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Minin and Pozharsky: Difference between revisions

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==Wheellock Musket==
==Wheellock Musket==
Several Russian soldier fires [[Wheellock Musket]]s during the final battle.
Many Russian soldier fires [[Wheellock Musket]]s during the final battle. It's completely historically incorrect. While this type of firearms was exist during the 1613, it was a very expensive gun, which uses only by a rich military personnel or aristocrats, and it absolutely couldn't be the main mass firearm of soldiers in the country, which was destroyed by a long civil war.
[[Image:Mayflower_gun.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Mayflower Wheellock Musket]]
[[Image:Mayflower_gun.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Mayflower Wheellock Musket]]
[[Image:Minin i Pozharskiy musket 4 1.jpg|thumb|none|501px|Russian soldier cleans his musket.]]
[[Image:Minin i Pozharskiy musket 4 1.jpg|thumb|none|501px|Russian soldier cleans his musket.]]

Revision as of 16:53, 23 December 2017


Minin and Pozharsky
(Minin i Pozharskiy)
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Original Russian Poster
Country Error creating thumbnail: File missing USSR
Directed by Vsevolod Pudovkin
Mikhail Doller
Release Date 1939
Language Russian
Studio Mosfilm
Main Cast
Character Actor
Kuzma Minin Aleksandr Khanov
Dmitry Pozharsky Boris Livanov
Roman Boris Chirkov
Hetman Jan Karol Chodkiewicz Anatoliy Goryunov
King Sigismund III of Poland Mikhail Astangov
Grigory Orlov Lev Sverdlin
Stepan Khoroshev Vladimir Moskvin
Prince Dmitry Troubetskoy Sergey Komarov
Ivan Zarutsky Yevgeniy Kaluzhsky
Pozharsky's wife Yelizaveta Kuzyurina



Minin and Pozharsky (Минин и Пожарский; 'Minin i Pozharskiy') is a 1939 Soviet B&W movie directed by Vsevolod Pudovkin and Mikhail Doller (The End of St. Petersburg). Story take place during the end of Time of Troubles and tells about war between Russian peoples under the leadership of merchant Kuzma Minin and prince Dmitry Pozharsky against Polish army and Swedish mercenaries. This is the first movie about Time of Troubles. The second is 1612.


The following weapons were used in the film Minin and Pozharsky:


Wheellock Pistol

Swedish mercenary Schmidt (Lev Fenin) fires Wheellock Pistol during the end of final battle.

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Brunswick wheellock pistol
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Schmidt (Lev Fenin) holds his pistol in the left hand.
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Schmidt (Lev Fenin) fires his pistol at the Russian soldier.
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Note the smoking barrel.

Wheellock Musket

Many Russian soldier fires Wheellock Muskets during the final battle. It's completely historically incorrect. While this type of firearms was exist during the 1613, it was a very expensive gun, which uses only by a rich military personnel or aristocrats, and it absolutely couldn't be the main mass firearm of soldiers in the country, which was destroyed by a long civil war.

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Mayflower Wheellock Musket
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Russian soldier cleans his musket.
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Perfect view of the buttstock.
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wheellock is seen.
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Russian soldiers aims his musket. Note, that he uses berdysh as bipode.
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Close view of the whellock.
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Russian soldiers aims.
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Soldiers fires.
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Russian soldier (Nikolay Aparin) puts the dog on the wheel.

Matchlock Musket

Matchlock Musket can be briefly seen in the hands of one Polish soldier. Another type of Matchlock Muskets was used by Russian man. Swedish mercenaries were armed with the matchlock as well.

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European Matchlock musket.
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Polish soldiers with the gun.
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The same soldier a few seconds later.
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Russian man aims his musket at Polish soldiers.
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Russian man fires his musket. Due the fact, that any part of the matchlock doesn't move, it's obviosly, that the flame and smoke are produced by pyrotechnical charge in the muzzle.
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Swedish mercenaries with the muskets at the background. Matches is seen

Charleville Musket

Polish soldier fires heavy anochronistic Charleville Musket to wounds Dmitry Pozharsky (Boris Livanov).

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Original Charleville Mle 1763 - .69 caliber
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Polish soldier aims. Note the similar muzzle shape.
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When Polish soldier fires fires, the flintlock doesn't move and the flame and smoke are produced by pyrotechnical charge in the muzzle.
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Another view of the same scene. Note the similar barrel band and ramrod position. Note also, that the second barrel band is broken (it's mark on the stock is seen).

Cannon

Polish soldiers and Russian militiamen uses cannons.

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Naval cannon - 18th century
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Polish commanders on the Moscow Cremlin near the cannons.
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Russian soldiers near cannon.