I have only managed to come across photos of a grand total of TWO known Swiss 18th century rifles. That's it. Mid 18th c.
1700 would be easier, as things aren't divided out as clearly this early. The closest thing I can come up with, regionally, with any consistency, would be guns from Elsasz (before the French takeover), Coeln, etc. Quite distinctive.
Saxon rifles...MUCH easier to find examples of.
I can show you actual saxon rifles. Let me get photos together at home later.
Actually, here, just go to
www.hermann-historica.com and look through their auction catalogs. You will find rifles from Sachsen and elsewhere.
Wouldn't "lower Rhine" would be Holland?...downriver.
Here's a typical ca. 1700 rifle from Wiesbaden. I have seen virtually identical guns from Coeln and Strassburg...all up and down the Rhine
I wonder if this form of gun originated, more or less, in Strassburg in the late 17th century, and when the French took over, the gunsmiths fled downriver... It's a VERY distinctive form, with an equally distinctive triggerguard. I do not know if guns like this were made in Switzerland, but it's about as close as I can get right now. I do have photos of a Swiss fowling gun that someone sent me, I think about 1690. I don't have the photos on this computer. I think it was Basel....not sure. It was typical "European" form...basically French in style.
A Saxon gun. Hans Loeffler in Ruhla, Sachsen. 1723. I LOVE this gun.
Yes, that's a maple stock.