Online Encyclopedia

ARSENAL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 651 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARSENAL  , an

establishment for the construction, repair, receipt, storage and issue of warlike stores; details as to materiel will be found under
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AMMUNITION, ORDNANCE, &c . The word " arsenal " appears in various forms in Romanic
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languages (from which it has been adopted into Teutonic), i.e .
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Italian arzanale,
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Spanish arsenal, &c.; Italian also has arzana and darsena, and Spanish a longer form atarazanal . The word is of Arabic origin, being a corruption of daras-sina'ah, house of trade or manufacture,
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dar, house, al, the, and sina'ah, trade, manufacture, .
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ana'a, to make . Such guesses as arx navalis,
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naval citadel, arx senatus (i.e. of Venice, &c.), are now entirely rejected . A first-class arsenal, which can renew the materiel and equipment of a large army, embraces a
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gun factory,
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carriage factory, laboratory and small-arms ammunition factory, small-arms factory, harness,
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saddlery and
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tent factories, and a powder factory; in addition it must possess
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great store-houses . In a second-class arsenal the factories would be replaced by workshops . The situation of an arsenal should be governed by strategical considerations . If of the first class, it should be situated at the
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base of operations and supply, secure from attack, not too near a frontier, and placed so as to draw in readily the resources of the country . The importance of a large arsenal is such that its defences would be on the scale of those of a large fortress . The usual subdivision of branches in a great arsenal is into A, Storekeeping; B, Construction; C, Administration . Under A we should have the following departments and stores:—Departments of issue and receipt,
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pattern
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room, armoury department, ordnance or park, harness, saddlery and accoutrements, camp equipment, tools and
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instruments, engineer store, magazines, raw material store,
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timber yard, breaking-up store, unserviceable store .

Under B—Gun factory, carriage factory, laboratory, small-arms factory, harness and tent factory, powder factory, &c . In a second-class arsenal there would be workshops instead of these factories . C—Under the

head of administration would be classed the chief director of the arsenal, officials military and
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civil, non-commissioned
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officers and military artificers, civilian foremen, workmen and labourers, with the clerks and writers necessary for the office
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work of the establishments . In the manufacturing branches are required skill, and efficient and economical work, both executive and administrative; in the storekeeping
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part, good arrangement, great care, thorough knowledge of all warlike stores, both in their active and passive state, and scrupulous exactness in the custody, issue and receipt of stores . For fuller details the reader is referred to papers by
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Sir E . Collen, R.A., in vol. viii., and Lieut . C . E . Grover, R.E., in vol. vi . Proceedings of R . Artillery Institution . In England the Royal Arsenal,
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Woolwich, manufactures and stores the requirements of the army and
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navy (see WOOLWICH) .

End of Article: ARSENAL
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