Anonymous ID: 8fe36f Jan. 24, 2021, 3:34 p.m. No.12700509   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0514 >>1311

>>12700334

 

Graveside military honors include the firing of three volleys each by seven service members. This commonly is confused with an entirely separate honor, the 21-gun salute. But the number of individual gun firings in both ceremonies evolved the same way.

 

The three volleys came from an old battlefield custom. The two warring sides would cease hostilities to clear their dead from the battlefield, and the firing of three volleys meant that the dead had been properly cared for and the side was ready to resume the battle.

Anonymous ID: 8fe36f Jan. 24, 2021, 3:35 p.m. No.12700514   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12700509

People commonly mistake the three rifle volleys, an element of military funeral honors, as a 21-gun salute.

 

The firing of three rifle volleys, or rounds, over the graves of deceased armed forces members and political leaders, can be traced to the European dynastic wars, when fighting was halted to remove the dead and wounded.

 

Once an area was cleared of casualties, three volleys were sent into the air as a signal that the dead were cleared and properly cared for and that fighting could resume. At a military funeral today, a rifle team typically consisting of seven service members firing three volleys from rifles may be provided.