Difference between revisions of "Matross"

From FIBIwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(add PAB comments)
Line 1: Line 1:
A '''Matross''' was the term for a private in a train of artillery (a gunner's mate). One of the soldiers who assisted the gunners in loading, firing, and also sponging the guns to stop them overheating. "They carried flintlocks and marched with store wagons, acting as guards" <ref> ''A Tug on the Thread''  by Diana Quick pub. 2009 </ref>
+
A '''Matross''' was the lowest rank in the [[Artillery]] and the term for a [[Private]] in a train of artillery (a gunner's mate). One of the soldiers who assisted the gunners in loading, firing, and also sponging the guns to stop them overheating. "They carried flintlocks and marched with store wagons, acting as guards" <ref> ''A Tug on the Thread''  by Diana Quick pub. 2009 </ref>
  
In India in the earlier years, approximately to 1800, only the term matross was used, while in later years, only the term gunner is used, with an intermediate period when both terms were used.
+
Matross was the only term used until about 1800 when the term [[Gunner]] also started to be used. The term matross discontinued in about 1820 and from then onwards only the term [[Gunner|gunner]] is used.
  
 
==Historical books online==
 
==Historical books online==
Line 15: Line 15:
 
}}
 
}}
  
 
+
[[Category:Glossary]]
  
 
[[Category:Military ranks]]
 
[[Category:Military ranks]]

Revision as of 20:18, 27 January 2014

A Matross was the lowest rank in the Artillery and the term for a Private in a train of artillery (a gunner's mate). One of the soldiers who assisted the gunners in loading, firing, and also sponging the guns to stop them overheating. "They carried flintlocks and marched with store wagons, acting as guards" [1]

Matross was the only term used until about 1800 when the term Gunner also started to be used. The term matross discontinued in about 1820 and from then onwards only the term gunner is used.

Historical books online

  • "Matross" pages 562-563 Hobson-Jobson: the Anglo-Indian Dictionary by Henry Yule, Arthur Coke Burnell, William Crooke "New Edition" 1903 Archive.org

References

  1. A Tug on the Thread by Diana Quick pub. 2009