Heavyweights: The Military Use of Massive Weapons
Author: Stephen Smith
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 224
Delivering the heaviest possible munitions onto the enemy and his strongpoints serves a number of military functions: it destroys protective positions and so is ideal for siege or trench warfare; it kills and maims at a distance without endangering one s own troops or provides devastating close-range protection against attack; also significant, it saps the enemy s morale as it searches them out far from the front lines, degrading their performance and reducing their manoeuvrability. Before the end of the 14th century, strong city walls and castle ramparts were almost impregnable: after the advent of gunpowder even the walls of Constantinople, which had defended the Roman Empire for centuries, fell before the Turkish supercannon. Before long, every army had its artillery train, and a significant point of pride was the largest, most potent of the weapons.At sea, cannon were the only weapons that could splinter the massive wooden walls of warships in the days of sail, and sea battles continued to see huge weapons employed through to World War II: the 460mm guns of the Yamoto or the 16-inch guns of the Iowa class battleships could engage the enemy at 24 miles and the latter saw service into the 1990s. It was only the advent of carrier-based aviation that saw the end of the huge battleships and their strategic importance. On land, the crucible of war the Napoleonic wars, US Civil War and the two great world wars saw heavy weapons develop exponentially: ironshot cannon were replaced by rifled guns and howitzers that could propel increasingly heavy shells, leading to the development of huge mortars, and heavier artillery, eventually so heavy they had to be put on rails railway guns allowed the speedy movement of weapons that were not only huge in themselves, but also required massive shells and ammunition carriers and reloaders. Heavyweights examines the use of these massive weapons of war from stone-shot cannon to the atomic artillery of the 1950s.It discusses the way that missiles and air-launched weapons have superseded theatre and strategic artillery. Covering the subject chronologically, each period has a number of case studies: the largest weapons are itemised and their use in wartime documented. Finally, appendices identify the largest of other guns, hand-held and personal weapons, as well as looking at guns and aircraft. 200 colour illustrations
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 224
Delivering the heaviest possible munitions onto the enemy and his strongpoints serves a number of military functions: it destroys protective positions and so is ideal for siege or trench warfare; it kills and maims at a distance without endangering one s own troops or provides devastating close-range protection against attack; also significant, it saps the enemy s morale as it searches them out far from the front lines, degrading their performance and reducing their manoeuvrability. Before the end of the 14th century, strong city walls and castle ramparts were almost impregnable: after the advent of gunpowder even the walls of Constantinople, which had defended the Roman Empire for centuries, fell before the Turkish supercannon. Before long, every army had its artillery train, and a significant point of pride was the largest, most potent of the weapons.At sea, cannon were the only weapons that could splinter the massive wooden walls of warships in the days of sail, and sea battles continued to see huge weapons employed through to World War II: the 460mm guns of the Yamoto or the 16-inch guns of the Iowa class battleships could engage the enemy at 24 miles and the latter saw service into the 1990s. It was only the advent of carrier-based aviation that saw the end of the huge battleships and their strategic importance. On land, the crucible of war the Napoleonic wars, US Civil War and the two great world wars saw heavy weapons develop exponentially: ironshot cannon were replaced by rifled guns and howitzers that could propel increasingly heavy shells, leading to the development of huge mortars, and heavier artillery, eventually so heavy they had to be put on rails railway guns allowed the speedy movement of weapons that were not only huge in themselves, but also required massive shells and ammunition carriers and reloaders. Heavyweights examines the use of these massive weapons of war from stone-shot cannon to the atomic artillery of the 1950s.It discusses the way that missiles and air-launched weapons have superseded theatre and strategic artillery. Covering the subject chronologically, each period has a number of case studies: the largest weapons are itemised and their use in wartime documented. Finally, appendices identify the largest of other guns, hand-held and personal weapons, as well as looking at guns and aircraft. 200 colour illustrations
Description
Author: Stephen Smith
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 224
Delivering the heaviest possible munitions onto the enemy and his strongpoints serves a number of military functions: it destroys protective positions and so is ideal for siege or trench warfare; it kills and maims at a distance without endangering one s own troops or provides devastating close-range protection against attack; also significant, it saps the enemy s morale as it searches them out far from the front lines, degrading their performance and reducing their manoeuvrability. Before the end of the 14th century, strong city walls and castle ramparts were almost impregnable: after the advent of gunpowder even the walls of Constantinople, which had defended the Roman Empire for centuries, fell before the Turkish supercannon. Before long, every army had its artillery train, and a significant point of pride was the largest, most potent of the weapons.At sea, cannon were the only weapons that could splinter the massive wooden walls of warships in the days of sail, and sea battles continued to see huge weapons employed through to World War II: the 460mm guns of the Yamoto or the 16-inch guns of the Iowa class battleships could engage the enemy at 24 miles and the latter saw service into the 1990s. It was only the advent of carrier-based aviation that saw the end of the huge battleships and their strategic importance. On land, the crucible of war the Napoleonic wars, US Civil War and the two great world wars saw heavy weapons develop exponentially: ironshot cannon were replaced by rifled guns and howitzers that could propel increasingly heavy shells, leading to the development of huge mortars, and heavier artillery, eventually so heavy they had to be put on rails railway guns allowed the speedy movement of weapons that were not only huge in themselves, but also required massive shells and ammunition carriers and reloaders. Heavyweights examines the use of these massive weapons of war from stone-shot cannon to the atomic artillery of the 1950s.It discusses the way that missiles and air-launched weapons have superseded theatre and strategic artillery. Covering the subject chronologically, each period has a number of case studies: the largest weapons are itemised and their use in wartime documented. Finally, appendices identify the largest of other guns, hand-held and personal weapons, as well as looking at guns and aircraft. 200 colour illustrations
Format: Hardback
Number of Pages: 224
Delivering the heaviest possible munitions onto the enemy and his strongpoints serves a number of military functions: it destroys protective positions and so is ideal for siege or trench warfare; it kills and maims at a distance without endangering one s own troops or provides devastating close-range protection against attack; also significant, it saps the enemy s morale as it searches them out far from the front lines, degrading their performance and reducing their manoeuvrability. Before the end of the 14th century, strong city walls and castle ramparts were almost impregnable: after the advent of gunpowder even the walls of Constantinople, which had defended the Roman Empire for centuries, fell before the Turkish supercannon. Before long, every army had its artillery train, and a significant point of pride was the largest, most potent of the weapons.At sea, cannon were the only weapons that could splinter the massive wooden walls of warships in the days of sail, and sea battles continued to see huge weapons employed through to World War II: the 460mm guns of the Yamoto or the 16-inch guns of the Iowa class battleships could engage the enemy at 24 miles and the latter saw service into the 1990s. It was only the advent of carrier-based aviation that saw the end of the huge battleships and their strategic importance. On land, the crucible of war the Napoleonic wars, US Civil War and the two great world wars saw heavy weapons develop exponentially: ironshot cannon were replaced by rifled guns and howitzers that could propel increasingly heavy shells, leading to the development of huge mortars, and heavier artillery, eventually so heavy they had to be put on rails railway guns allowed the speedy movement of weapons that were not only huge in themselves, but also required massive shells and ammunition carriers and reloaders. Heavyweights examines the use of these massive weapons of war from stone-shot cannon to the atomic artillery of the 1950s.It discusses the way that missiles and air-launched weapons have superseded theatre and strategic artillery. Covering the subject chronologically, each period has a number of case studies: the largest weapons are itemised and their use in wartime documented. Finally, appendices identify the largest of other guns, hand-held and personal weapons, as well as looking at guns and aircraft. 200 colour illustrations
Heavyweights: The Military Use of Massive Weapons