Online Encyclopedia

TARGET

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 419 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TARGET  , a

mark. to shoot at, so called from its resemblance in shape to the " targe " or small round shield, particularly the round wood and leather buckler, with metal bosses, and long spike protruding from the central
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boss, which was carried by the Highland clans; at the back was a leathern sleeve in which the
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left arm was inserted . In the 17th century, as
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body armour ceased to be used, the
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infantry soldier often carried a
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light shield of various forms which was known as a " target," which is a diminutive of targe; such soldiers were known as " targeteers." " Targe " is a word that has been the subject of much etymological discussion . On the one hand is found the O.E . Large, with hard g, a shield, cf . Icel. targa, shield, target, and O.H . Ger. zarga,
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frame, side, border; on the other is Fr. targe, Sp. and
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Port. tarja, Ital. targa, buckler, shield . The soft and hard g's point to two distinct words . In Sp. and Port., is found adarga, a square target or buckler, which is an Arabic word, al darkat or darakat, a leather shield . The O.E. and Icel. words can hardly have come from an Arab. source, and the relation between the two words is an etymological
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puzzle (see Skeat, Etym .
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Diet., 1910) . The target as a mark to shoot at is, for
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archery, a circular
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canvas-covered frame stuffed with
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straw and marked with concentric rings surrounding the centre or bull's-eye . For
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shooting with the
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rifle the target is usually square .

In the days of the smooth-

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bore musket, and for many years after the introduction of small arms of precision, the targets used in musketry training were of a " match " and not a " service " character . The target was white with a black bull's-eye (counting 5 points) and two rings, invisible to the firer, called the " inner " and the "
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magpie," and scoring 4 and 3; the rest of the target was called the "
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outer " and counted 2 points . This
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system was the basis of all match shooting, whether with match or service rifles, and (with the trifling difference that the bull counted 4, the inner 3 and the magpie and outer alike 2) it was followed in military range practice . For collective fire
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regular rows of black silhouettes on white screens were employed . These were a compromise between bull's-eye and service targets which possessed the virtues of neither . But after the S .
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African war bull's-eye practices were eliminated from the musketry course of the
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British army, and in the musketry regulations of 1909 they were restricted to the earliest stages of recruits' training and trained soldiers'
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TARGUM 419 "
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refresher " courses . The use of the bull's-eye to-day is to teach the soldier to shoot uniformly, that is, to "
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group " his shots closely . The position of his shot group with reference to the bull's-eye does not
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matter; if his group is comprised within a 6 or 12-inch ring (at zoo yards range) he is passed on to more advanced practices at service targets . The latter are no longer coloured black-and-white, but are of the dull colours which are met with in the field, either brown head-and-shoulders painted on a green-grey canvas background or brown silhouettes held up against the face of the stop-butt . The
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National Rifle Association in 1910 followed the lead of the War Office to some extent as regards the targets used at the
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Bisley meeting in " service-rifle " competitions . For collective practices at the more important military stations large areas of ground are prepared with silhouettes in entrenchments, dummy guns, &c .

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Mechanical "
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running-man " and " disappearing " targets are also used for training in snap-shooting and rapid fire . The target used in
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naval gunnery is a large floating frame of
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timber either fixed by buoys or anchors or towed at a distance by a vessel (see ORDNANCE: § Naval Gunnery) .

End of Article: TARGET
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