Rare Inscribed 18th Century French 1lb Cannon Model 1786 French

Dated 1795
40 Inches Overall, 9 ¾ in. across trunnions
 
   

Rare Inscribed 18th Century French 1lb Cannon Model 1786
 
(Dated 1795, Lecourant Foundry, Rennes)

Dated 1795
40 Inches Overall, 9 ¾ in. across trunnions
 
   

This rare, signed French bronze naval cannon was made in the first years of the Republic, predating Napoleon's rule by nearly a decade. Few bronze cannons from this period survive and it is even more unusual to find one dated and with the original foundry mark and its original stepped naval carriage.

The cannon is a 1lb., two-inch bore French model 1786 Pierrier, numbered for the year the design was formalized and adopted as a standard. Historians believe that this cannon was the first French standardized model swivel gun. Pierrier were relatively short guns firing medium weight solid shot, designed for close range battering. Pierriers are similar to later carronades. The 1786 Pierrier were so successful they remained in use by the French Navy until 1854.

The top of the muzzle is inscribed with large ornate initials "AN" for Armée Nationale. The cannon is also inscribed that it was made by the Lecourant Foundry in the City of Rennes in the sixth month of the third year/anniversary of the founding of the French Republic (Lecourant a. Rennes en Ventôse, 3me année Républicaine). Ventôse was the sixth month in the French Republican Calendar- it started between 19 February and 21 February and ended between 20 March and 21 March and the third year of the French Republic was 1795.

Only a handful of cannons from the Lecourant Foundry are known to exist. Etienne Lecourant was a bell and cannon founder known to have worked between 1775 and 1832. Historical documents survive that show the Lecourant Foundry of Rennes was commissioned to make military cannon in the late 1790's. As the capital of Brittany, Rennes was an important center of government ... Read More


Provenance: Springfield Arsenal Artillery Collection