passive state, and scrupulous exactness in the custody, issue and receipt of stores. Frederick Taylor introduced command and control techniques to arsenals, including the U.S.'s Watertown Arsenal (a principal center for artillery design and manufacture) and Frankford Arsenal (a principal center for small arms ammunition design and manufacture).

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Arsenals.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Armories.
Look up arsenal in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

References

  1. Soanes, Catherine and Stevenson, Angus (ed.) (2005). Oxford Dictionary of English, 2nd Ed., revised, Oxford University Press, Oxford, New York, p. 85. ISBN 978-0-19-861057-1.
  2. The English barrister and heraldist Arthur Charles Fox-Davies meant that the spelling without a u was never used for weapons but only used for armory in the meaning of the science of coats of arms, which is a part of heraldry, in his book The Art of Heraldry: An Encyclopædia of Armory (1904), p. 1
  3. Firearms, Idaho Department of Correction, 2010, p. 2, retrieved 2014-06-12
  4. "Definition of arsenal – Oxford Dictionaries (British & World English)". Oxford Dictionary of English.
  5. "Define Arsenal at Dictionary.com". Reference.com.
  6. "American Heritage Dictionary Entry: arsenal". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language.
  7. "Online Etymology Dictionary". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  8. "Definition of “arsenal” – Collins English Dictionary". Collins English Dictionary.
  9. "Arsenal – Definition and More from the Free Merriam-Webster Dictionary". Merriam-Webster.

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Arsenal". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

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