A wide variety of gunpowder artillery weapons were created in the medieval and early modern period.
List
| Name | Image | Notes | 
|---|---|---|
|  | A long, narrow 15thβ16th century cannon[1] | |
| .JPG.webp) | First recorded use in 1326, made of brass.[2] | |
|  | A long-range cannon, first mentioned in 1410[3] | |
| A type of cannon with a short barrel.[4] | ||
|  | A medium cannon, smaller than a culverin | |
| A 3-pounder cannon; alternatively, an adjective to describe a lighter variant of another cannon.[5] | ||
|  | A light cannon | |
| A small cannon used in the 16th and 17th centuries | ||
| A large naval cannon | ||
|  | A medium cannon firing a 5 to 8 lb shot[3] | |
|  | A cannon similar to a culverin[3] | |
|  | A long, narrow 17th century cannon[1] | 
Bibliography
- Artillery: An Illustrated History of Its Impact, Jeff Kinard.
- English Civil War Artillery 1642-51, Chris Henry, 2005, Osprey: Oxford.
- Science and Civilisation in China: Military technology: The gunpowder epic, Joseph Needham
References
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