logo
300-year-old ‘Doune pistols' finally return to their hometown in Scotland

300-year-old ‘Doune pistols' finally return to their hometown in Scotland

Yahoo05-05-2025

A set of historic 300-year-old guns have finally returned to their Scottish hometown after years spent in a private collection. According to a recent announcement, 10 Doune flintlock pistols are now on permanent public display at the tiny city in eastern Scotland's Information and Heritage Center. Crafted by six different hammermen (gunsmiths) during the 1700's, the weapons also showcase well-preserved examples of makers' intricate artistry techniques such as finely engraved Celtic patterns and silver wire inlays.
Doune pistols are remarkable pieces of firearm history. The recognizable curvehandled flintlock weapons date back to 1646, when blacksmith Thomas Caddell began repurposing discarded horseshoe nails due to the scarcity of iron. Apart from their comparative reliability for the era, the pistols were soon also sought after for their decorative adornments. While expensive and often favored by wealthier English customers, Highland locals were often known to save their funds in order to also purchase the weapons.
Doune pistol decorative designs evolved as their reputation grew in the ensuing decades, while their popularity extended across mainland England and even over the Atlantic to the British colonies. Although never confirmed, it has long been suggested that a Doune pistol fired the 'shot heard around the world' at the American Revolution's outset in 1775.
Ironically, the British had already banned Highlanders from owning firearms for almost three decades by the time of the Battles of Lexington and Concord. The 1746 Act of Proscription was part of a wider attempt to break apart the Scottish clan system following the prior year's failed Jacobite rising. Punishment for violators included fines, imprisonment for late payments, and even as long as seven years at 'any of his Majesty's plantations beyond the seas.'
The Doune pistol's influence had already begun to wane by the time the Act of Proscription was repealed in 1782. By the end of the 18th century, customers began opting for cheaper imports as well as weaponry made in other regions across England. Today, only a few hundred examples of genuine Doune pistols are known to exist.'While having a practical function, the pistols really are fine works of art and would have taken countless hours of craftsmanship by candlelight to bring to fruition,' Kilmadock Development Trust chair Karen Ross said in a statement. 'We are thrilled that such a unique part of Doune's history is now on display in the village where they were made.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Raids across Canary Islands in major cocaine gang bust
Raids across Canary Islands in major cocaine gang bust

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Raids across Canary Islands in major cocaine gang bust

A major cocaine smuggling operation that used a network of speedboats to transport drugs from South America to the Canary Islands has been taken down, police have said. Almost four tonnes of cocaine trafficked from Brazil and Colombia were seized and 48 suspects, arrested in raids across Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria and Lanzarote. Spain's Policia Nacional said the gang used 11 so-called narco boats to smuggle the drugs across the Atlantic in a complex operation that involved using an abandoned wreck at sea as a refuelling platform. Police forces from Europe, the UK, South America and the US were involved in planning the raids, dubbed Operation Black Shadow. The UK's National Crime Agency (NCA) confirmed that a British national was among those arrested. Europol said the gang used speedboats "repeatedly, departing from strategic points in the Atlantic Ocean to a mother ship transporting the cocaine". Investigators revealed the gang used "a complex encrypted communications system to evade law enforcement, including the use of satellite terminals, hard-to-trace phones and a coded language". Police said the raids were months in the planning and saw 29 properties searched, 69 vehicles seized - including boats and jet skis - and cash and firearms recovered. Details of the raids shine a light on the complexity of the networks international drug smuggling gangs use to get narcotics into Europe, a major market for South American-based cartels. Spanish police said the operation had "dismantled one of the largest criminal organisations dedicated to cocaine trafficking". The force also said it had identified a local network in the Canary Islands responsible for distributing the cocaine once it had arrived from South America. Footage of the raids published by Spanish police showed armed and masked officers raiding several houses, arresting suspects and carrying out searches. It is not the first time police have intercepted a large amount of cocaine bound for the Canary Islands, a Spanish territory and popular tourist destination lying around 100km (62 miles) off the west African coast. Police announced in December that they had intercepted a Venezuelan fishing boat 1,000 miles out at sea. It was discovered the vessel - which was so dilapidated it sank while being towed to shore - was carrying 3.3 tonnes of cocaine. Commenting on the latest raid, an NCA spokesperson said: "Alongside our international partners, we are relentless in our efforts to tackle drug trafficking across borders, ensuring it's seized before it reaches the UK criminal supply chain." Royal Navy warship seizes £30m of drugs Brits could face death over Bali drugs plot British woman accused of drug offences tells BBC of Sri Lanka jail conditions

Three Iranians in UK court accused of assisting Tehran spy service
Three Iranians in UK court accused of assisting Tehran spy service

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Three Iranians in UK court accused of assisting Tehran spy service

LONDON (Reuters) -Three Iranian men appeared in court in London on Friday accused of assisting Iran's foreign intelligence service and plotting violence against journalists working for a British-based broadcaster critical of Tehran. The three men - Mostafa Sepahvand, 39, Farhad Javadi Manesh, 44, and Shapoor Qalehali Khani Noori, 55, - have been charged with offences under Britain's National Security Act, brought in to give the authorities new powers to target threats from foreign states. They are accused of "engaging in conduct likely to assist a foreign intelligence service" between August 2024 and February this year, and police have said that it related to Iran. Sepahvand is also charged with carrying out surveillance in preparation to commit serious violence against a person, while Manesh and Noori were charged with surveillance with the intention that serious violent acts would be committed by others. The men appeared by videolink on Friday for a brief hearing at London's Old Bailey court during which their lawyers said all intended to plead not guilty to the charges. Prosecutors told a hearing last month that the allegations involved the targeting of journalists based in Britain connected with Iran International, a broadcaster critical of the Iranian government. They were remanded in custody until a formal plea hearing on September 26 and they are due to go on trial in October next year. The suspects were arrested last month on the same day counter-terrorism police detained five other men, including four Iranians, as part of a separate operation. Those men were later released without charge.

Ex-Arsenal talent jailed for drug smuggling, who can beat Spain at World Cup?
Ex-Arsenal talent jailed for drug smuggling, who can beat Spain at World Cup?

New York Times

time5 hours ago

  • New York Times

Ex-Arsenal talent jailed for drug smuggling, who can beat Spain at World Cup?

The Athletic FC ⚽ is The Athletic's daily football (or soccer, if you prefer) newsletter. Sign up to receive it directly to your inbox. Hello. He once had Arsene Wenger purring. Now this former Arsenal forward is serving time for drug smuggling. On the way: The reason Jay Emmanuel-Thomas is now a former footballer is because of the story you're about to read. As recently as September of last year, he was playing out his days with Greenock Morton, a Scottish team on the outskirts of Glasgow. Then the police came knocking. That same month, Emmanuel-Thomas — best known as a product of Arsenal's academy — was arrested as part of a drugs bust and accused of smuggling cannabis with a street value of £600,000 ($814,000) into the UK. Yesterday, a court sentenced him to four years in prison. Aged 34, his name is tarred and his career is over, a sharp fall from grace complete. Advertisement It's many moons since mentions of Emmanuel-Thomas in dispatches were making ears prick at Arsenal and beyond. Ultimately, it didn't happen for him there and he soon became nomadic, passing through clubs in England, Scotland, Thailand and India. But he's still the guy Arsene Wenger once described as 'an unbelievable finisher' — so lethal and powerful that when he helped destroy Liverpool in the FA Youth Cup in 2009, Liverpool's players refused to believe he was young enough to be taking part in the competition. Why, then, did Emmanuel-Thomas embroil himself in the importation of narcotics, a crime his own barrister described as 'a catastrophic error of judgement', when, before this offence, he had been a law-abiding citizen his entire life? Danny Taylor was in court to find out. 'The most painful experience' By the time of his arrest, Emmanuel-Thomas was no longer earning big from football. His pay at Morton was £600 a week, before bonuses. The club terminated his six-month contract as soon as he was charged. Chelmsford Crown Court heard how he may have been tempted into criminality during his short time playing for Thai side PTT Rayong in 2019. The cannabis in question arrived on a plane from Bangkok. The court was also told that Emmanuel-Thomas enlisted two women — one of them his own partner at the time — to act as couriers, promising them £2,500 in cash and flying them business class via Dubai. The women were themselves charged by police, but the allegations against them were dropped after WhatsApp conversations showed they believed they were bringing gold back to the UK, rather than illegal drugs. Emmanuel-Thomas deleted his messages, threw away his mobile phone and, at first, denied all wrongdoing — before changing his tune and pleading guilty. The maximum sentence for cannabis importation in the UK is 14 years. He received four, although nine months of that sentence have already been served by him on remand. He called his conviction 'the most painful and eye-opening experience of my life'. Advertisement A father of two, he will re-emerge from prison before long, with no semblance of a career to cling to. As the judge told him, 'You will no longer be known for being a professional footballer. You will be known as a criminal, a professional footballer who threw it all away and put others at risk of imprisonment in pursuit of money.' The World Cup is rarely a foregone conclusion but, with the big kick-off in North America a little over 12 months away, is anybody looking beyond Spain? They're the European Championship holders, they've got Lamine Yamal running riot and they're different gravy. OK, their Nations League semi-final against France last night ended 5-4 in their favour, but I was packing up and heading to bed when they led 5-1 with 12 minutes to go. It was worth hanging on to see evidence (if any more was needed) of why Manchester City are so set on seducing France's Rayan Cherki. In the chaos of a frantic finish, he hammered in a beast of a volley (above) and plucked an assist right out of the Yamal playbook. These boys are the future, just like the Spanish, who face Cristiano Ronaldo's Portugal in Sunday's final. Our pals at The Pulse run a regular section entitled 'Hi, my name is…', where they introduce us to a prospect we haven't heard of (or not in great detail). Today, I'm pinching it for a footballer who is 32. Ravel Morrison won't need introducing to many of you, but he's been so far off the radar for so long that some readers might not be familiar. How gifted was he as a teenage midfielder at Manchester United? Sir Alex Ferguson explained it best when he said he'd never seen anybody better. Morrison displayed his talent with an iconic instep volley during an England Under-21 training session, below. Danny Taylor has interviewed Morrison for The Athletic and it's a great get because Morrison doesn't do much media. From Old Trafford to West Ham United, Lazio and now a second-division team in Dubai, he carried the reputation of being a bad boy and a big-time problem as his promise melted — a reputation he earned on occasions. Advertisement Aged 17, and just after his United debut, he was convicted of intimidating a witness in a robbery case. Negative headlines had a habit of coming for him. These days, however, he's on the straight and narrow, and aiming to represent Jamaica at next year's World Cup. Reading Danny's piece, the popular caricature of him becomes faintly ludicrous. Did he quit Lazio because of a lack of salad cream (a sandwich condiment in the UK)? Did he p**s in a former manager's fish pond? Did he complain about his digs at West Ham being haunted? No, no and no. The truth about Morrison was less likely to send a tweet viral, but where's the fun in that? (Selected games, kick-offs ET/UK time) Friday: UEFA World Cup qualifier Group I: Norway vs Italy, 2.45pm/7.45pm — Fox Sports, Fubo/Amazon Prime. Saturday: UEFA World Cup qualifier Group K: Andorra vs England, 2.45pm/7.45pm — Fox Sports, Fubo/ITV. International friendlies (all U.S. only): USMNT vs Turkey, 3.30pm — TNT, Peacock Premium, Fubo; Canada vs Ukraine, 3.30pm — OneSoccer; Mexico vs Switzerland, 4pm — Univision, VIX. MLS: DC United vs Chicago Fire, 7.30pm/12.30am — MLS Season Pass/Apple TV. Sunday: UEFA Nations League final: Portugal vs Spain, 3pm/8pm — Fox, Fubo/ITV. MLS: LAFC vs Sporting Kansas City; Vancouver Whitecaps vs Seattle Sounders — both 9pm/2am and MLS Season Pass/Apple TV. Everyone makes mistakes, even your loyal scribes at TAFC. So we're about to throw stones from a glass house. But here's a howler of epic proportions from Finland. This week, the manager of Finland's women's team, Outi Saarinen, named her squad for a Nations League match against Serbia. She meant to include defender Nanne Ruuskanen but absent-mindedly filled in the teamsheet with the name of Stina Ruuskanen — a 51-year-old whose last international appearance for Finland came almost 30 years ago. Advertisement The error was picked up too late to be changed, leaving Nanne to kick her heels, while Stina joked to a local paper: 'I'm definitely ready if the call comes.' If the squad had anything about them, they'll have worn Stina Ruuskanen face masks to the next training session. (Top photo by)

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store