Martini
From The Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia
The Martini–Henry is a breech-loading single-shot rifle with a lever action that was used by the British Army. It first entered service in 1871, eventually replacing the Snider–Enfield, a muzzle-loader converted to the cartridge system. Martini–Henry variants were used throughout the British Empire for 47 years. It combined the dropping-block action first developed by Henry O. Peabody (in his Peabody rifle) and improved by the Swiss designer Friedrich von Martini, combined with the polygonal rifling designed by Scotsman Alexander Henry.
In the Sherlock Holmes stories
- Sherlock Holmes said he would rather face a Martini bullet than the poisoned blowpipe dart used by Tonga (SIGN 1268).
