Some interesting comments.
I hope the Brig or OOE can give their input. And how has the Iraq war changed anything in this regard.
I hope the Brig or OOE can give their input. And how has the Iraq war changed anything in this regard.
Of late and especially after the 1991 'Gulf War' - and the rout of the Iraqi Artillery - mainly single barrelled and towed - some doubts have started arising in my mind about the efficacy of such a workhorse which has served the armies of the world since time immemorial.
It would be erroneous to say that gun powder (black powder) and the development of guns is related in any way. Both these have developed independent of each other. The earlier guns were merely contraptions which 'hurled' - projectiles - mainly stones (round ones) and were used to batter fortresses. The 'projectiles' as we know them now were not 'fired' i.e., these were explosive driven. They were just thrown mechanically and not chemically. Perhaps the best earlier example of gun were the 'Pot De Fer' - a sort of a pot with a touch hole and which projected an arrow through the pressure built in the pot. And of course the study of the development of fire power indicates that at one time a bullet of rifle/musket achieved greater range than an artillery piece.
Guns apparently were a harmless artifact - although there is evidence that these were used in the Siege of Calais (around 1391) and they used iron shot.
Harmless these pieces were as the following ballad indicates:
'Gonners to schew their art
Into the town in many a parte
Schot many a fulle great stone
Thanked be God and Mary Mild
They hurt neither man, woman, nor child
To the houses, though they did harm.'
All the same the invention and use of gun powder democratised warfare and struck a death blow to the age of chivalry. The artillery as an arms started emerging as distinctly as it possibly could. Its main contribution to the battlefield was fire power - and the capability to neutralise the enemy - and thus keeping his head down.
The Russians (Stalin) called the artillery as 'God of War' - and Herman Goering told the German people '... Guns will make us powerful, butter will only make us fat...' And then the great scientist of war Capt Liddel Hart had opined '... Its the fire power, and fire power alone, that arrives at the correct time and place that counts in the modern war....'
This I should suppose was the peak of the conventional artillery which still remained single barrelled - although some variants of this, like mortars and sawed off barrels like the howitzers also existed to effectively deal with crest problems, and special problems.