English cannon

Remains of a battery of English cannon from Youghal

The first usage of cannon in Great Britain was possibly in 1327, when they were used in battle by the English against the Scots.[1] Under the Tudors, the first forts featuring cannon batteries were built, while cannon were first used by the Tudor navy. Cannon were later used during the English Civil War for both siegework and extensively on the battlefield.

Cannon were first used abroad by the English during the Hundred Years War, when primitive artillery was used at the Battle of Crécy. With the Age of Discovery and the establishment of the Thirteen Colonies, cannon saw use in British armies in North America, first against the rival colony of New France, and later during the American Revolutionary War. From the 18th century to the present day, the Royal Regiment of Artillery has formed the artillery of the British Army. The Royal Navy developed the carronade in the 18th century, although they disappeared from use in the 1850s. As with other western cannon of the period, cannon used by the British Army and the Royal Navy became longer ranged and more destructive in the 19th and 20th centuries.

  1. ^ The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology. Oxford University Press. 2010. p. 229. ISBN 9780195334036.

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