Artillery: Books - History, Types and Construction (1/2)
A book on artillery? Explore here illustrated books on the history, types and construction of artillery (1/2).
Greek and Roman Artillery 399 BC–AD 363 (Osprey)
The catapult (katapeltikon) was invented under the patronage of Dionysius I, tyrant of Syracuse, in the 4th century bc. At first only the arrow-firing variant was used, and it was not until the reign of Alexander the Great that stone-projecting catapults were introduced. The Romans adopted these weapons during the Punic Wars and further developed them, before introducing the new arrow-firing ballista and stone-throwing onager.
This title traces the often controversial design, development and construction of these weapons throughout the history of the classical world.
Contents: Introduction - The Arrow-Firing Catapult of the Greeks - The Stone-Projecting Catapult of the Greeks - Roman Artillery: The Republic and Early Empire - The Roman Artillery Revolution - Conclusion.
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Author:
Duncan B Campbell
Details:
48 pages, 25 x 18.5 x 0.4 cm / 9.8 x 7.3 x 0.16 in, paperback
The Napoleonic Wars gripped Europe, and beyond, for over ten years at the beginning of the Nineteenth century. Hundreds of battles were fought between the armies of France (and its allies) and all those powers that wished to see Napoleon Bonaparte stopped in his tracks and an end to the French Empire.
The battles and sieges of the Napoleonic Wars, which cost the lives of between 3 and 6 million men, made unprecedented use of large guns, and every participating army possessed a range of artillery.
With the Wars covering such a long period of time, and with so many armies involved, the subject of Napoleonic artillery is a complicated one. The product of years of research, this book presents most of what is known about the artillery pieces of the Napoleonic Wars. Including numerous drawings, contemporary illustrations and modern photographs of surviving guns, it will be an invaluable addition to the library of historians, modellers, wargamers and re-enactors.
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Author:
Paul Dawson
Details:
304 pages, 25 x 20 x 2.8 cm / 9.8 x 7.9 x 1.1 in, hardback
Superguns 1854-1991 - Extreme artillery from the Paris Gun and the V-3 to Iraq's Project Babylon (Osprey)
Over the last 150 years, gun designers have sought to transform warfare with artillery of superlative range and power, from William Armstrong's 19th-century "monster guns" to the latest research into hypersonic electro-magnetic railguns.
Taking a case study approach, "Superguns" explains the technology and role of the finest monster weapons of each era. It looks at the 1918 "Wilhelm Gun," designed to shell Paris from behind the German trenches; the World War II "V-3" gun built to bombard London across the Channel; the Cold War atomic cannons of the US and Soviet Union; and the story of Dr Gerald Bull's HARP program and the Iraqi "Supergun" he designed for Saddam Hussein.
Illustrated throughout, this is an authoritative history of the greatest and most ambitious artillery pieces of all time.
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Author:
Steven J. Zaloga
Details:
48 pages, 25 x 18.5 cm / 9.8 x 7.3 in, paperback
Illustrations:
numerous b&w and colour photos
Publisher:
Osprey Publishing (GB, 2018)
Series:
New Vanguard
ISBN:
9781472826107
Superguns 1854-1991 - Extreme artillery from the Paris Gun and the V-3 to Iraq's Project Babylon
The 40mm Bofors Gun, first produced in the 1930s, has become one of the most famous artillery pieces of all time. It shows no sign of fading from the defence scene even though, in the second decade of the twenty-first century, it performs in many roles that were not contemplated by its original designers. It has also proved to be so versatile that it is now allied to electronic and other technological marvels that were mere pipe dreams only a few years ago.
When the Bofors entered the international defence market, its primary quarry, the military aircraft, was still a slow and fragile machine that could be terminally damaged by a single hit from a 40mm projectile. Terry Gander describes this early period in the gun's development and he shows how, despite recent increases in target speed and other performance parameters, it can still inflict a one-hit kill on almost any aircraft, helicopter or guided missile.
Perhaps the most astonishing aspect of the story is that the fundamentals of today's Bofors guns remain virtually unchanged from the very first examples to come off the Karlskoga production line in Sweden. In all its forms, the Bofors continues to be a sound, reliable and lethal piece of military hardware that has given good service to gunners all over the world.
Terry Gander's comprehensive account of the history of this remarkable weapon over the course of almost eighty years is fascinating reading and an invaluable work of reference for military historians and artillery specialists alike. It is the definitive work in the field.
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Author:
Terry Gander
Details:
256 pages, 23.5 x 16.5 x 2.1 cm / 9.25 x 6.5 x 0.83 in, hardback
The use of artillery in the high mountains, especially in earlier times, placed special demands on the equipment, because it not only had to withstand inhospitable weather, but also had to be able to be transported and operated in the most impassable terrain at often dizzying heights - and all this without the advanced technical aids of today.
Supported by around 200 historical illustrations, Franz Kosar describes in detail in this volume which solutions were found worldwide from the 19th century until the end of the Second World War: in Europe, Africa, Asia and in North and South America.
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