Welcome to the Forum Hightower .
I cant help you much with a definitive time frame .
but i can tell you bout the one i have .
The barrel is a hand forged ,42 inch barrel with radius rifling .
If you look at the muzzle , it looks to be a polygon bore . IE the bore doesn’t look round
Even if you drop a bore light down the bore , it still doesn’t look round .
For years this perplexed me as I couldn’t figure out how in the heck it would have been done .
Now I could still be wrong about it , but I have come to the conclusion that it is in fact round and what im seeing is an optical illusion caused by the way the rifling was cut .
With my bore , if I look at the muzzle , the deep groves exit the crown just ever so slightly from the corners of the barrel flats on the top and bottom . With one high on the side and one low on the other . The result is a perfect 6 sided polygon which is even more accented by the octagon barrel .
The one time that I swaged the barrel , even the swag came out it also looked polygon . When I used my Micrometer, it also suggested polygon as it measured flat when measured across ,grove to grove . .
But when I took measurements up to that strait line distance , the center of the lands was less ever so slightly less then the measurement taken right next to the grove ..
But again , looking at the muzzle and the swag , it sure says polygon. The tail is only told with a micrometer.
During my time at the M.O.I I saw several barrels like this . While I have no writen proof of it , I hold the opinion that this may have been a principle of some makers . IE the rifling should exit the muzzle so as a majority of the groves match the corners of the flats or at least as close as possible.. Now again , let me make it clear that im not saying this was fact . But I have seen enough original barrels done that way to suggest it may be a real possibility .
Also ,im not saying that’s how your bore is . The case could be that its an actual poly-bore . I would have to look up my reference material but during the early 18th century,,, I think it was possibly in Germany
, there were a lot of experiments with different bore shapes which resulted in the need for specific geometric shaped projectiles . Stars . Harts and banded ball designs come to mind .
Earlier then that you will find reference to Moorish barrels which had square bores and shot a square , block shaped projectile .
From what I have read these square bores were not a attempt at accuracy , but more a fear factor being played against and enemies belief .
By all means , post some photos of your bore . It would be interesting to see.