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It just may have been used against 'perfidious Albion' in the old days of the North West Frontier scuffles....that alone should make it even more valuable to an American. Very few were rifled, BTW, The barrels were made by the so-called 'stub-twist method', where short rods of iron, not steel, were heated up and wrapped around a mandrel, rather like winding string around your finger. They were hammer forged into one piece, and then bored out to the correct diameter. The more stubs were used, the more expensive the barrel cost. Often five were used, but seven and nine-stub twists were often used by the likes of Nock and Egg, as well as Manton.
Here's a Youtube movie of a guy in Kansas doing it to make an astonishingly beautiful pistol. Long guns just used longer 'stubs'. As you can imagine, the resultant spiral twist gave rise to the nickname of 'Damascus' after the pattern found on steel blades coming from that part of the world.
Damn that was a LOT of time that goes into that. All I could think when watching that was what it must have been like long ago when they did not have the equipment he had and people were making those. Impressive to say the least!