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bayonet |
Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia | 0.06 sec. |
bayonetShort sword attached to the muzzle of a firearm. The bayonet was placed inside the barrel of the muzzleloading muskets of the late 17th century. The sock or ring bayonet, invented in 1700, allowed a weapon to be fired without interruption, leading to the demise of the pike. Since the 1700s, bayonets have evolved into a variety of types. During World War I, the French used a long needle bayonet, the British a sword bayonet, while the Germans adopted a ‘pioneer’ bayonet with the rear edge formed into a saw. As armies have become more mechanized, bayonets have tended to decrease in length.
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| Highlights of the battalion service included companies of the 13th Canadian Battalion serving under command of the 52nd with individual Canadians and Australians fighting together at Mouquet Farm and the spectacular bayonet charge at Villers-Bretonneux. Mawhood's battle-hardened regulars of the 17th Regiment of Foot wasted no time in returning the volley, following it with a bayonet charge that scattered the weary American line. He highlights the initial contact on July 1st, Joshua Chamberlain's bayonet charge of the 2nd, and, of course, the debacle known as Pickett's Charge of the third and final day. |
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