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Musket an infantryman's light gun with a long barrel, typically smooth-bored and fired from the shoulder. A soldier armed with a musket was known as a musketeer and over centuries they improved more and more the ammunition is called a minie ball but it’s not a ball. As the time passed they brought out guns with multiple rounds of and more power and easier to use the musket died out.
Highwayman man, typically on horseback, who held up travellers at gunpoint in order to rob them. Ostler a man employed to look after the horses of people staying at an inn. Galleon a sailing ship in use (especially by Spain) from the 15th to the 18th centuries, originally as a warship, later for trade. Galleons were typically square-rigged and had three or more decks and masts.
Moor a member of a NW African Muslim people of mixed Berber and Arab descent. In the 8th century they conquered the Iberian peninsula, but were finally driven out of their last stronghold in Granada at the end of the 15th century. Casement a window or part of a window set ogn a vertical hinge so that it opens like a door.
Rapier a thin, light sharp-pointed sword used for thrusting.
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