Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Big Bertha (Howitzer)

Encyclopedia : B : BI : BIG : Big Bertha (Howitzer)


"Big Bertha"
Enlarge
"Big Bertha"

"Big Bertha"
Enlarge
"Big Bertha"

Big Bertha (German: Dicke Bertha; literal translation "Fat Bertha") is the name of the L/14 model of heavy mortar-like howitzers built and used by Germany during World War I. The name "Big Bertha" is often mistakenly applied to the Langer Max and Paris Gun railway guns.

Designed in 1904 and produced by the Krupp factories in Essen, Germany, in 1914, the L/14 howitzer was a movable 42 cm siege mortar with shells weighing 820 kg each and a maximum range of 15 km, with a maximum elevation grade of 80 degrees. Only about 30 of them were built, and were used during the German assault upon Verdun from February 1916, along with other assaults. The howitzer was named after Gustav Krupp's wife, and the term has since been applied to any large woman. There is a cannon named after this one in Estonia; The Estonian Volunteer Defense League's tank-destroying unit "Tankipurustajad" calls its anti-tank cannon "Bertha" with respect to its supposed great-grandmother.

This gun is the older version of its now more powerful sister the M68 howitzer artillery gun. They are used to shoot over long ranges to clear away many forces at a time.

In WW2 at least two machines were created re-proposing the concept of the siege mortar: the Sturmtiger and the Mörser Karl.

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: