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Artillery
Artillery
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US artillerymen test fire an M777 Lightweight 155-millimeter Howitzer at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms (2005)

Artillery consists of ranged weapons that launch munitions far beyond the range and power of infantry firearms. Early artillery development focused on the ability to breach defensive walls and fortifications during sieges, and led to heavy, fairly immobile siege engines. As technology improved, lighter, more mobile field artillery cannons were developed for battlefield use. This development continues today; modern self-propelled artillery vehicles are highly mobile weapons of great versatility generally providing the largest share of an army's total firepower.

Originally, the word "artillery" referred to any group of soldiers primarily armed with some form of manufactured weapon or armour. Since the introduction of gunpowder and cannon, "artillery" has largely meant cannon, and in contemporary usage, usually refers to shell-firing guns, howitzers, and mortars (collectively called barrel artillery, cannon artillery or gun artillery) and rocket artillery. In common speech, the word "artillery" is often used to refer to individual devices, along with their accessories and fittings, although these assemblages are more properly called "equipment". However, there is no generally recognized generic term for a gun, howitzer, mortar, and so forth: the United States uses "artillery piece", but most English-speaking armies use "gun" and "mortar". The projectiles fired are typically either "shot" (if solid) or "shell" (if not solid). Historically, variants of solid shot including canister, chain shot and grapeshot were also used. "Shell" is a widely used generic term for a projectile, which is a component of munitions.

By association, artillery may also refer to the arm of service that customarily operates such engines. In some armies, the artillery arm has operated field, coastal, anti-aircraft, and anti-tank artillery; in others these have been separate arms, and with some nations coastal has been a naval or marine responsibility.

In the 20th century, target acquisition devices (such as radar) and techniques (such as sound ranging and flash spotting) emerged, primarily for artillery. These are usually utilized by one or more of the artillery arms. The widespread adoption of indirect fire in the early 20th century introduced the need for specialist data for field artillery, notably survey and meteorological, and in some armies, provision of these are the responsibility of the artillery arm. The majority of combat deaths in the Napoleonic Wars, World War I, and World War II were caused by artillery.[1] In 1944, Joseph Stalin said in a speech that artillery was "the god of war".[1]

Artillery piece

[edit]
French soldiers in the Franco-Prussian War 1870–71
British 64 Pounder Rifled Muzzle-Loaded (RML) Gun on a Moncrieff disappearing mount, at Scaur Hill Fort, Bermuda. This is a part of a fixed battery, meant to protect against over-land attack and to serve as coastal artillery.

Although not called by that name, siege engines performing the role recognizable as artillery have been employed in warfare since antiquity. The first known catapult was developed in Syracuse in 399 BC.[2] Until the introduction of gunpowder into western warfare, artillery was dependent upon mechanical energy, which not only severely limited the kinetic energy of the projectiles, but also required the construction of very large engines to accumulate sufficient energy. A 1st-century BC Roman catapult launching 6.55 kg (14.4 lb) stones achieved a kinetic energy of 16 kilojoules, compared to a mid-19th-century 12-pounder gun, which fired a 4.1 kg (9.0 lb) round, with a kinetic energy of 240 kilojoules, or a 20th-century US battleship that fired a 1,225 kg (2,701 lb) projectile from its main battery with an energy level surpassing 350 megajoules.

From the Middle Ages through most of the modern era, artillery pieces on land were moved by horse-drawn gun carriages. In the contemporary era, artillery pieces and their crew relied on wheeled or tracked vehicles as transportation. These land versions of artillery were dwarfed by railway guns; the largest of these large-calibre guns ever conceived – Project Babylon of the Supergun affair – was theoretically capable of putting a satellite into orbit. Artillery used by naval forces has also changed significantly, with missiles generally replacing guns in surface warfare.

Over the course of military history, projectiles were manufactured from a wide variety of materials, into a wide variety of shapes, using many different methods in which to target structural/defensive works and inflict enemy casualties. The engineering applications for ordnance delivery have likewise changed significantly over time, encompassing some of the most complex and advanced technologies in use today.

In some armies, the weapon of artillery is the projectile, not the equipment that fires it. The process of delivering fire onto the target is called gunnery. The actions involved in operating an artillery piece are collectively called "serving the gun" by the "detachment" or gun crew, constituting either direct or indirect artillery fire. The manner in which gunnery crews (or formations) are employed is called artillery support. At different periods in history, this may refer to weapons designed to be fired from ground-, sea-, and even air-based weapons platforms.

Crew

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Some armed forces use the term "gunners" for the soldiers and sailors with the primary function of using artillery.

7-person gun crew firing a US M777 Light Towed Howitzer, War in Afghanistan, 2009

The gunners and their guns are usually grouped in teams called either "crews" or "detachments". Several such crews and teams with other functions are combined into a unit of artillery, usually called a battery, although sometimes called a company. In gun detachments, each role is numbered, starting with "1" the Detachment Commander, and the highest number being the Coverer, the second-in-command. "Gunner" is also the lowest rank, and junior non-commissioned officers are "Bombardiers" in some artillery arms.

Batteries are roughly equivalent to a company in the infantry, and are combined into larger military organizations for administrative and operational purposes, either battalions or regiments, depending on the army. These may be grouped into brigades; the Russian army also groups some brigades into artillery divisions, and the People's Liberation Army has artillery corps.

The term "artillery" also designates a combat arm of most military services when used organizationally to describe units and formations of the national armed forces that operate the weapons.

Tactics

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Artillery illuminating ammunition used in a shooting exercise on Simplon Pass, Switzerland. The illuminated mountain is Mount Fletschhorn, 9 km from the photographer's position.

During military operations, field artillery has the role of providing support to other arms in combat or of attacking targets, particularly in-depth. Broadly, these effects fall into two categories, aiming either to suppress or neutralize the enemy, or to cause casualties, damage, and destruction. This is mostly achieved by delivering high-explosive munitions to suppress, or inflict casualties on the enemy from casing fragments and other debris and from blast, or by destroying enemy positions, equipment, and vehicles. Non-lethal munitions, notably smoke, can also suppress or neutralize the enemy by obscuring their view.

Fire may be directed by an artillery observer or another observer, including crewed and uncrewed aircraft, or called onto map coordinates.

Military doctrine has had a significant influence on the core engineering design considerations of artillery ordnance through its history, in seeking to achieve a balance between the delivered volume of fire with ordnance mobility. However, during the modern period, the consideration of protecting the gunners also arose due to the late-19th-century introduction of the new generation of infantry weapons using conoidal bullet, better known as the Minié ball, with a range almost as long as that of field artillery.

"Weapons Of The Field Artillery" (1953) - Official United States Army artillery training information reel.

The gunners' increasing proximity to and participation in direct combat against other combat arms and attacks by aircraft made the introduction of a gun shield necessary. The problems of how to employ a fixed or horse-towed gun in mobile warfare necessitated the development of new methods of transporting the artillery into combat. Two distinct forms of artillery were developed: the towed gun, used primarily to attack or defend a fixed-line; and the self-propelled gun, intended to accompany a mobile force and to provide continuous fire support and/or suppression. These influences have guided the development of artillery ordnance, systems, organizations, and operations until the present, with artillery systems capable of providing support at ranges from as little as 100 m to the intercontinental ranges of ballistic missiles. The only combat in which artillery is unable to take part is close-quarters combat, with the possible exception of artillery reconnaissance teams.[3]

Etymology

[edit]

The word as used in the current context originated in the Middle Ages. One suggestion is that it comes from French atelier, meaning the place where manual work is done.

Another suggestion is that it originates from the 13th century and the Old French artillier, designating craftsmen and manufacturers of all materials and warfare equipments (spears, swords, armor, war machines); and, for the next 250 years, the sense of the word "artillery" covered all forms of military weapons. Hence, the naming of the Honourable Artillery Company, which was essentially an infantry unit until the 19th century.

Another suggestion is that it comes from the Italian arte de tirare (art of shooting), coined by one of the first theorists on the use of artillery, Niccolò Tartaglia. The term was used by Girolamo Ruscelli (died 1566) in his Precepts of Modern Militia published posthumously in 1572.

History

[edit]
A bronze "thousand ball thunder cannon" from the Huolongjing.

Mechanical systems used for throwing ammunition in ancient warfare, also known as "engines of war", like the catapult, onager, trebuchet, and ballista, are also referred to by military historians as artillery.

Medieval

[edit]

During medieval times, more types of artillery were developed, most notably the counterweight trebuchet. Traction trebuchets, using manpower to launch projectiles, have been used in ancient China since the 4th century as anti-personnel weapons. The much more powerful counterweight trebuchet was invented in the eastern Mediterranean region in the 12th century, with the earliest definite attestation in 1187.[4]

Invention of gunpowder

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A depiction of an early vase-shaped cannon (shown here as the "Long-range Awe-inspiring Cannon"(威遠砲)) complete with a crude sight and an ignition port dated from around 1350 AD. The illustration is from the 14th century Ming Dynasty book Huolongjing.[5]

Early Chinese artillery had vase-like shapes. This includes the "long range awe inspiring" cannon dated from 1350 and found in the 14th century Ming dynasty treatise Huolongjing.[5] With the development of better metallurgy techniques, later cannons abandoned the vase shape of early Chinese artillery. This change can be seen in the bronze "thousand ball thunder cannon", an early example of field artillery.[6] These small, crude weapons diffused into the Middle East (the madfaa) and reached Europe in the 13th century, in a very limited manner.

In Asia, Mongols adopted the Chinese artillery and used it effectively in the great conquest. By the late 14th century, Chinese rebels used organized artillery and cavalry to push Mongols out.

As small smooth-bore barrels, these were initially cast in iron or bronze around a core, with the first drilled bore ordnance recorded in operation near Seville in 1247.[citation needed] They fired lead, iron, or stone balls, sometimes large arrows and on occasions simply handfuls of whatever scrap came to hand. During the Hundred Years' War, these weapons became more common, initially as the bombard and later the cannon. Cannons were always muzzle-loaders. While there were many early attempts at breech-loading designs, a lack of engineering knowledge rendered these even more dangerous to use than muzzle-loaders.

Expansion of use

[edit]
French gunner in the 15th century, a 1904 illustration
First Battle of Panipat[7]
Bullocks dragging siege-guns up hill during Akbar's Siege of Ranthambore[8]

In 1415, the Portuguese invaded the Mediterranean port town of Ceuta. While it is difficult to confirm the use of firearms in the siege of the city, it is known the Portuguese defended it thereafter with firearms, namely bombardas, colebratas, and falconetes. In 1419, Sultan Abu Sa'id led an army to reconquer the fallen city, and Marinids brought cannons and used them in the assault on Ceuta. Finally, hand-held firearms and riflemen appear in Morocco, in 1437, in an expedition against the people of Tangiers.[9][page needed] It is clear these weapons had developed into several different forms, from small guns to large artillery pieces.

The artillery revolution in Europe caught on during the Hundred Years' War and changed the way that battles were fought. In the preceding decades, the English had even used a gunpowder-like weapon in military campaigns against the Scottish.[10] However, at this time, the cannons used in battle were very small and not particularly powerful. Cannons were only useful for the defense of a castle, as demonstrated at Breteuil in 1356, when the besieged English used a cannon to destroy an attacking French assault tower.[11] By the end of the 14th century, cannons were only powerful enough to knock in roofs, and could not penetrate castle walls.

However, a major change occurred between 1420 and 1430, when artillery became much more powerful and could now batter strongholds and fortresses quite efficiently. The English, French, and Burgundians all advanced in military technology, and as a result the traditional advantage that went to the defense in a siege was lost. Cannons during this period were elongated, and the recipe for gunpowder was improved to make it three times as powerful as before.[12] These changes led to the increased power in the artillery weapons of the time.

The Austrian Pumhart von Steyr, the earliest extant large-calibre gun[13]

Joan of Arc encountered gunpowder weaponry several times. When she led the French against the English at the Battle of Tourelles, in 1430, she faced heavy gunpowder fortifications, and yet her troops prevailed in that battle. In addition, she led assaults against the English-held towns of Jargeau, Meung, and Beaugency, all with the support of large artillery units. When she led the assault on Paris, Joan faced stiff artillery fire, especially from the suburb of St. Denis, which ultimately led to her defeat in this battle. In April 1430, she went to battle against the Burgundians, whose support was purchased by the English. At this time, the Burgundians had the strongest and largest gunpowder arsenal among the European powers, and yet the French, under Joan of Arc's leadership, were able to beat back the Burgundians and defend themselves.[14] As a result, most of the battles of the Hundred Years' War that Joan of Arc participated in were fought with gunpowder artillery.

Dardanelles Gun. Very heavy 15th-C bronze muzzle-loading cannon of type used by Ottomans in siege of Constantinople (1453), showing ornate decoration. Taken by The Land Feb 07 at Fort Nelson, Hampshire.

The army of Mehmet the Conqueror, which conquered Constantinople in 1453, included both artillery and foot soldiers armed with gunpowder weapons.[15] The Ottomans brought to the siege sixty-nine guns in fifteen separate batteries and trained them at the walls of the city. The barrage of Ottoman cannon fire lasted forty days, and they are estimated to have fired 19,320 times.[16] Artillery also played a decisive role in the Battle of St. Jakob an der Birs of 1444. Early cannon were not always reliable; King James II of Scotland was killed by the accidental explosion of one of his own cannon, imported from Flanders, at the siege of Roxburgh Castle in 1460.

The able use of artillery supported to a large measure the expansion and defense of the Portuguese Empire, as it was a necessary tool that allowed the Portuguese to face overwhelming odds both on land and sea from Morocco to Asia.[17] In great sieges and in sea battles, the Portuguese demonstrated a level of proficiency in the use of artillery after the beginning of the 16th century unequalled by contemporary European neighbours, in part due to the experience gained in intense fighting in Morocco, which served as a proving ground for artillery and its practical application, and made Portugal a forerunner in gunnery for decades.[17] During the reign of King Manuel (1495–1521) at least 2017 cannon were sent to Morocco for garrison defense, with more than 3000 cannon estimated to have been required during that 26-year period.[17] An especially noticeable division between siege guns and anti-personnel guns enhanced the use and effectiveness of Portuguese firearms above contemporary powers, making cannon the most essential element in the Portuguese arsenal.[17]

Portuguese artillery on display at the Military Museum of Lisbon, Portugal.

The three major classes of Portuguese artillery were anti-personnel guns with a high borelength (including: rebrodequim, berço, falconete, falcão, sacre, áspide, cão, serpentina and passavolante); bastion guns which could batter fortifications (camelete, leão, pelicano, basilisco, águia, camelo, roqueira, urso); and howitzers that fired large stone cannonballs in an elevated arch, weighted up to 4000 pounds and could fire incendiary devices, such as a hollow iron ball filled with pitch and fuse, designed to be fired at close range and burst on contact.[18] The most popular in Portuguese arsenals was the berço, a 5 cm, one pounder bronze breech-loading cannon that weighted 150 kg with an effective range of 600 meters.[18]

A tactical innovation the Portuguese introduced in fort defense was the use of combinations of projectiles against massed assaults.[19] Although canister shot had been developed in the early 15th century, the Portuguese were the first to employ it extensively, and Portuguese engineers invented a canister round which consisted of a thin lead case filled with iron pellets, that broke up at the muzzle and scattered its contents in a narrow pattern.[19] An innovation which Portugal adopted in advance of other European powers was fuse-delayed action shells, and were commonly used in 1505.[19] Although dangerous, their effectiveness meant a sixth of all rounds used by the Portuguese in Morocco were of the fused-shell variety.[19]

Three of the large Korean artillery, Chongtong in the Jinju National Museum. These cannons were made in the mid 16th century. The closest is a "Cheonja chongtong"(천자총통, 天字銃筒), the second is a "Jija chongtong"(지자총통, 地字銃筒), and the third is a "Hyeonja chongtong"(현자총통, 玄字銃筒).

The new Ming Dynasty established the "Divine Engine Battalion" (神机营), which specialized in various types of artillery. Light cannons and cannons with multiple volleys were developed. In a campaign to suppress a local minority rebellion near today's Burmese border, "the Ming army used a 3-line method of arquebuses/muskets to destroy an elephant formation".[20]

When the Portuguese and Spanish arrived at Southeast Asia, they found that the local kingdoms were already using cannons. Portuguese and Spanish invaders were unpleasantly surprised and even outgunned on occasion.[21] Duarte Barbosa ca. 1514 said that the inhabitants of Java were great masters in casting artillery and very good artillerymen. They made many one-pounder cannons (cetbang or rentaka), long muskets, spingarde (arquebus), schioppi (hand cannon), Greek fire, guns (cannons), and other fire-works. In all aspects the Javanese were considered excellent in casting artillery, and in the knowledge of using it.[22]: 254 [23]: 198 [24]: 224  In 1513, the Javanese fleet led by Pati Unus sailed to attack Portuguese Malacca "with much artillery made in Java, for the Javanese are skilled in founding and casting, and in all works in iron, over and above what they have in India".[25]: 162 [26]: 23  By the early 16th century, the Javanese had already started locally-producing large guns, which were dubbed "sacred cannon[s]" or "holy cannon[s]" and have survived up to the present day – though in limited numbers. These cannons varied between 180 and 260 pounders, weighing anywhere between 3–8 tons, measuring between 3–6 m.[27]

Between 1593 and 1597, about 200,000 Korean and Chinese troops which fought against Japan in Korea actively used heavy artillery in both siege and field combat. Korean forces mounted artillery in ships as naval guns, providing an advantage against Japanese navy which used Kunikuzushi (国崩し – Japanese breech-loading swivel gun) and Ōzutsu (大筒 – large size Tanegashima) as their largest firearms.[28][29]

In the 16th century Ottoman Empire, Humbaracıs were founded.[30]

Smoothbores

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Artillery with gabion fortification

Bombards were of value mainly in sieges. A famous Turkish example used at the siege of Constantinople in 1453 weighed 19 tons[vague], took 200 men and sixty oxen to emplace, and could fire just seven times a day. The Fall of Constantinople was perhaps "the first event of supreme importance whose result was determined by the use of artillery" when the huge bronze cannons of Mehmed II breached the city's walls, ending the Byzantine Empire, according to Sir Charles Oman.[31]

Bombards developed in Europe were massive smoothbore weapons distinguished by their lack of a field carriage, immobility once emplaced, highly individual design, and noted unreliability (in 1460 James II, King of Scots, was killed when one exploded at the siege of Roxburgh). Their large size precluded the barrels being cast and they were constructed out of metal staves or rods bound together with hoops like a barrel, giving their name to the gun barrel.[32][page needed]

The use of the word "cannon" marks the introduction in the 15th century of a dedicated field carriage with axle, trail and animal-drawn limber—this produced mobile field pieces that could move and support an army in action, rather than being found only in the siege and static defenses. The reduction in the size of the barrel was due to improvements in both iron technology and gunpowder manufacture, while the development of trunnions—projections at the side of the cannon as an integral part of the cast—allowed the barrel to be fixed to a more movable base, and also made raising or lowering the barrel much easier.[32]

The Tsar Cannon (caliber 890 mm), cast in 1586 in Moscow. It is the largest bombard in the world.

The first land-based mobile weapon is usually credited to Jan Žižka, who deployed his oxen-hauled cannon during the Hussite Wars of Bohemia (1418–1424). However, cannons were still large and cumbersome. With the rise of musketry in the 16th century, cannon were largely (though not entirely) displaced from the battlefield—the cannon were too slow and cumbersome to be used and too easily lost to a rapid enemy advance.

The combining of shot and powder into a single unit, a cartridge, occurred in the 1620s with a simple fabric bag, and was quickly adopted by all nations. It speeded loading and made it safer, but unexpelled bag fragments were an additional fouling in the gun barrel and a new tool—a worm—was introduced to remove them. Gustavus Adolphus is identified as the general who made cannon an effective force on the battlefield—pushing the development of much lighter and smaller weapons and deploying them in far greater numbers than previously. The outcome of battles was still determined by the clash of infantry.

Shells, explosive-filled fused projectiles, were in use by the 15th century.[33][34] The development of specialized pieces—shipboard artillery, howitzers and mortars—was also begun in this period. More esoteric designs, like the multi-barrel ribauldequin (known as "organ guns"), were also produced.[dubiousdiscuss]

The 1650 book by Kazimierz Siemienowicz Artis Magnae Artilleriae pars prima[35] was one of the most important contemporary publications on the subject of artillery. For over two centuries this work was used in Europe as a basic artillery manual.[36]

The Siege of Stralsund during the Thirty Years' War, 1628

One of the most significant effects of artillery during this period was however somewhat more indirect—by easily reducing to rubble any medieval-type fortification or city wall (some which had stood since Roman times), it abolished millennia of siege-warfare strategies and styles of fortification building.[32] This led, among other things, to a frenzy of new bastion-style fortifications to be built all over Europe and in its colonies, but also had a strong integrating effect on emerging nation-states, as kings were able to use their newfound artillery superiority to force any local dukes or lords to submit to their will, setting the stage for the absolutist kingdoms to come.[32]

Modern rocket artillery can trace its heritage back to the Mysorean rockets of Mysore. Their first recorded use was in 1780 during the battles of the Second, Third and Fourth Mysore Wars. The wars fought between the British East India Company and the Kingdom of Mysore in India made use of the rockets as a weapon. In the Battle of Pollilur, the Siege of Seringapatam (1792) and in Battle of Seringapatam in 1799, these rockets were used with considerable effect against the British.[37] After the wars, several Mysore rockets were sent to England, but experiments with heavier payloads were unsuccessful. In 1804 William Congreve, considering the Mysorian rockets to have too short a range (less than 1,000 yards) developed rockets in numerous sizes with ranges up to 3,000 yards and eventually utilizing iron casing as the Congreve rocket which were used effectively during the Napoleonic Wars and the War of 1812.[38]

Napoleonic

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A 19th-century cannon, set in the wall of Acre to commemorate the city's resistance to the 1799 siege by Napoleon's troops.

With the Napoleonic Wars, artillery experienced changes in both physical design and operation. Rather than being overseen by "mechanics", artillery was viewed as its own service branch with the capability of dominating the battlefield. The success of the French artillery companies was at least in part due to the presence of specially trained artillery officers leading and coordinating during the chaos of battle.[39] Napoleon, himself a former artillery officer, perfected the tactic of massed artillery batteries unleashed upon a critical point in his enemies' line as a prelude to a decisive infantry and cavalry assault.

Physically, cannons continued to become smaller and lighter. During the Seven Years War, King Frederick II of Prussia used these advances to deploy horse artillery that could move throughout the battlefield. Frederick also introduced the reversible iron ramrod, which was much more resistant to breakage than older wooden designs. The reversibility aspect also helped increase the rate of fire, since a soldier would no longer have to worry about what end of the ramrod they were using.[40]

Jean-Baptiste de Gribeauval, a French artillery engineer, introduced the standardization of cannon design in the mid-18th century. He developed a 6-inch (150 mm) field howitzer whose gun barrel, carriage assembly and ammunition specifications were made uniform for all French cannons. The standardized interchangeable parts of these cannons down to the nuts, bolts and screws made their mass production and repair much easier. While the Gribeauval system made for more efficient production and assembly, the carriages used were heavy and the gunners were forced to march on foot (instead of riding on the limber and gun as in the British system).[41] Each cannon was named for the weight of its projectiles, giving us variants such as 4, 8, and 12, indicating the weight in pounds. The projectiles themselves included solid balls or canister containing lead bullets or other material. These canister shots acted as massive shotguns, peppering the target with hundreds of projectiles at close range.[42] The solid balls, known as round shot, was most effective when fired at shoulder-height across a flat, open area. The ball would tear through the ranks of the enemy or bounce along the ground breaking legs and ankles.[43]

Modern

[edit]
Prussian artillery at the Battle of Langensalza (1866)

The development of modern artillery occurred in the mid to late 19th century as a result of the convergence of various improvements in the underlying technology. Advances in metallurgy allowed for the construction of breech-loading rifled guns that could fire at a much greater muzzle velocity.

After the British artillery was shown up in the Crimean War as having barely changed since the Napoleonic Wars, the industrialist William Armstrong was awarded a contract by the government to design a new piece of artillery. Production started in 1855 at the Elswick Ordnance Company and the Royal Arsenal at Woolwich, and the outcome was the revolutionary Armstrong Gun, which marked the birth of modern artillery.[44][45] Three of its features particularly stand out.

Armstrong gun deployed by Japan during the Boshin war (1868–69)

First, the piece was rifled, which allowed for a much more accurate and powerful action. Although rifling had been tried on small arms since the 15th century, the necessary machinery to accurately rifle artillery was not available until the mid-19th century. Martin von Wahrendorff, and Joseph Whitworth independently produced rifled cannon in the 1840s, but it was Armstrong's gun that was first to see widespread use during the Crimean War.[46] The cast iron shell of the Armstrong gun was similar in shape to a Minié ball and had a thin lead coating which made it fractionally larger than the gun's bore and which engaged with the gun's rifling grooves to impart spin to the shell. This spin, together with the elimination of windage as a result of the tight fit, enabled the gun to achieve greater range and accuracy than existing smooth-bore muzzle-loaders with a smaller powder charge.

8-inch Armstrong gun during American Civil War, Fort Fisher, 1865

His gun was also a breech-loader. Although attempts at breech-loading mechanisms had been made since medieval times, the essential engineering problem was that the mechanism could not withstand the explosive charge. It was only with the advances in metallurgy and precision engineering capabilities during the Industrial Revolution that Armstrong was able to construct a viable solution. The gun combined all the properties that make up an effective artillery piece. The gun was mounted on a carriage in such a way as to return the gun to firing position after the recoil.

The French Canon de 75 modèle 1897, the first modern artillery piece

What made the gun really revolutionary lay in the technique of the construction of the gun barrel that allowed it to withstand much more powerful explosive forces. The "built-up" method involved assembling the barrel with wrought-iron (later mild steel was used) tubes of successively smaller diameter.[47] The tube would then be heated to allow it to expand and fit over the previous tube. When it cooled the gun would contract although not back to its original size, which allowed an even pressure along the walls of the gun which was directed inward against the outward forces that the gun's firing exerted on the barrel.[48]

"Weapons of the Field Artillery"" (1966).

Another innovative feature, more usually associated with 20th-century guns, was what Armstrong called its "grip", which was essentially a squeeze bore; the 6 inches of the bore at the muzzle end was of slightly smaller diameter, which centered the shell before it left the barrel and at the same time slightly swaged down its lead coating, reducing its diameter and slightly improving its ballistic qualities.

Armstrong's system was adopted in 1858, initially for "special service in the field" and initially he produced only smaller artillery pieces, 6-pounder (2.5 in/64 mm) mountain or light field guns, 9-pounder (3 in/76 mm) guns for horse artillery, and 12-pounder (3 inches /76 mm) field guns.

The first cannon to contain all 'modern' features is generally considered to be the French 75 of 1897.[49][50] The gun used cased ammunition, was breech-loading, had modern sights, and a self-contained firing mechanism. It was the first field gun to include a hydro-pneumatic recoil mechanism, which kept the gun's trail and wheels perfectly still during the firing sequence. Since it did not need to be re-aimed after each shot, the crew could fire as soon as the barrel returned to its resting position. In typical use, the French 75 could deliver fifteen rounds per minute on its target, either shrapnel or melinite high-explosive, up to about 5 miles (8,500 m) away. Its firing rate could even reach close to 30 rounds per minute, albeit only for a very short time and with a highly experienced crew. These were rates that contemporary bolt action rifles could not match.

Indirect fire

[edit]

Indirect fire, the firing of a projectile without relying on direct line of sight between the gun and the target, possibly dates back to the 16th century.[51] Early battlefield use of indirect fire may have occurred at Paltzig in July 1759, when the Russian artillery fired over the tops of trees,[52] and at the Battle of Waterloo, where a battery of the Royal Horse Artillery fired shrapnel indirectly against advancing French troops.[53]

In 1882, Russian Lieutenant Colonel KG Guk published Indirect Fire for Field Artillery, which provided a practical method of using aiming points for indirect fire by describing, "all the essentials of aiming points, crest clearance, and corrections to fire by an observer".[54]

A few years later, the Richtfläche (lining-plane) sight was invented in Germany and provided a means of indirect laying in azimuth, complementing the clinometers for indirect laying in elevation which already existed. Despite conservative opposition within the German army, indirect fire was adopted as doctrine by the 1890s. In the early 1900s, Goertz in Germany developed an optical sight for azimuth laying. It quickly replaced the lining-plane; in English, it became the 'Dial Sight' (UK) or 'Panoramic Telescope' (US).

The British halfheartedly experimented with indirect fire techniques since the 1890s, but with the onset of the Boer War, they were the first to apply the theory in practice in 1899, although they had to improvise without a lining-plane sight.[55]

In the next 15 years leading up to World War I, the techniques of indirect fire became available for all types of artillery. Indirect fire was the defining characteristic of 20th-century artillery and led to undreamt of changes in the amount of artillery, its tactics, organisation, and techniques, most of which occurred during World War I.

An implication of indirect fire and improving guns was increasing range between gun and target, this increased the time of flight and the vertex of the trajectory. The result was decreasing accuracy (the increasing distance between the target and the mean point of impact of the shells aimed at it) caused by the increasing effects of non-standard conditions. Indirect firing data was based on standard conditions including a specific muzzle velocity, zero wind, air temperature and density, and propellant temperature. In practice, this standard combination of conditions almost never existed, they varied throughout the day and day to day, and the greater the time of flight, the greater the inaccuracy. An added complication was the need for survey to accurately fix the coordinates of the gun position and provide accurate orientation for the guns. Of course, targets had to be accurately located, but by 1916, air photo interpretation techniques enabled this, and ground survey techniques could sometimes be used.

German 15cm field howitzers during World War I

In 1914, the methods of correcting firing data for the actual conditions were often convoluted, and the availability of data about actual conditions was rudimentary or non-existent, the assumption was that fire would always be ranged (adjusted). British heavy artillery worked energetically to progressively solve all these problems from late 1914 onwards, and by early 1918, had effective processes in place for both field and heavy artillery. These processes enabled 'map-shooting', later called 'predicted fire'; it meant that effective fire could be delivered against an accurately located target without ranging. Nevertheless, the mean point of impact was still some tens of yards from the target-centre aiming point. It was not precision fire, but it was good enough for concentrations and barrages. These processes remain in use into the 21st century with refinements to calculations enabled by computers and improved data capture about non-standard conditions.

The British Major General Henry Hugh Tudor pioneered armour and artillery cooperation at the breakthrough Battle of Cambrai. The improvements in providing and using data for non-standard conditions (propellant temperature, muzzle velocity, wind, air temperature, and barometric pressure) were developed by the major combatants throughout the war and enabled effective predicted fire.[56] The effectiveness of this was demonstrated by the British in 1917 (at Cambrai) and by Germany the following year (Operation Michael).

Major General J.B.A. Bailey, British Army (retired) wrote:

From the middle of the eighteenth century to the middle of the nineteenth, artillery is judged to have accounted for perhaps 50% of battlefield casualties. In the sixty years preceding 1914, this figure was probably as low as 10 percent. The remaining 90 percent fell to small arms, whose range and accuracy had come to rival those of artillery. ... [By WWI] The British Royal Artillery, at over one million men, grew to be larger than the Royal Navy. Bellamy (1986), pp. 1–7, cites the percentage of casualties caused by artillery in various theaters since 1914: in the First World War, 45 percent of Russian casualties and 58 percent of British casualties on the Western Front; in the Second World War, 75 percent of British casualties in North Africa and 51 percent of Soviet casualties (61 percent in 1945) and 70 percent of German casualties on the Eastern Front; and in the Korean War, 60 percent of US casualties, including those inflicted by mortars.[57]

— J.B.A. Bailey (2004). Field artillery and firepower

An estimated 75,000 French soldiers were casualties of friendly artillery fire in the four years of World War I.[58]

Precision-guidance

[edit]
M982 Excalibur guided artillery shell

Modern artillery is most obviously distinguished by its long range, firing an explosive shell or rocket and a mobile carriage for firing and transport. However, its most important characteristic is the use of indirect fire, whereby the firing equipment is aimed without seeing the target through its sights. Indirect fire emerged at the beginning of the 20th century and was greatly enhanced by the development of predicted fire methods in World War I. However, indirect fire was area fire; it was and is not suitable for destroying point targets; its primary purpose is area suppression. Nevertheless, by the late 1970s precision-guided munitions started to appear, notably the US 155 mm Copperhead and its Soviet 152 mm Krasnopol equivalent that had success in Indian service. These relied on laser designation to 'illuminate' the target that the shell homed onto. However, in the early 21st century, the Global Positioning System (GPS) enabled relatively cheap and accurate guidance for shells and missiles, notably the US 155 mm Excalibur and the 227 mm GMLRS rocket. The introduction of these led to a new issue, the need for very accurate three dimensional target coordinates—the mensuration process.[59]

M1156 precision guidance kit can be added to unguided projectiles

Weapons covered by the term 'modern artillery' include "cannon" artillery (such as howitzer, mortar, and field gun) and rocket artillery. Certain smaller-caliber mortars are more properly designated small arms rather than artillery, albeit indirect-fire small arms. This term also came to include coastal artillery which traditionally defended coastal areas against seaborne attack and controlled the passage of ships. With the advent of powered flight at the start of the 20th century, artillery also included ground-based anti-aircraft batteries.

The term "artillery" has traditionally not been used for projectiles with internal guidance systems, preferring the term "missilery", though some modern artillery units employ surface-to-surface missiles. Advances in terminal guidance systems for small munitions has allowed large-caliber guided projectiles to be developed, blurring this distinction.[60] See Long Range Precision Fires (LRPF), Joint terminal attack controller

Ammunition

[edit]

One of the most important roles of logistics is the supply of munitions as a primary type of artillery consumable, their storage (ammunition dump, arsenal, magazine ) and the provision of fuzes, detonators and warheads at the point where artillery troops will assemble the charge, projectile, bomb or shell.

A round of artillery ammunition comprises four components:

  1. Fuze
  2. Projectile
  3. Propellant
  4. Primer

Fuzes

[edit]

Fuzes are the devices that initiate an artillery projectile, either to detonate its High Explosive (HE) filling or eject its cargo (illuminating flare or smoke canisters being examples). The official military spelling is "fuze".[61] Broadly there are four main types:

Most artillery fuzes are nose fuzes. However, base fuzes have been used with armor-piercing shells and for squash head (High-Explosive Squash Head (HESH) or High Explosive, Plastic (HEP) anti-tank shells). At least one nuclear shell and its non-nuclear spotting version also used a multi-deck mechanical time fuze fitted into its base.

Impact fuzes were, and in some armies remain, the standard fuze for HE projectiles. Their default action is normally 'superquick', some have had a 'graze' action which allows them to penetrate light cover and others have 'delay'. Delay fuzes allow the shell to penetrate the ground before exploding. Armor or Concrete-Piercing (AP or CP) fuzes are specially hardened. During World War I and later, ricochet fire with delay or graze fuzed HE shells, fired with a flat angle of descent, was used to achieve airburst.

HE shells can be fitted with other fuzes. Airburst fuzes usually have a combined airburst and impact function. However, until the introduction of proximity fuzes, the airburst function was mostly used with cargo munitions—for example, shrapnel, illumination, and smoke. The larger calibers of anti-aircraft artillery are almost always used airburst. Airburst fuzes have to have the fuze length (running time) set on them. This is done just before firing using either a wrench or a fuze setter pre-set to the required fuze length.

Early airburst fuzes used igniferous timers which lasted into the second half of the 20th century. Mechanical time fuzes appeared in the early part of the century. These required a means of powering them. The Thiel mechanism used a spring and escapement (i.e. 'clockwork'), Junghans used centrifugal force and gears, and Dixi used centrifugal force and balls. From about 1980, electronic time fuzes started replacing mechanical ones for use with cargo munitions.

Proximity fuzes have been of two types: photo-electric or radar. The former was not very successful and seems only to have been used with British anti-aircraft artillery 'unrotated projectiles' (rockets) in World War II. Radar proximity fuzes were a big improvement over the mechanical (time) fuzes which they replaced. Mechanical time fuzes required an accurate calculation of their running time, which was affected by non-standard conditions. With HE (requiring a burst 20 to 30 feet (9.1 m) above the ground), if this was very slightly wrong the rounds would either hit the ground or burst too high. Accurate running time was less important with cargo munitions that burst much higher.

The first radar proximity fuzes (perhaps originally codenamed 'VT' and later called Variable Time (VT)) were invented by the British and developed by the US and initially used against aircraft in World War II. Their ground use was delayed for fear of the enemy recovering 'blinds' (artillery shells which failed to detonate) and copying the fuze. The first proximity fuzes were designed to detonate about 30 feet (9.1 m) above the ground. These air-bursts are much more lethal against personnel than ground bursts because they deliver a greater proportion of useful fragments and deliver them into terrain where a prone soldier would be protected from ground bursts.

However, proximity fuzes can suffer premature detonation because of the moisture in heavy rain clouds. This led to 'Controlled Variable Time' (CVT) after World War II. These fuzes have a mechanical timer that switched on the radar about 5 seconds before expected impact, they also detonated on impact.

The proximity fuze emerged on the battlefields of Europe in late December 1944. They have become known as the U.S. Artillery's "Christmas present", and were much appreciated when they arrived during the Battle of the Bulge. They were also used to great effect in anti-aircraft projectiles in the Pacific against kamikaze as well as in Britain against V-1 flying bombs.[62]

Electronic multi-function fuzes started to appear around 1980. Using solid-state electronics they were relatively cheap and reliable, and became the standard fitted fuze in operational ammunition stocks in some western armies. The early versions were often limited to proximity airburst, albeit with height of burst options, and impact. Some offered a go/no-go functional test through the fuze setter.

Later versions introduced induction fuze setting and testing instead of physically placing a fuze setter on the fuze. The latest, such as Junghan's DM84U provide options giving, superquick, delay, a choice of proximity heights of burst, time and a choice of foliage penetration depths.

Projectiles

[edit]
Artillery can be used to fire nuclear warheads, as seen in this 1953 nuclear test.

The projectile is the munition or "bullet" fired downrange. This may be an explosive device. Projectiles have traditionally been classified as "shot" or "shell", the former being solid and the latter having some form of "payload".

Shells can be divided into three configurations: bursting, base ejection or nose ejection. The latter is sometimes called the shrapnel configuration. The most modern is base ejection, which was introduced in World War I. Base and nose ejection are almost always used with airburst fuzes. Bursting shells use various types of fuze depending on the nature of the payload and the tactical need at the time.

Payloads have included:

  • Bursting: high-explosive, white phosphorus, coloured marker, chemical, nuclear devices; high-explosive anti-tank and canister may be considered special types of bursting shell.
  • Nose ejection: shrapnel, star, incendiary and flechette (a more modern version of shrapnel).
  • Base ejection: Dual-Purpose Improved Conventional Munition bomblets, which arm themselves and function after a set number of rotations after having been ejected from the projectile (this produces unexploded sub-munitions, or "duds", which remain dangerous), scatterable mines, illuminating, coloured flare, smoke, incendiary, propaganda, chaff[63] (foil to jam radars)[64] and modern exotics such as electronic payloads and sensor-fuzed munitions.

Stabilization

[edit]
  • Rifled: Artillery projectiles have traditionally been spin-stabilised, meaning that they spin in flight so that gyroscopic forces prevent them from tumbling. Spin is induced by gun barrels having rifling, which engages a soft metal band around the projectile, called a "driving band" (UK) or "rotating band" (U.S.). The driving band is usually made of copper, but synthetic materials have been used.
  • Smoothbore/fin-stabilized: In modern artillery, smoothbore barrels have been used mostly by mortars. These projectiles use fins in the airflow at their rear to maintain correct orientation. The primary benefits over rifled barrels is reduced barrel wear, longer ranges that can be achieved (due to the reduced loss of energy to friction and gas escaping around the projectile via the rifling) and larger explosive cores for a given caliber artillery due to less metal needing to be used to form the case of the projectile because of less force applied to the shell from the non-rifled sides of the barrel of smooth bore guns.
  • Rifled/fin-stabilized: A combination of the above can be used, where the barrel is rifled, but the projectile also has deployable fins for stabilization,[65] guidance[citation needed] or gliding.[66]

Propellant

[edit]
152 mm howitzer D-20 during the Iran–Iraq War

Most forms of artillery require a propellant to propel the projectile to the target. Propellant is always a low explosive, which means it deflagrates, rather than detonating like high explosives. The shell is accelerated to a high velocity in a very short time by the rapid generation of gas from the burning propellant. This high pressure is achieved by burning the propellant in a contained area, either the chamber of a gun barrel or the combustion chamber of a rocket motor.

Until the late 19th century, the only available propellant was black powder. It had many disadvantages as a propellant; it has relatively low power, requiring large amounts of powder to fire projectiles, and created thick clouds of white smoke that would obscure the targets, betray the positions of guns, and make aiming impossible. In 1846, nitrocellulose (also known as guncotton) was discovered, and the high explosive nitroglycerin was discovered at nearly the same time. Nitrocellulose was significantly more powerful than black powder, and was smokeless. Early guncotton was unstable, however, and burned very fast and hot, leading to greatly increased barrel wear. Widespread introduction of smokeless powder would wait until the advent of the double-base powders, which combine nitrocellulose and nitroglycerin to produce powerful, smokeless, stable propellant.

Many other formulations were developed in the following decades, generally trying to find the optimum characteristics of a good artillery propellant – low temperature, high energy, non-corrosive, highly stable, cheap, and easy to manufacture in large quantities. Modern gun propellants are broadly divided into three classes: single-base propellants that are mainly or entirely nitrocellulose based, double-base propellants consisting of a combination of nitrocellulose and nitroglycerin, and triple base composed of a combination of nitrocellulose and nitroglycerin and nitroguanidine.

Artillery shells fired from a barrel can be assisted to greater range in three ways:

  • Rocket-assisted projectiles enhance and sustain the projectile's velocity by providing additional 'push' from a small rocket motor that is part of the projectile's base.
  • Base bleed uses a small pyrotechnic charge at the base of the projectile to introduce sufficient combustion products into the low-pressure region behind the base of the projectile responsible for a large proportion of the drag.
  • Ramjet-assisted, similar to rocket-assisted, but using a ramjet instead of a rocket motor; it is anticipated that a ramjet-assisted 120-mm mortar shell could reach a range of 22 mi (35 km).[67]

Propelling charges for barrel artillery can be provided either as cartridge bags or in metal cartridge cases. Generally, anti-aircraft artillery and smaller-caliber (up to 3" or 76.2 mm) guns use metal cartridge cases that include the round and propellant, similar to a modern rifle cartridge. This simplifies loading and is necessary for very high rates of fire. Bagged propellant allows the amount of powder to be raised or lowered, depending on the range to the target. It also makes handling of larger shells easier. Cases and bags require totally different types of breech. A metal case holds an integral primer to initiate the propellant and provides the gas seal to prevent the gases leaking out of the breech; this is called obturation. With bagged charges, the breech itself provides obturation and holds the primer. In either case, the primer is usually percussion, but electrical is also used, and laser ignition is emerging. Modern 155 mm guns have a primer magazine fitted to their breech.

Battleship ammunition: 16" artillery shells aboard a United States Iowa-class battleship

Artillery ammunition has four classifications according to use:

  • Service: ammunition used in live fire training or for wartime use in a combat zone. Also known as "warshot" ammunition.
  • Practice: Ammunition with a non- or minimally-explosive projectile that mimics the characteristics (range, accuracy) of live rounds for use under training conditions. Practice artillery ammunition often utilizes a colored-smoke-generating bursting charge for marking purposes in place of the normal high-explosive charge.
  • Dummy: Ammunition with an inert warhead, inert primer, and no propellant; used for training or display.
  • Blank: Ammunition with live primer, greatly reduced propellant charge (typically black powder), and no projectile; used for training, demonstration or ceremonial use.

Field artillery system

[edit]
Cyclone of the 320th French Artillery, in Hoogstade, Belgium, September 5, 1917

Because modern field artillery mostly uses indirect fire, the guns have to be part of a system that enables them to attack targets invisible to them, in accordance with the combined arms plan.

The main functions in the field artillery system are:

  • Communications
  • Command: authority to allocate resources;
  • Target acquisition: detect, identify and deduce the location of targets;
  • Control: authority to decide which targets to attack and allot fire units to the attack;
  • Computation of firing data – to deliver fire from a fire unit onto its target;
  • Fire units: guns, launchers or mortars grouped together;
  • Specialist services: produce data to support the production of accurate firing data;
  • Logistic services: to provide combat supplies, particularly ammunition, and equipment support.

All these calculations to produce a quadrant elevation (or range) and azimuth were done manually using instruments, tabulated, data of the moment, and approximations until battlefield computers started appearing in the 1960s and 1970s. While some early calculators copied the manual method (typically substituting polynomials for tabulated data), computers use a different approach. They simulate a shell's trajectory by 'flying' it in short steps and applying data about the conditions affecting the trajectory at each step. This simulation is repeated until it produces a quadrant elevation and azimuth that lands the shell within the required 'closing' distance of the target coordinates. NATO has a standard ballistic model for computer calculations and has expanded the scope of this into the NATO Armaments Ballistic Kernel (NABK)[68] within the SG2 Shareable (Fire Control) Software Suite (S4).

Logistics

[edit]

Supply of artillery ammunition has always been a major component of military logistics. Up until World War I some armies made artillery responsible for all forward ammunition supply because the load of small arms ammunition was trivial compared to artillery. Different armies use different approaches to ammunition supply, which can vary with the nature of operations. Differences include where the logistic service transfers artillery ammunition to artillery, the amount of ammunition carried in units and extent to which stocks are held at unit or battery level. A key difference is whether supply is 'push' or 'pull'. In the former the 'pipeline' keeps pushing ammunition into formations or units at a defined rate. In the latter units fire as tactically necessary and replenish to maintain or reach their authorised holding (which can vary), so the logistic system has to be able to cope with surge and slack.

Classification

[edit]
The Finnish Defence Forces using 130 mm Gun M-46 during a direct fire mission in a live fire exercise in 2010.

Artillery types can be categorised in several ways, for example by type or size of weapon or ordnance, by role or by organizational arrangements.

Types of ordnance

[edit]

The types of cannon artillery are generally distinguished by the velocity at which they fire projectiles. Types of artillery:

German Army PzH 2000 self-propelled artillery
  • Cannon: The oldest type of artillery with direct firing trajectory.
  • Bombard: A type of a large calibre, muzzle-loading artillery piece, a cannon or mortar used during sieges to shoot round stone projectiles at the walls of enemy fortifications.
  • Falconet was a type of light cannon developed in the late 15th century that fired a smaller shot than the similar falcon.
  • Swivel gun is a type of small cannon mounted on a swiveling stand or fork which allows a very wide arc of movement. Camel mounted swivel guns called zamburak were used by the Gunpowder Empires as self-propelled artillery.
  • Volley gun is a gun with multiple single-shot barrels that volley fired simultaneously or sequentially in quick succession. Although capable of unleashing intense firepower, volley guns differ from modern machine guns in that they lack autoloading and automatic fire mechanisms
  • Siege artillery: Large-caliber artillery that have limited mobility with indirect firing trajectory, which was used to bombard targets at long distances.
  • Field artillery: Mobile weapons used to support armies in the field. Subcategories include:
  • Railway gun: Large-caliber weapons that are mounted on, transported by and fired from specially designed railway wagons.
    Naval cannon, early 19th century
  • Naval artillery: Guns mounted on warships to be used either against other naval vessels or to bombard coastal targets in support of ground forces. The crowning achievement of naval artillery was the battleship, but the advent of air power and missiles have rendered this type of artillery largely obsolete. They are typically longer-barreled, low-trajectory, high-velocity weapons designed primarily for a direct-fire role.
  • Coastal artillery: Fixed-position weapons dedicated to defense of a particular location, usually a coast (for example, the Atlantic Wall in World War II) or harbor. Not needing to be mobile, coastal artillery used to be much larger than equivalent field artillery pieces, giving them longer range and more destructive power. Modern coastal artillery (for example, Russia's "Bereg" system) is often self-propelled, (allowing it to avoid counter-battery fire) and fully integrated, meaning that each battery has all of the support systems that it requires (maintenance, targeting radar, etc.) organic to its unit.
  • Aircraft artillery: Large-caliber guns mounted on attack aircraft, this is typically found on slow-flying gunships.
  • Nuclear artillery: Artillery which fires nuclear shells.

Modern field artillery can also be split into two other subcategories: towed and self-propelled. As the name suggests, towed artillery has a prime mover, usually an artillery tractor or truck, to move the piece, crew, and ammunition around. Towed artillery is in some cases equipped with an APU for small displacements. Self-propelled artillery is permanently mounted on a carriage or vehicle with room for the crew and ammunition and is thus capable of moving quickly from one firing position to another, both to support the fluid nature of modern combat and to avoid counter-battery fire. It includes mortar carrier vehicles, many of which allow the mortar to be removed from the vehicle and be used dismounted, potentially in terrain in which the vehicle cannot navigate, or in order to avoid detection.

Organizational types

[edit]

At the beginning of the modern artillery period, the late 19th century, many armies had three main types of artillery, in some case they were sub-branches within the artillery branch in others they were separate branches or corps. There were also other types excluding the armament fitted to warships:

Horse-drawn artillery
Man-pulled artillery
Australian gunners, wearing gas masks, operate a 9.2-inch (230 mm) howitzer during World War I
  • Horse artillery, first formed as regular units in the late 18th century, with the role of supporting cavalry, they were distinguished by the entire crew being mounted.
  • Field or "foot" artillery, the main artillery arm of the field army, using either guns, howitzers, or mortars. In World War II this branch again started using rockets and later surface to surface missiles.
  • Fortress or garrison artillery, operated a nation's fixed defences using guns, howitzers or mortars, either on land or coastal frontiers. Some had deployable elements to provide heavy artillery to the field army. In some nations coast defence artillery was a naval responsibility.
  • Mountain artillery, a few nations treated mountain artillery as a separate branch, in others it was a speciality in another artillery branch. They used light guns or howitzers, usually designed for pack animal transport and easily broken down into small easily handled loads
  • Naval artillery, some nations carried pack artillery on some warships, these were used and manhandled by naval (or marine) landing parties. At times, part of a ship's armament would be unshipped and mated to makeshift carriages and limbers for actions ashore, for example during the Second Boer War, during the First World War the guns from the stricken SMS Königsberg formed the main artillery strength of the German forces in East Africa.
Firing of an 18-pound gun, Louis-Philippe Crepin (1772–1851)

After World War I many nations merged these different artillery branches, in some cases keeping some as sub-branches. Naval artillery disappeared apart from that belonging to marines. However, two new branches of artillery emerged during that war and its aftermath, both used specialised guns (and a few rockets) and used direct not indirect fire, in the 1950s and 1960s both started to make extensive use of missiles:

  • Anti-tank artillery, also under various organisational arrangements but typically either field artillery or a specialist branch and additional elements integral to infantry, etc., units. However, in most armies field and anti-aircraft artillery also had at least a secondary anti-tank role. After World War II anti-tank in Western armies became mostly the responsibility of infantry and armoured branches and ceased to be an artillery matter, with some exceptions.
  • Anti-aircraft artillery, under various organisational arrangements including being part of artillery, a separate corps, even a separate service or being split between army for the field and air force for home defence. In some cases infantry and the new armoured corps also operated their own integral light anti-aircraft artillery. Home defence anti-aircraft artillery often used fixed as well as mobile mountings. Some anti-aircraft guns could also be used as field or anti-tank artillery, providing they had suitable sights.

However, the general switch by artillery to indirect fire before and during World War I led to a reaction in some armies. The result was accompanying or infantry guns. These were usually small, short range guns, that could be easily man-handled and used mostly for direct fire but some could use indirect fire. Some were operated by the artillery branch but under command of the supported unit. In World War II they were joined by self-propelled assault guns, although other armies adopted infantry or close support tanks in armoured branch units for the same purpose, subsequently tanks generally took on the accompanying role.

Equipment types

[edit]

The three main types of artillery "gun" are field guns, howitzers, and mortars. During the 20th century, guns and howitzers have steadily merged in artillery use, making a distinction between the terms somewhat meaningless. By the end of the 20th century, true guns with calibers larger than about 60 mm have become very rare in artillery use, the main users being tanks, ships, and a few residual anti-aircraft and coastal guns. The term "cannon" is a United States generic term that includes guns, howitzers, and mortars; it is not used in other English speaking armies.

The traditional definitions differentiated between guns and howitzers in terms of maximum elevation (well less than 45° as opposed to close to or greater than 45°), number of charges (one or more than one charge), and having higher or lower muzzle velocity, sometimes indicated by barrel length. These three criteria give eight possible combinations, of which guns and howitzers are but two. However, modern "howitzers" have higher velocities and longer barrels than the equivalent "guns" of the first half of the 20th century.

True guns are characterized by long range, having a maximum elevation significantly less than 45°, a high muzzle velocity and hence a relatively long barrel, smooth bore (no rifling) and a single charge. The latter often led to fixed ammunition where the projectile is locked to the cartridge case. There is no generally accepted minimum muzzle velocity or barrel length associated with a gun.

A British 60-pounder (5-inch (130 mm)) gun at full recoil, in action during the Battle of Gallipoli, 1915. Photo by Ernest Brooks.

Howitzers can fire at maximum elevations at least close to 45°; elevations up to about 70° are normal for modern howitzers. Howitzers also have a choice of charges, meaning that the same elevation angle of fire will achieve a different range depending on the charge used. They have rifled bores, lower muzzle velocities and shorter barrels than equivalent guns. All this means they can deliver fire with a steep angle of descent. Because of their multi-charge capability, their ammunition is mostly separate loading (the projectile and propellant are loaded separately).

That leaves six combinations of the three criteria, some of which have been termed gun howitzers. A term first used in the 1930s when howitzers with a relatively high maximum muzzle velocities were introduced, it never became widely accepted, most armies electing to widen the definition of "gun" or "howitzer". By the 1960s, most equipment had maximum elevations up to about 70°, were multi-charge, had quite high maximum muzzle velocities and relatively long barrels.

Mortars are simpler. The modern mortar originated in World War I and there were several patterns. After that war, most mortars settled on the Stokes pattern, characterized by a short barrel, smooth bore, low muzzle velocity, elevation angle of firing generally greater than 45°, and a very simple and light mounting using a "baseplate" on the ground. The projectile with its integral propelling charge was dropped down the barrel from the muzzle to hit a fixed firing pin. Since that time, a few mortars have become rifled and adopted breech loading.

There are other recognized typifying characteristics for artillery. One such characteristic is the type of obturation used to seal the chamber and prevent gases escaping through the breech. This may use a metal cartridge case that also holds the propelling charge, a configuration called "QF" or "quickfiring" by some nations. The alternative does not use a metal cartridge case, the propellant being merely bagged or in combustible cases with the breech itself providing all the sealing. This is called "BL" or "breech loading" by some nations.

A second characteristic is the form of propulsion. Modern equipment can either be towed or self-propelled (SP). A towed gun fires from the ground and any inherent protection is limited to a gun shield. Towing by horse teams lasted throughout World War II in some armies, but others were fully mechanized with wheeled or tracked gun towing vehicles by the outbreak of that war. The size of a towing vehicle depends on the weight of the equipment and the amount of ammunition it has to carry.

A variation of towed is portee, where the vehicle carries the gun which is dismounted for firing. Mortars are often carried this way. A mortar is sometimes carried in an armored vehicle and can either fire from it or be dismounted to fire from the ground. Since the early 1960s it has been possible to carry lighter towed guns and most mortars by helicopter. Even before that, they were parachuted or landed by glider from the time of the first airborne trials in the USSR in the 1930s.

In SP equipment, the gun is an integral part of the vehicle that carries it. SPs first appeared during World War I, but did not really develop until World War II. They are mostly tracked vehicles, but wheeled SPs started to appear in the 1970s. Some SPs have no armor and carry few or no other weapons and ammunition. Armored SPs usually carry a useful ammunition load. Early armored SPs were mostly a "casemate" configuration, in essence an open top armored box offering only limited traverse. However, most modern armored SPs have a full enclosed armored turret, usually giving full traverse for the gun. Many SPs cannot fire without deploying stabilizers or spades, sometimes hydraulic. A few SPs are designed so that the recoil forces of the gun are transferred directly onto the ground through a baseplate. A few towed guns have been given limited self-propulsion by means of an auxiliary engine.

Two other forms of tactical propulsion were used in the first half of the 20th century: Railways or transporting the equipment by road, as two or three separate loads, with disassembly and re-assembly at the beginning and end of the journey. Railway artillery took two forms, railway mountings for heavy and super-heavy guns and howitzers and armored trains as "fighting vehicles" armed with light artillery in a direct fire role. Disassembled transport was also used with heavy and super heavy weapons and lasted into the 1950s.

Caliber categories

[edit]

A third form of artillery typing is to classify it as "light", "medium", "heavy" and various other terms. It appears to have been introduced in World War I, which spawned a very wide array of artillery in all sorts of sizes so a simple categorical system was needed. Some armies defined these categories by bands of calibers. Different bands were used for different types of weapons—field guns, mortars, anti-aircraft guns and coastal guns.[69]

Modern operations

[edit]
ATAGS showcasing towing, turning and firing of rounds
Two French Army Giat GCT 155mm (155 mm AUF1) Self-propelled Guns, 40th Regiment d' Artillerie, with IFOR markings are parked at Hekon base, near Mostar, Bosnia-Herzegovina, in support of Operation Joint Endeavor

List of countries in order of amount of artillery (only conventional barrel ordnance is given, in use with land forces):[70][71]

Country Number Ref (2010)
2010 2016[71]
Russia 26,121 4,180+ [72]
North Korea 17,900+ 21,100+ [73]
China 17,700+ 13,178+ [74]
India 11,258+ 9,682+ [75]
South Korea 10,774+ 11,038+ [76]
United States 8,137 5,923 [77]
Turkey 7,450+ 7,852+ [78]
Israel 5,432 530 [79]
Egypt 4,480 4,468 [80]
Pakistan 4,291+ 4,472+ [81]
Syria 3,805+ Unknown [81]
Iran 3,668+ 8,798+ [81]
Algeria 3,465 1,109 [81]
Jordan 2,339 1,429+ [81]
Iraq 2,300+ 1,061+ [81]
Finland 1,398 647 [82]
Brazil 900 1,847 [81]
Cameroon 883 106+ [81]
Morocco 848 2,141 [81]
Hungary 835 69 [citation needed]
France 758 298+ [81]

Artillery is used in a variety of roles depending on its type and caliber. The general role of artillery is to provide fire support—"the application of fire, coordinated with the manoeuvre of forces to destroy, neutralize or suppress the enemy". This NATO definition makes artillery a supporting arm although not all NATO armies agree with this logic. The italicised terms are NATO's.[83]

Unlike rockets, guns (or howitzers as some armies still call them) and mortars are suitable for delivering close supporting fire. However, they are all suitable for providing deep supporting fire although the limited range of many mortars tends to exclude them from the role. Their control arrangements and limited range also mean that mortars are most suited to direct supporting fire. Guns are used either for this or general supporting fire while rockets are mostly used for the latter. However, lighter rockets may be used for direct fire support. These rules of thumb apply to NATO armies.

Modern mortars, because of their lighter weight and simpler, more transportable design, are usually an integral part of infantry and, in some armies, armour units. This means they generally do not have to concentrate their fire so their shorter range is not a disadvantage. Some armies also consider infantry operated mortars to be more responsive than artillery, but this is a function of the control arrangements and not the case in all armies. However, mortars have always been used by artillery units and remain with them in many armies, including a few in NATO.

In NATO armies artillery is usually assigned a tactical mission that establishes its relationship and responsibilities to the formation or units it is assigned to. It seems that not all NATO nations use the terms and outside NATO others are probably used. The standard terms are: direct support, general support, general support reinforcing and reinforcing. These tactical missions are in the context of the command authority: operational command, operational control, tactical command or tactical control.

In NATO direct support generally means that the directly supporting artillery unit provides observers and liaison to the manoeuvre troops being supported, typically an artillery battalion or equivalent is assigned to a brigade and its batteries to the brigade's battalions. However, some armies achieve this by placing the assigned artillery units under command of the directly supported formation. Nevertheless, the batteries' fire can be concentrated onto a single target, as can the fire of units in range and with the other tactical missions.

Application of fire

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A 155 mm artillery shell fired by a United States 11th Marine Regiment M-198 howitzer

There are several dimensions to this subject. The first is the notion that fire may be against an opportunity target or may be arranged. If it is the latter it may be either on-call or scheduled. Arranged targets may be part of a fire plan. Fire may be either observed or unobserved, if the former it may be adjusted, if the latter then it has to be predicted. Observation of adjusted fire may be directly by a forward observer or indirectly via some other target acquisition system.

NATO also recognises several different types of fire support for tactical purposes:

  • Counterbattery fire: delivered for the purpose of destroying or neutralizing the enemy's fire support system.
  • Counterpreparation fire: intensive prearranged fire delivered when the imminence of the enemy attack is discovered.
  • Covering fire: used to protect troops when they are within range of enemy small arms.
  • Defensive fire: delivered by supporting units to assist and protect a unit engaged in a defensive action.
  • Final Protective Fire: an immediately available prearranged barrier of fire designed to impede enemy movement across defensive lines or areas.
  • Harassing fire: a random number of shells are fired at random intervals, without any pattern to it that the enemy can predict. This process is designed to hinder enemy forces' movement, and, by the constantly imposed stress, threat of losses and inability of enemy forces to relax or sleep, lowers their morale.
  • Interdiction fire: placed on an area or point to prevent the enemy from using the area or point.
  • Preparation fire: delivered before an attack to weaken the enemy position.

These purposes have existed for most of the 20th century, although their definitions have evolved and will continue to do so, lack of suppression in counterbattery is an omission. Broadly they can be defined as either:

  • Deep supporting fire: directed at objectives not in the immediate vicinity of own force, for neutralizing or destroying enemy reserves and weapons, and interfering with enemy command, supply, communications and observation; or
  • Close supporting fire: placed on enemy troops, weapons or positions which, because of their proximity present the most immediate and serious threat to the supported unit.
USMC M-198 firing outside of Fallujah, Iraq in 2004

Two other NATO terms also need definition:

  • Neutralization fire: delivered to render a target temporarily ineffective or unusable; and
  • Suppression fire: that degrades the performance of a target below the level needed to fulfill its mission. Suppression is usually only effective for the duration of the fire.

The tactical purposes also include various "mission verbs", a rapidly expanding subject with the modern concept of "effects based operations".

Targeting is the process of selecting target and matching the appropriate response to them taking account of operational requirements and capabilities. It requires consideration of the type of fire support required and the extent of coordination with the supported arm. It involves decisions about:

  • what effects are required, for example, neutralization or suppression;
  • the proximity of and risks to own troops or non-combatants;
  • what types of munitions, including their fuzing, are to be used and in what quantities;
  • when the targets should be attacked and possibly for how long;
  • what methods should be used, for example, converged or distributed, whether adjustment is permissible or surprise essential, the need for special procedures such as precision or danger close
  • how many fire units are needed and which ones they should be from those that are available (in range, with the required munitions type and quantity, not allotted to another target, have the most suitable line of fire if there is a risk to own troops or non-combatants);

The targeting process is the key aspect of tactical fire control. Depending on the circumstances and national procedures it may all be undertaken in one place or may be distributed. In armies practicing control from the front, most of the process may be undertaken by a forward observer or other target acquirer. This is particularly the case for a smaller target requiring only a few fire units. The extent to which the process is formal or informal and makes use of computer based systems, documented norms or experience and judgement also varies widely armies and other circumstances.

Surprise may be essential or irrelevant. It depends on what effects are required and whether or not the target is likely to move or quickly improve its protective posture. During World War II UK researchers concluded that for impact fuzed munitions the relative risk were as follows:[citation needed]

  • men standing – 1
  • men lying – 1/3
  • men firing from trenches – 1/15–1/50
  • men crouching in trenches – 1/25–1/100

Airburst munitions significantly increase the relative risk for lying men, etc. Historically most casualties occur in the first 10–15 seconds of fire, i.e. the time needed to react and improve protective posture, however, this is less relevant if airburst is used.

There are several ways of making best use of this brief window of maximum vulnerability:

  • ordering the guns to fire together, either by executive order or by a "fire at" time. The disadvantage is that if the fire is concentrated from many dispersed fire units then there will be different times of flight and the first rounds will be spread in time. To some extent a large concentration offsets the problem because it may mean that only one round is required from each gun and most of these could arrive in the 15 second window.
  • burst fire, a rate of fire to deliver three rounds from each gun within 10 or 15 seconds, this reduces the number of guns and hence fire units needed, which means they may be less dispersed and have less variation in their times of flight. Smaller caliber guns, such as 105 mm, have always been able to deliver three rounds in 15 seconds, larger calibers firing fixed rounds could also do it but it was not until the 1970s that a multi-charge 155 mm howitzer, FH-70 first gained the capability.
  • multiple round simultaneous impact (MRSI), where a single weapon or multiple individual weapons fire multiple rounds at differing trajectories so that all rounds arrive on target at the same time.
  • time on target, fire units fire at the time less their time of flight, this works well with prearranged scheduled fire but is less satisfactory for opportunity targets because it means delaying the delivery of fire by selecting a 'safe' time that all or most fire units can achieve. It can be used with both the previous two methods.

Counter-battery fire

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Modern counter-battery fire developed in World War I, with the objective of defeating the enemy's artillery. Typically such fire was used to suppress enemy batteries when they were or were about to interfere with the activities of friendly forces (such as to prevent enemy defensive artillery fire against an impending attack) or to systematically destroy enemy guns. In World War I the latter required air observation. The first indirect counter-battery fire was in May 1900 by an observer in a balloon.[citation needed]

Enemy artillery can be detected in two ways, either by direct observation of the guns from the air or by ground observers (including specialist reconnaissance), or from their firing signatures. This includes radars tracking the shells in flight to determine their place of origin, sound ranging detecting guns firing and resecting their position from pairs of microphones or cross-observation of gun flashes using observation by human observers or opto-electronic devices, although the widespread adoption of 'flashless' propellant limited the effectiveness of the latter.

Once hostile batteries have been detected they may be engaged immediately by friendly artillery or later at an optimum time, depending on the tactical situation and the counter-battery policy. Air strike is another option. In some situations the task is to locate all active enemy batteries for attack using a counter-battery fire at the appropriate moment in accordance with a plan developed by artillery intelligence staff. In other situations counter-battery fire may occur whenever a battery is located with sufficient accuracy.

Modern counter-battery target acquisition uses unmanned aircraft, counter-battery radar, ground reconnaissance and sound-ranging. Counter-battery fire may be adjusted by some of the systems, for example the operator of an unmanned aircraft can 'follow' a battery if it moves. Defensive measures by batteries include frequently changing position or constructing defensive earthworks, the tunnels used by North Korea being an extreme example. Counter-measures include air defence against aircraft and attacking counter-battery radars physically and electronically.

Modern artillery ammunition. Caliber 155 mm as used by the PzH 2000

Time on target

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A technique called time on target (TOT) was developed by the British Army in North Africa at the end of 1941 and early 1942 particularly for counter-battery fire and other concentrations, it proved very popular. It relied on BBC time signals to enable officers to synchronize their watches to the second because this avoided the need to use military radio networks and the possibility of losing surprise, and the need for field telephone networks in the desert.[84] With this technique the time of flight from each fire unit (battery or troop) to the target is taken from the range or firing tables, or the computer and each engaging fire unit subtracts its time of flight from the TOT to determine the time to fire. An executive order to fire is given to all guns in the fire unit at the correct moment to fire. When each fire unit fires their rounds at their individual firing time all the opening rounds will reach the target area almost simultaneously. This is especially effective when combined with techniques that allow fires for effect to be made without preliminary adjusting fires.

Multiple round simultaneous impact

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Illustration of different trajectories used in MRSI: For any muzzle velocity there is a steeper (> 45°, solid line) and a lower (<45°, dashed line) trajectory. On these different trajectories, the shells have different flight times.
Animation showing how six shots of different elevation, speed and timing can be used to hit a target at the same time (Click for SVG animated with SMIL)

Multiple round simultaneous impact (MRSI) is a modern version of the earlier time on target concept. MRSI is when a single gun fires multiple shells so all arrive at the same target simultaneously. This is possible because there is more than one trajectory for a round to fly to any given target. Typically one is below 45 degrees from horizontal and the other is above it, and by using different sized propellant charges with each shell, it is possible to utilize more than two trajectories. Because the higher trajectories cause the shells to arc higher into the air, they take longer to reach the target. If shells are fired on higher trajectories for initial volleys (starting with the shell with the most propellant and working down) and later volleys are fired on the lower trajectories, with the correct timing the shells will all arrive at the same target simultaneously. This is useful because many more shells can land on the target with no warning. With traditional methods of firing, the target area may have time (however long it takes to reload and re-fire the guns) to take cover between volleys. However, guns capable of burst fire can deliver multiple rounds in a few seconds if they use the same firing data for each, and if guns in more than one location are firing on one target they can use Time on Target procedures so that all their shells arrive at the same time and target.

MRSI has a few prerequisites. The first is guns with a high rate of fire. The second is the ability to use different sized propellant charges. Third is a fire control computer that has the ability to compute MRSI volleys and the capability to produce firing data, sent to each gun, and then presented to the gun commander in the correct order.[85][86] The number of rounds that can be delivered in MRSI depends primarily on the range to the target and the rate of fire. To allow the most shells to reach the target, the target has to be in range of the lowest propellant charge.

Examples of guns with a rate of fire that makes them suitable for MRSI includes UK's AS-90, South Africa's Denel G6-52 (which can land six rounds simultaneously at targets at least 25 km (16 mi) away), Germany's Panzerhaubitze 2000[87] (which can land five rounds simultaneously at targets at least 17 km (11 mi) away), Slovakia's 155 mm SpGH ZUZANA 2,[88] and K9 Thunder.[89]

The Archer project (developed by BAE-Systems Bofors in Sweden) is a 155 mm howitzer on a wheeled chassis which is claimed to be able to deliver up to six shells on target simultaneously from the same gun. The 120 mm twin barrel AMOS mortar system, joint developed by Hägglunds (Sweden) and Patria (Finland),[90] is capable of 7 + 7 shells MRSI. The United States Crusader program (now cancelled) was slated to have MRSI capability. It is unclear how many fire control computers have the necessary capabilities.

Two-round MRSI firings were a popular artillery demonstration in the 1960s, where well trained detachments could show off their skills for spectators.

Air burst

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The destructiveness of artillery bombardments can be enhanced when some or all of the shells are set for airburst, meaning that they explode in the air above the target instead of upon impact. This can be accomplished either through time fuzes or proximity fuzes. Time fuzes use a precise timer to detonate the shell after a preset delay. This technique is tricky and slight variations in the functioning of the fuze can cause it to explode too high and be ineffective, or to strike the ground instead of exploding above it. Since December 1944 (Battle of the Bulge), proximity fuzed artillery shells have been available that take the guesswork out of this process. These employ a miniature, low powered radar transmitter in the fuze to detect the ground and explode them at a predetermined height above it. The return of the weak radar signal completes an electrical circuit in the fuze which explodes the shell. The proximity fuze itself was developed by the British to increase the effectiveness of anti-aircraft warfare.

This is a very effective tactic against infantry and light vehicles, because it scatters the fragmentation of the shell over a larger area and prevents it from being blocked by terrain or entrenchments that do not include some form of robust overhead cover. Combined with TOT or MRSI tactics that give no warning of the incoming rounds, these rounds are especially devastating because many enemy soldiers are likely to be caught in the open; even more so if the attack is launched against an assembly area or troops moving in the open rather than a unit in an entrenched tactical position.

Use in monuments

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An artillery piece in the monument commemorating the 1864 Battle of Tupelo (American Civil War)

Numerous war memorials around the world incorporate an artillery piece that was used in the war or battle commemorated.

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Artillery is defined as the equipment, supplies, ammunition, and personnel involved in the use of cannon, rocket, or surface-to-surface missile launchers to deliver indirect fires in support of military operations. These systems provide suppressive, destructive, neutralizing, or obscuring effects against enemy forces, facilities, and equipment, often at ranges exceeding those of direct-fire weapons. In modern doctrine, artillery encompasses crew-served weapons with calibers typically greater than 20 mm, distinguishing it from small arms and emphasizing its role in fire support coordination across joint and multinational forces. The origins of artillery trace back to ancient civilizations, where mechanical devices served as early means of hurling missiles too heavy to be thrown by hand, including ballistae that fired arrows or stones at low trajectories like field guns and catapults that lobbed projectiles in high arcs similar to howitzers. Trebuchets, using counterweights to launch stones up to 300 pounds over 300 yards, represented a pinnacle of pre- artillery during the . The invention of in 9th-century marked a pivotal advancement, enabling the development of projectiles and leading to the emergence of true cannons by the 13th to 14th centuries in and , which fundamentally altered warfare and battlefield tactics. In contemporary military contexts, artillery systems are categorized into cannon artillery (such as towed or self-propelled howitzers like the M777A2 and M109 series), (including multiple launch rocket systems like HIMARS), missile systems (such as ATACMS), and mortars for close support. These platforms deliver precision-guided munitions for targeted strikes or area effects, integrating with sensors, radars, and assets to counter enemy artillery, suppress air defenses, and shape operations in large-scale combat environments. Historically vital in conflicts from the —where units were established in 1775—to World Wars I and II, artillery remains a cornerstone of , often called the "King of Battle" for its decisive impact on outcomes.

Etymology and Definition

Origins of the Term

The term "artillery" entered the English language in the late , borrowed from Anglo-French artillerie, which denoted "warlike munitions" or implements of , particularly ballistic engines and . This artillerie (attested from the ) derived from the verb artillier (), meaning "to provide or equip with engines of ," and traces back to artilleria, an alteration possibly linked to articulum, a of Latin ars (genitive artis), signifying "," "," or "craft" in the context of provisioning. Historically, the term originally signified bows and arrows as a form of , later expanding to include other engines of . The emphasized the technical equipping of armies, evolving from broader notions of armament to focus on mechanical devices for projecting force. Early textual references highlight the term's initial application to a variety of military apparatus beyond modern connotations. In Jean Froissart's Chronicles, composed in the late , "artillery" appears as one of the earliest documented uses in , used to describe the equipment (leur artillerie) of the at the in 1346, illustrating its application to projectile weaponry like crossbows, while also mentioning the English use of early cannons (kanons). Froissart's account, drawing from eyewitness reports, underscores the word's medieval breadth, encompassing ranged weaponry in the . Over time, the terminology shifted from encompassing all "engines of war"—a phrase common in antiquity and early medieval sources to describe torsion-based devices like ballistae and trebuchets—to denoting specifically gunpowder-propelled systems by the late . This narrowing occurred as black powder weapons, introduced to around the 13th century, supplanted mechanical engines, with "artillery" increasingly reserved for and bombards that revolutionized and field tactics. By the , the term had solidified in treatises to refer exclusively to large-caliber firearms mounted on carriages, reflecting the dominance of explosive propulsion in European warfare.

Core Characteristics and Role in Warfare

Artillery is defined as long-range, crew-served weapons systems that employ projectiles propelled by forces, typically mounted on carriages, towed platforms, or self-propelled vehicles to deliver support. These systems encompass cannons, rockets, and missiles, operated by trained personnel to provide lethal and nonlethal effects across various operational domains. Unlike direct-fire weapons such as rifles or tank guns, artillery emphasizes extended-range projection, enabling engagement of targets beyond line-of-sight while minimizing exposure of operating crews. Core characteristics of artillery include high-velocity propulsion for ranges often exceeding several kilometers, capability for area suppression through fragmentation and blast effects, and adaptability for all-weather operations. These traits allow artillery to deliver responsive, continuous fires that can destroy fortifications, neutralize enemy positions, or obscure areas with smoke, typically using munitions like high- shells or precision-guided rounds. Integration with tactics is fundamental, as artillery synchronizes with , armor, aviation, and other elements to shape the , protect maneuvering forces, and exploit enemy vulnerabilities through coordinated measures. In warfare, artillery has evolved from primarily serving as siege breakers in medieval conflicts, where heavy bombards focused on demolishing fortifications through sheer destructive power, to providing mobile in 20th-century operations. Early systems prioritized area devastation over accuracy, using large-caliber guns to breach walls and suppress defenders at close ranges. By the , advancements in mobility—such as wheeled carriages and self-propelled mounts—transformed artillery into a versatile asset for offensive and defensive maneuvers, emphasizing massed indirect fires to achieve fire superiority and disrupt enemy cohesion, though precision remained secondary until the introduction of guided munitions. This strategic role underscores artillery's importance in enabling operational flexibility, deterring advances, and consolidating gains across multidomain battlespaces.

Historical Development

Early Gunpowder and Medieval Artillery

, a revolutionary incendiary compound composed primarily of saltpeter, , and , was invented in mid-9th-century during the (618–907 CE) by Taoist alchemists experimenting with elixirs for immortality. Initially termed "huo yao" or fire medicine, its explosive potential was soon recognized beyond alchemical pursuits. The first documented formula appears in the , a military manual compiled in 1044 CE, marking the compound's formalization for strategic applications. During the (960–1279 CE), gunpowder underwent rapid military adaptation, evolving from incendiary devices to battlefield weapons by the 10th and 11th centuries. Early innovations included fire lances—bamboo or metal tubes filled with that projected flames and shrapnel—and explosive bombs launched via catapults, enhancing siege capabilities against northern invaders like the Jurchens. By the , these adaptations had proliferated, with rockets and poison-laced grenades integrated into Song arsenals, supplementing traditional trebuchets and foreshadowing the shift toward projectile artillery. This era's developments, driven by ongoing conflicts, established as a core element of Chinese warfare, though its use remained incendiary rather than propulsive until later refinements. Gunpowder technology spread westward through the Mongol Empire's 13th-century conquests, as Mongol forces adopted and deployed Chinese innovations like fire lances and early cannons during campaigns across . In , the first recorded deployment of artillery occurred at the of in 1324, where rudimentary cannons were used by German forces to bombard fortifications. This introduction marked the continent's transition from mechanical siege engines, such as trebuchets, to chemical propulsion, though adoption was initially slow due to technological and logistical hurdles. Early European bombards, the primitive cannons of this period, consisted of wrought-iron staves longitudinally arranged and reinforced by iron hoops, mounted on sturdy wooden frames for stability. These cumbersome devices fired large stone balls—occasionally iron projectiles—propelled by black powder charges, with bores often exceeding 30 cm in diameter to accommodate massive payloads for breaching walls. However, their design imposed severe limitations: the wrought-iron construction carried a high risk of bursting upon firing due to inconsistent and buildup, endangering crews and requiring thick reinforcements that added weight. Reloading was equally arduous, taking up to 30 minutes per shot owing to manual powder ramming and cleaning, restricting their to a few rounds per hour. Despite these drawbacks, bombards began supplanting trebuchets in sieges, heralding artillery's enduring role in .

Expansion and Smoothbore Era

The widespread adoption of artillery accelerated after the mid-15th century, marking a pivotal expansion in its use across . In , the Ottoman Sultan employed massive bombards during the siege of , commissioning Hungarian engineer Urban to cast guns capable of firing 1,500-pound stone balls, which breached the city's formidable walls after decades of failed assaults. This Ottoman success demonstrated artillery's siege-breaking potential and spurred its proliferation. In , Renaissance-era foundries, adapting bell-casting techniques, produced solid cannons in standardized models, with innovators like the Bureau brothers promoting reliable designs during the late (1422–1461), enabling faster and safer production compared to earlier wrought-iron constructions. Smoothbore cannons defined this era's artillery, featuring unrifled barrels that allowed for quicker manufacturing through casting while accommodating the era's black powder charges. These guns primarily fired —solid iron or stone balls—for direct impact, with bore lengths varying by type to balance range and power; for instance, culverins were long-barreled pieces (30–32 calibers) optimized for long-range flat-trajectory fire against distant targets or formations. Mortars, in contrast, employed short, wide bores (under 10 calibers) for high-angle lobbing of explosive shells or heavy stone projectiles over obstacles, making them essential for bombarding fortifications from cover. This unrifled design prioritized volume over precision, reflecting the period's emphasis on massed barrages rather than individual accuracy. Tactically, artillery shifted warfare from prolonged sieges toward decisive field engagements, as lighter, mobile pieces integrated into lines. During the (1494–1559), French forces under Charles VIII introduced mobile field guns that stunned opponents at battles like Fornovo (1495), compelling armies to maneuver around artillery threats and reducing reliance on static defenses. Rates of fire improved with these advancements, reaching up to 1–2 shots per minute for field pieces through better crew drills and lighter loads, allowing sustained support that disrupted pike squares and charges. This evolution elevated artillery's battlefield dominance, influencing doctrines across Europe and the .

Napoleonic Innovations

The Gribeauval system, introduced in 1765 under the direction of Jean-Baptiste Vaquette de Gribeauval, marked a significant advancement in French field artillery by emphasizing lighter, more standardized designs that improved mobility and production efficiency. This system replaced heavier Vallière-era pieces with shorter barrels and reduced weights, such as the 12-pounder gun, which weighed approximately 985 kg and measured 211 cm in length, about 30% shorter and 40% lighter than its predecessor. Napoleon Bonaparte, drawing from his artillery background, refined the Gribeauval system during his rise to power by enforcing stricter standardization and integrating horse-drawn limbers, which allowed six horses to tow a 12-pounder efficiently across varied terrain, thereby enhancing rapid deployment in campaigns. These modifications, implemented around 1793–1794, made the 12-pounder a cornerstone of French firepower, balancing range and maneuverability on the battlefield. Building on smoothbore foundations from the expansion era, Napoleonic doctrinal innovations transformed artillery from dispersed support into a concentrated striking force through the tactic, which massed dozens or hundreds of guns at pivotal points to deliver overwhelming volleys for breakthroughs. At the in 1805, deployed around 139 guns in a grand battery against the Coalition's center on the Pratzen Heights, using combined round shot and canister to shatter defenses and create exploitable gaps for advances, securing a decisive victory. Complementing this, reorganized artillery at the level in 1806, assigning reserve brigades—typically two foot artillery companies with 12-pounders and one company per —to enable flexible massing under centralized command, amplifying tactical impact across larger formations. Ammunition advancements further elevated artillery's role in close support, particularly the widespread adoption of , which loaded cannons with tin containers of iron balls to function as anti-infantry shredders at short ranges. Introduced prominently in the , canister proved devastating against massed infantry up to 300–600 yards, turning smoothbore guns into high-volume killers during final defensive stands or assaults. For instance, at Friedland in 1807, French batteries firing canister at 150 yards inflicted thousands of casualties in minutes, breaking Russian lines and enabling swift exploitation by , thus underscoring artillery's boosted lethality in direct engagements.

Modern Evolution and Indirect Fire

The adoption of rifling in artillery during the mid-19th century marked a pivotal advancement in ordnance design, enabling the use of elongated, spin-stabilized shells that dramatically improved accuracy and range compared to cannons. In 1858, the British formally adopted the , a rifled breech-loading field piece developed by Sir William Armstrong, which featured a multi-groove system to impart rotational stability to projectiles. This innovation addressed the limitations of earlier muzzle-loaders by allowing shells to maintain over greater distances, extending effective ranges from approximately 2 kilometers with smoothbores to over 10 kilometers in subsequent rifled field guns by the late 19th century, such as the French 75 mm modèle 1897. The spin imparted by rifling reduced dispersion and enhanced penetration, transforming artillery from a close-support into a tool capable of engaging distant targets while minimizing exposure to enemy small-arms fire. The evolution toward indirect fire doctrine further revolutionized artillery tactics, shifting from line-of-sight engagements to concealed firing positions that prioritized survivability and coverage. In the early 1880s, the Russian army pioneered practical methods through the work of Lieutenant Colonel K. Guk, whose 1882 publication Field Artillery Fire from Covered Positions outlined techniques for aiming via reference points and forward observers, allowing guns to deliver accurate barrages without direct visibility of targets. This approach gained traction amid increasing firepower from rifled muskets, compelling artillery to operate from defilade. By , the British refined these concepts, integrating aerial and ground observers to adjust fire in real-time, as seen in the development of forward observation officers who coordinated with battery commanders via field telephones to target positions beyond the horizon. Such doctrines emphasized predicted fire tables and survey techniques, enabling massed salvos that neutralized enemy positions preemptively. The World Wars exemplified the devastating scale of indirect fire in industrialized conflict, particularly in the context of . During (1914–1918), artillery dominated the Western Front, where the British fired approximately 175 million shells across the war; for instance, the preparatory bombardment for the consumed 1.5 million shells. This volume underscored artillery's role in attrition, though high dud rates and highlighted logistical strains. In , mechanization enhanced mobility, with towed and self-propelled guns integrating into operations; the German 8.8 cm Flak 18/36/37 series, initially an anti-aircraft weapon, proved versatile as a towed field piece hauled by half-tracks, delivering indirect support while excelling in anti-tank roles alongside panzer units, as demonstrated at battles like . These advancements built on interwar recoil mechanisms and radio communications, allowing rapid repositioning and sustained fire without the static entrenchments of the prior conflict.

Precision-Guided Systems

Precision-guided artillery systems emerged in the post-World War II era as a response to the need for greater accuracy in targeting high-value assets, marking a shift from massed, unguided fire to munitions capable of precise strikes. The pioneered this technology with the , a 155mm -guided developed in the , which represented the first cannon-launched smart munition designed for anti-tank roles. Fired from standard howitzers like the M114 or M777, the Copperhead used semi-active homing to home in on a target illuminated by ground- or air-based designators, achieving effective ranges of 3 to 16 kilometers with a high-explosive anti-tank . This system demonstrated early potential for reducing expenditure while minimizing risks to adjacent forces, though its reliance on line-of-sight laser designation limited its use in obscured environments. Advancements in the and introduced satellite-based guidance, enhancing all-weather performance and extending ranges. The Russian 2K25 Krasnopol, a 152mm semi-active laser-guided shell introduced in the , targeted armored vehicles, command posts, and fortifications with ranges up to 20-25 kilometers, employing a top-attack for improved penetration. Similarly, Israel's TopGun precision guidance kit, developed by in the 2010s, converts conventional 155mm artillery shells into GPS/INS-guided munitions, enabling strikes with (CEP) accuracies under 10 meters at ranges exceeding 30 kilometers. The U.S. M982 Excalibur, entering service around 2008, further refined this approach with GPS-aided inertial navigation, delivering <10-meter accuracy at up to 40 kilometers and proving effective in urban operations by minimizing through first-round hits. These systems collectively reduced the logistical burden of artillery by enabling fewer rounds to achieve mission effects comparable to salvos of unguided projectiles. By the 2020s, integration of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) for terminal guidance enhanced the versatility of precision artillery, allowing drones to provide real-time laser designation or forward observation in contested environments. For instance, UAVs have been paired with laser-guided shells like Krasnopol variants to extend targeting beyond direct line-of-sight, as observed in recent conflicts where drones illuminate targets for incoming projectiles, improving hit probabilities in dynamic urban settings. Recent trends as of 2025 emphasize hypersonic capabilities and artificial intelligence (AI) to counter evolving threats. The U.S. Army's Long-Range Hypersonic Weapon (LRHW), or Dark Eagle, underwent critical tests in 2023 despite some aborts due to technical issues, aiming for ranges over 1,700 miles with glide-body precision to evade defenses; the first operational battery is slated for full equipping by late 2025. AI-assisted fire control systems, meanwhile, process sensor data in real-time to optimize targeting, predict enemy movements, and adjust trajectories, significantly lowering collateral damage in urban warfare by enabling proportional responses. In October 2025, advancements included successful tests of the General Atomics Long-Range Modular Precision (LRMP) round, offering 2–3 times the range of standard 155mm projectiles with precision guidance, and BAE Systems' Scorpio-XR, which doubles cannon artillery range while maintaining accuracy through advanced sensors. These innovations underscore a broader doctrinal evolution toward integrated, autonomous fires that prioritize precision over volume.

Components of Artillery Systems

Artillery Piece Design

Artillery pieces are engineered with robust barrels designed to withstand extreme pressures and repeated firings, primarily constructed from high-strength alloys since the late , which replaced earlier materials like and for enhanced durability and performance. These alloys, such as used in early designs, allow for built-up constructions with hoops or wire wrapping over a central tube to distribute stress evenly. within the barrel imparts spin to projectiles for stability; common types include traditional land-and-groove patterns, while —featuring rounded hills and valleys instead of sharp edges—reduces barrel wear and erosion by minimizing . mechanisms, integral to barrel design, absorb the rearward force during firing; hydropneumatic systems, which use for braking and compressed gas for return, became standard following their introduction in French artillery around 1894 and widespread adoption by the early . Mounting systems secure the barrel and enable precise aiming, varying by mobility and platform. Towed mounts, often used for howitzers like the 155 mm M777, feature split-trail carriages for stability and transport by vehicles, with elevation from -3° to +72° and traverse of 45° (22.5° left and right) to accommodate trajectories. Self-propelled variants, such as the M109 , integrate the artillery piece into an armored, tracked chassis for rapid repositioning, offering full 360° traverse via a rotating turret and elevation from -3° to +75°. Naval and rail-mounted systems adapt these principles for ship or train platforms, with rail artillery like World War II-era designs providing extended lengths and limited traverse aligned to the track, typically 10° either side. These mounts fall under broader classifications by ordnance type, such as field guns or howitzers. Safety features in artillery piece design prioritize secure operation under high-pressure conditions, with breech mechanisms like the sliding block—either horizontal or vertical—sealing the chamber against gases while allowing quick reloading. The horizontal sliding wedge, as in the 105 mm M101A1 , slides laterally for manual operation, incorporating interlocks to prevent firing unless fully closed and extractors to eject casings safely. Vertical variants, seen in semiautomatic systems like the 155 mm M126A1, use energy for cycling and include locks to block accidental discharge. Design considerations for , typically around 800 m/s in field guns to balance range and barrel life, influence barrel length and chamber dimensions to manage stress without compromising structural integrity.

Crew Organization and Roles

Artillery crews have traditionally consisted of 5 to 10 personnel per or , organized to handle the demanding tasks of loading, aiming, firing, and maintaining the piece under combat conditions. The division of labor is specialized: the chief of section or section chief oversees operations, verifies firing data, and ensures safety protocols; the gunner aims the weapon using sights or digital systems and initiates fire; loaders handle charges and projectiles, often requiring multiple individuals for heavy calibers like 155 mm; the assistant gunner supports aiming adjustments and quadrant settings; and additional roles such as the handler or driver manage resupply and mobility. Fire direction responsibilities may involve a separate forward observer or integrate with the for direct support missions, emphasizing coordinated communication via voice commands or automated fire direction centers. Training for artillery crews focuses on , weapon handling, and safety to mitigate risks like misfires or propellant mishandling. In the United States, the U.S. School at , , established in September 1911, provides this instruction through theoretical and practical courses on tactics, gunnery computations, and live-fire exercises. The curriculum, delivered via programs like Basic Officer Leader Course and Advanced Individual Training, stresses precision in trajectory calculations and adherence to safety "T" protocols to prevent accidents during high-rate fire. Modern artillery systems incorporate to streamline operations and reduce crew sizes, shifting roles toward digital interfaces and remote targeting. Self-propelled howitzers like the French CAESAR 155 mm system, operational in the , typically require only 3 to 5 personnel, with automated loading and fire control allowing the commander and gunner to focus on navigation displays and sensor integration rather than manual labor. This evolution enhances survivability by minimizing exposure time in contested environments while maintaining rapid deployment capabilities.

Field Artillery Logistics

Field artillery logistics involves the complex coordination of supply chains, transportation, and to ensure sustained operational capability amid the demands of mobile warfare. Central to this is resupply, which must account for high consumption rates during intense engagements. The U.S. Army defines the required supply rate (RSR) as the quantity of ammunition expressed in rounds per per day, calculated by operations staff to meet mission needs without resupply limitations. In planning for large-scale combat, a typical RSR for 155mm might be 75 rounds per per day, translating to several short tons of munitions per battery depending on caliber and intensity. Delivery relies on specialized vehicles like ammunition supply trucks from the , which preposition stocks at forward ammunition supply points, or airdrops in austere environments to bypass contested ground routes. Historical precedents underscore the risks of supply disruptions; during the Normandy campaign in 1944, Allied forces faced severe artillery shell shortages due to port congestion and extended supply lines, limiting some units to as few as 1.1 rounds per 105mm howitzer per day in the Third Army by mid-October. Mobility logistics further challenges field artillery units, requiring rapid repositioning to avoid counter-battery fire while maintaining fire support. Towed systems, such as the 105mm , are typically pulled by High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles (HMMWVs) for light formations, enabling off-road traversal and quick displacement over varied terrain. Deployment involves emplacing the piece, conducting surveys, and registering positions, with setup times generally ranging from 15 to 30 minutes for a battery under optimal conditions to achieve combat readiness. Crews handle initial positioning and alignment, integrating with broader battery movements coordinated by the fire direction center to support maneuver elements. Sustainment extends to maintenance cycles, where barrel wear from propellant gases poses a primary limitation. Modern 155mm barrels typically endure 1,000 to 2,250 equivalent full charges (EFCs) before compromises accuracy and safety, with factors like charge size and firing rate accelerating degradation through heat-affected zones and cracking. Field repairs focus on inspecting for via or magnetic particle testing and performing minor interventions like liner replacements or chrome recoating when feasible, though full barrel swaps often require rearward evacuation to higher echelons. These efforts ensure prolonged , balancing immediate combat needs with long-term unit readiness.

Ammunition and Propulsion

Projectile Types and Fuzes

Artillery projectiles are categorized into explosive and non-explosive variants, each designed for specific tactical effects such as fragmentation, penetration, obscuration, or illumination, with payloads integrated into the projectile body ahead of the charge. High-explosive (HE) projectiles, the most common type, deliver blast and fragmentation effects against personnel, , and fortifications; the standard 155mm M795 HE round, for instance, features a high-fragmentation body filled with 23.8 pounds of TNT, weighing approximately 103 pounds overall, and is used for , , and mining support. Armor-piercing (AP) projectiles, historically employed in to defeat armored targets, consist of a solid or semi-solid core of or encased in a jacket, prioritizing kinetic penetration over explosive yield to breach thick plating before detonating internally if fitted with a burster charge. Non-explosive projectiles focus on support roles without primary destructive intent. Illumination rounds, such as the 155mm M485 series, eject a parachute-suspended canister containing a magnesium-based illuminant from the base, providing up to 1,000,000 for about 120 seconds to light a 1,000-meter area for night operations or target spotting. Smoke projectiles, like the 155mm M825 series white phosphorus (WP) variant, disperse 116 burning felt elements upon ejection to create dense screening clouds, obscuring enemy observation or marking positions while covering friendly maneuvers. Specialized rounds include cluster munitions, which release multiple smaller submunitions over an area for anti-personnel or anti-armor effects; these are banned under the 2008 , which prohibits their production, stockpiling, transfer, and use by 111 states parties as of 2025, due to high risks to civilians. Some advanced variants incorporate guided submunitions with inertial or GPS navigation for precision targeting within the cluster dispersion pattern. Fuzing systems determine the timing and conditions for detonation or payload release, with types including impact, time/delay, and proximity mechanisms. Impact fuzes, also known as percussion or point-detonating fuzes, activate upon direct contact with a target via a piezoelectric in the nose that generates an from mechanical stress to initiate the explosive train, ensuring immediate for ground-burst effects. Time or delay fuzes employ a or electronic set before firing to delay for airburst or penetration, allowing fragments to spread over an area or burrow into cover before exploding. Proximity fuzes, introduced during , use miniaturized transceivers to detect targets within 5-50 feet and trigger via signal reflection, dramatically increasing anti-aircraft and ground artillery lethality by enabling airbursts; the U.S. Mark 53 model, for example, significantly increased the effectiveness of naval gunfire against Japanese aircraft.

Propellant and Stabilization Mechanisms

The propellant in artillery systems provides the to accelerate projectiles to high velocities, typically ranging from 500 to 900 meters per second depending on the caliber and charge. Single-base propellants, introduced in the , consist primarily of , which replaced black powder to enable smokeless, higher-performance . These propellants burn progressively to maintain consistent pressure during firing. Triple-base propellants, developed later for large-caliber guns, incorporate , , and ; the addition of reduces muzzle flash and erosion while enhancing energy output for artillery applications. Charge systems in modern artillery, such as the Modular Artillery Charge System (MACS) for 155 mm howitzers, use combustible bags or modules that allow crews to adjust propellant quantity for variable ranges, from short barrages to maximum extension up to 40 kilometers. These modular designs, consisting of increment charges like M231 and M232A1, enable precise control over by stacking 1 to 5 modules, improving safety and logistics over fixed charges. Stabilization ensures projectiles maintain trajectory accuracy over long distances, countering aerodynamic forces. For rifled artillery pieces, spin stabilization is achieved through helical grooves in the barrel, imparting rotational speeds of approximately 15,000 revolutions per minute (RPM) to 155 mm shells at typical muzzle velocities of around 800 m/s and twist rates of 20 calibers per turn. This gyroscopic effect prevents tumbling, with spin rates calculated as RPM = (60 × muzzle velocity) / (twist length in meters). For rocket-assisted or unrifled systems, fin stabilization uses deployable or fixed fins to provide aerodynamic torque, often combined with base-bleed units that expel gas to reduce base drag and extend range by 20-30%. The theoretical maximum range RR for a spin- or fin-stabilized projectile in vacuum, ignoring air resistance and assuming flat fire, is given by: R=v2sin(2θ)gR = \frac{v^2 \sin(2\theta)}{g} where vv is the muzzle velocity, θ\theta is the elevation angle, and gg is gravitational acceleration (approximately 9.81 m/s²). This formula derives from constant horizontal velocity vcosθv \cos \theta and symmetric parabolic flight: total flight time is t=2vsinθgt = \frac{2 v \sin \theta}{g}, so R=(vcosθ)×tR = (v \cos \theta) \times t, simplifying to the expression above for optimal range at θ=45\theta = 45^\circ. In practice, drag and earth curvature reduce this, but stabilization minimizes dispersion. Modern formulations include additives like flash suppressants (e.g., in triple-base mixes) to minimize visible signatures, enhancing in . Ramjet-assisted projectiles, such as the XM1155 for 155 mm systems, integrate air-breathing engines ignited post-launch to sustain , achieving ranges over 100 km in 2020s trials and enabling hypersonic speeds for precision strikes.

Classification Schemes

By Ordnance and Caliber

Artillery is classified by ordnance type based on the design of the firing mechanism, which determines , , and tactical role. Guns are long-barreled, high-velocity weapons optimized for flat or low-angle trajectories, enabling against visible targets such as armored vehicles or fortifications with precision and penetration at extended ranges. Howitzers feature medium-length barrels and moderate muzzle velocities, allowing versatile curved trajectories from high to low angles for support against personnel, equipment, or area targets in varied terrain. Mortars, with short barrels and low velocities, produce steep, near-vertical trajectories for , typically muzzle-loaded for portability and close-range support over obstacles or in defilade positions. Caliber categories further divide artillery by bore size, influencing mobility, firepower, and logistical demands. Light-caliber systems, such as 105 mm howitzers, provide mobile fire support with balanced range. Medium-caliber artillery, centered on 155 mm, serves as the field standard for explosive effect and range, exemplified by systems like the M777 howitzer. Heavy-caliber pieces exceed 155 mm, suited for siege or coastal roles with heavy payloads but requiring greater crew and transport resources. The 155 mm caliber has become the de facto global norm for NATO and allied forces, particularly since the 2009 Joint Ballistics Memorandum of Understanding to ensure interoperability in ammunition and ballistics. Bore diameter, the key measurement for caliber, is typically expressed in millimeters for modern systems, though historical designations often used inches or weight-based terms. For instance, the British 25-pounder gun-howitzer had a bore of 3.45 inches (87.6 mm), reflecting early 20th-century imperial conventions that shifted toward metric standards post-World War II for international alignment. This transition facilitated global standardization, with most contemporary artillery calibers defined in millimeters to support unified production and supply chains.

By Organizational and Equipment Types

Artillery is classified by organizational types based on its primary role within structures, including for mobile ground support, anti-aircraft artillery for aerial defense, and coastal defense artillery for fixed shoreline protection. units provide support to maneuver forces, emphasizing mobility and rapid deployment to accompany advancing troops. Anti-aircraft artillery, often equipped with high-angle guns capable of elevating to near-vertical positions, historically formed dedicated units to counter low-flying , evolving from field guns adapted for elevated fire during . Coastal defense artillery consists of fixed heavy batteries emplaced in fortified positions to deter naval incursions, such as the U.S. Army's Battery Ramsay with its three 6-inch disappearing guns completed in 1900. Equipment platforms for artillery vary by mobility and mounting, categorized as towed, self-propelled, and systems to suit operational demands. Towed artillery, pulled by or trucks, offers simplicity and lower cost for units requiring frequent repositioning, exemplified by lightweight s integrated into expeditionary forces. Self-propelled platforms enhance survivability and speed; tracked variants like the German (PzH 2000) 155 mm provide armored protection and automated loading for sustained fire up to 40 km with NATO-standard rounds, while wheeled versions offer greater road mobility. , such as multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS), delivers area saturation fire; the U.S. High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) mounts MLRS launchers on a wheeled for rapid deployment and precision strikes with guided munitions. In , artillery integrates into brigades and divisions for coordinated , with structures varying by nation but often featuring standardized battery compositions. For instance, a U.S. Army division artillery typically includes three battalions, each with 18 guns such as M777 155 mm howitzers, organized into firing batteries of six guns to balance firepower and . Hybrid systems combine artillery functions for versatility, including gun-mortar configurations that allow a single platform to fire both high-velocity projectiles and indirect mortar rounds. Composite battalions may incorporate towed howitzers, self-propelled s, rockets, and 120 mortars in mixed batteries to adapt to diverse missions. Naval turrets represent another hybrid application, mounting artillery on warships for surface and limited air defense roles; the U.S. Navy's 5-inch/127 Mark 45 on Arleigh Burke-class destroyers provides rapid with a range exceeding 20 km using guided projectiles.

Tactics and Operations

Fire Application Techniques

Fire application techniques in artillery encompass the methods used to direct and deliver projectiles onto targets, emphasizing precision, efficiency, and safety in both combat and training scenarios. These techniques have evolved from line-of-sight aiming to sophisticated computational systems, allowing artillery units to support maneuver forces over extended ranges while minimizing risks to friendly personnel. Central to these methods are fire missions, which integrate observer inputs, meteorological , and ballistic calculations to achieve desired effects on enemy positions. Direct fire involves line-of-sight aiming, where the gun crew visually aligns the weapon with the target, a practice common in early artillery but rare after due to advances in rifles and the need for concealment. By the early , the transition to became standard, enabling gunners to engage targets beyond visual range using computed trajectories derived from maps, surveys, and forward observers. relies on fire control systems, such as the Advanced Field Artillery Tactical Data System (AFATDS), to calculate elevations and deflections without direct visibility, incorporating factors like terrain and wind for accuracy. This shift, formalized in doctrines like the 1907 U.S. Drill Regulations, allowed batteries to operate from defiladed positions, dramatically increasing survivability and range effectiveness. Fire missions are categorized by their execution and observation needs, with predicted fire serving as the foundational technique for rapid engagement. Predicted fire delivers rounds without prior observation, relying on precomputed data including accurate target locations, specifications, and meteorological (MET) data such as , , and air to adjust trajectories for nonstandard conditions. U.S. Army outlines five key requirements for effective predicted fire: precise target and firing unit locations, reliable and data, current MET information, and accurate computational procedures, often processed through fire direction centers (FDCs). This method preserves surprise and conserves , as seen in large-scale operations where initial volleys achieve first-round effects. When predicted fire conditions are unmet—such as incomplete MET data or uncertain target positions—adjust fire missions refine impacts through observer corrections. In adjust fire, forward observers (FOs) call for initial spotting rounds and provide iterative adjustments based on deviations in direction (measured in mils), range (add or drop), and height-of-burst (up or down), using techniques like successive to narrow the error to within 50 meters. Procedures involve polar plots, grid coordinates, or shifts from known points, with MET data integrated to compensate for environmental variables; for instance, observers equipped with GPS/vector laser locators (G/VLLD) compute corrections on-site for deviations under 100 mils. This method, detailed in U.S. Marine Corps observed fire protocols, ensures saturation but may expose positions and increase round expenditure. Once adjustments confirm accuracy, missions transition to (FFE), delivering massed, concentrated fires to neutralize, suppress, or destroy targets through saturation. FFE employs multiple assets, such as batteries or fires, firing volleys simultaneously after confirms the target within probable error ranges (e.g., 38 meters for 155mm rounds). Doctrinal emphasis is on achieving maximum lethality with minimal rounds, using MET-adjusted computations for first-round impacts; in danger-close scenarios (under 600 meters from friendlies), creeping fire techniques apply small increments to avoid overruns. This saturation approach, integral to U.S. Army operations, synchronizes lethal and nonlethal effects across domains for decisive battlefield outcomes. Safety protocols underpin all fire applications, establishing minimum range zones and fragmentation patterns to prevent incidents. Minimum range zones define the shortest safe distance from the firing point—typically 550 meters for 105mm or 750 meters for 155mm —ensuring projectiles clear friendly troops or obstacles via quadrant (QE) computations that account for charges and . U.S. range standards require two-person verification of safety tables, incorporating probable errors and nonstandard corrections (e.g., +110 meters for weight variations), with surface danger zones (SDZs) cleared of personnel. Fragmentation patterns, which dictate secondary danger areas (e.g., Area A at 550 meters for 105mm, containing fragments), are modeled using risk-estimate distances based on blast and radii, prohibiting unprotected exposure and mandating barriers or defilade. These measures, enforced through field manuals, integrate with roles for real-time hazard mitigation during missions.

Counter-Battery and Advanced Targeting

Counter-battery fire represents a critical defensive in artillery operations, aimed at detecting, locating, and neutralizing enemy artillery positions to protect friendly forces from incoming barrages. During , early techniques relied on passive methods such as sound ranging and flash spotting to identify hostile guns. Sound ranging involved deploying acoustic arrays of microphones to capture the sound waves from gunfire, allowing of the firing point through time-of-arrival calculations at multiple sensors. Flash spotting, meanwhile, used visual observers to detect muzzle flashes at night or in low visibility, employing theodolites or cameras for angular measurements that pinpointed enemy batteries when combined with map data. These methods proved indispensable in campaigns like the North African theater, where German forces credited them with enabling effective reinforcement against Allied artillery. Advancements in sensor technology have transformed counter-battery capabilities, with systems providing rapid, automated detection. The AN/TPQ-53 Counterfire Target Acquisition , a truck-mounted, 360-degree scanning system, exemplifies modern weapons locating radars (WLRs) by detecting in-flight projectiles from mortars, artillery, and rockets. It achieves detection ranges of up to 34 kilometers for artillery in a 90-degree sector and 25 kilometers in full 360-degree mode, with accuracy typically within 0.3% to 1% of the range—equating to about 75 meters at maximum distance. The system processes tracks in near real-time using techniques, enabling counterfire responses in under a minute by relaying point-of-origin coordinates to firing units. Classified as a division-level asset, the AN/TPQ-53 supports both offensive and defensive operations by integrating with fire direction centers for immediate neutralization. Advanced targeting technologies enhance counter-battery precision through unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and systems. Since the 1990s, UAVs have served as forward observers, providing real-time and laser designation for artillery strikes; the RQ-2 Pioneer, deployed by the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps, was among the first to support targeting in combat during the 1991 . These platforms offer persistent surveillance, reducing risks to human observers while feeding video and coordinates directly into fire control networks. integration, particularly via GPS, further refines counter-rocket, artillery, and mortar (C-RAM) systems by enabling precision-guided munitions and automated threat tracking. In C-RAM architectures, GPS-denied or augmented positioning ensures accurate interception of incoming projectiles, as demonstrated in post-2003 deployments where integrated sensors achieve early warning and response. As of 2025, U.S. Army tactics increasingly incorporate unmanned systems and (AI) to enhance targeting and survivability. Commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) drones provide low-cost, real-time intelligence for , integrating with systems like AFATDS for automated adjustments. Doctrinal updates emphasize unmanned aerial systems (UAS) in operations to reduce exposure in contested environments, as outlined in recent strategies focusing on responsive, longer-range fires amid peer competitions. Doctrinal approaches like emphasize mobility to evade enemy counter-battery retaliation, allowing artillery units to fire, relocate rapidly, and survive prolonged engagements. This tactic, integral to U.S. since the era, was pivotal in the 1991 Gulf War, where Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (MLRS) and M109 employed it to deliver massed fires while avoiding Iraqi responses. U.S. forces countered Iraqi artillery with Firefinder radars and MLRS, silencing threats within 30 kilometers and destroying nearly all engaged targets through overwhelming volleys equivalent to dozens of battalions. The integration of these methods resulted in highly effective suppression, with Iraqi units suffering over 90% losses in artillery assets during the ground campaign, underscoring the doctrine's impact on achieving fire superiority.

Specialized Fire Methods

Specialized fire methods in artillery encompass advanced techniques for synchronizing barrages to maximize impact through precise timing and detonation control. These methods enhance the psychological and physical effects on targets by concentrating destructive power at optimal moments, often integrating multiple batteries or rounds from individual guns. Key approaches include (TOT), Multiple Round Simultaneous Impact (MRSI), and airburst configurations, each leveraging computational and technologies to achieve coordinated effects beyond standard sequential firing. Time on Target (TOT) coordinates fires from numerous artillery pieces so that all projectiles arrive at the designated point simultaneously, creating a sudden, overwhelming barrage that denies enemies warning time. This technique, refined in through fire direction centers and radio communications, saw extensive use in by U.S. forces under leaders like General . A prominent example occurred during in July 1944 near , , where over 1,000 guns from VII Corps delivered a massed TOT, saturating German positions with thousands of shells in minutes and facilitating the Allied breakout from the bocage terrain. The method's effectiveness stemmed from precise time-of-flight calculations broadcast to participating batteries, amplifying shock and suppressing counteractions. Multiple Round Simultaneous Impact (MRSI) extends TOT principles to a single gun or battery, firing successive rounds at varying elevations and charges to converge on the target at the same instant, simulating a multi-gun volley. Enabled by digital fire control systems introduced in the late and , MRSI allows rapid, high-volume saturation without repositioning crews. For instance, the U.S. Army's Crusader self-propelled program incorporated MRSI capabilities, permitting up to five or six rounds to impact together through automated ballistic computations, significantly increasing firepower density for transient targets. This technique relies on advanced computers to solve equations in real-time, a development that marked a shift from manual adjustments to automated precision in post-Cold War artillery. Airburst modes employ variable-time (VT) fuzes to detonate s above the ground, optimizing fragmentation patterns for anti-personnel effects, particularly against troops in cover like trenches or buildings. Introduced during , these radar-based proximity fuzes—initially termed VT for security—triggered at a preset height, dispersing shrapnel downward in a lethal cone that proved far more effective than ground-impact bursts. Modern iterations incorporate barometric sensors to fine-tune detonation altitude based on , ensuring consistent airburst performance despite variables like terrain or weather; this enhances fragmentation against concealed by exploding 5-10 meters overhead. Such fuzes, as in the U.S. M762-series, integrate with projectile types like high-explosive for versatile applications in defensive or suppressive roles.

Contemporary and Cultural Aspects

Integration in Modern Warfare

In 21st-century conflicts, artillery has evolved into a key enabler of combined arms operations, integrating with drones and precision-guided munitions to deliver targeted strikes that disrupt enemy logistics and command structures. During the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, which began in 2022, the U.S.-provided High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) has exemplified this role, enabling Ukrainian forces to conduct deep strikes on Russian supply lines and ammunition depots with minimal collateral damage through its GPS-guided rockets. As of November 2025, HIMARS continues to be employed effectively despite persistent Russian electronic warfare jamming, with Ukrainian forces adapting through improved inertial navigation systems and drone integration for real-time reconnaissance and fire adjustment. This amplifies artillery's effectiveness in hybrid warfare environments where rapid, networked operations are essential. Despite these advances, artillery faces significant challenges in urban combat and contested electromagnetic spectra. , including the , imposes strict limits on indiscriminate use of heavy weapons in populated areas to protect civilians, complicating targeting in dense urban settings where military objectives intermingle with non-combatants. Additionally, electronic warfare tactics, such as GPS jamming, have degraded the accuracy of precision-guided artillery in modern conflicts, forcing systems like HIMARS and shells to operate with reduced effectiveness or revert to unguided modes. Looking toward future trends as of 2025, artillery is increasingly incorporating autonomous systems and hypersonic technologies to enhance while minimizing human exposure on the . Prototypes like the U.S. Army's AI system demonstrate this shift, using for automated threat detection and fire direction from unmanned aerial platforms to support artillery missions without direct gunner involvement. Meanwhile, efforts to integrate hypersonic missiles, such as Castelion's , onto mobile Army platforms promise speeds exceeding Mach 5 for standoff strikes, allowing artillery forces to engage high-value targets from safer distances and counter adversary defenses. These developments build on precision guidance techniques to ensure reliable performance amid evolving threats.

Use in Monuments and Symbolism

Artillery pieces have long served as war trophies in monuments, symbolizing military victories and national pride. At the Musée de l'Armée in ' , captured German artillery from is displayed in the courtyard and galleries, including howitzers and field guns that highlight the conflict's technological scale. These exhibits, part of the museum's artillery collection founded in 1785, transform former weapons of destruction into enduring memorials of historical triumphs. In ceremonial contexts, artillery batteries perform saluting roles, notably through the tradition, which originated in naval customs of the but was standardized for royalty by the Royal Navy in the early . By 1730, British ships fired 21 guns for royal anniversaries, evolving into a global honor for heads of state, with U.S. regulations formalizing it in 1842 for the President and national holidays. This practice, executed by dedicated saluting batteries, underscores artillery's role in and remembrance, distinct from its combat function. Symbolically, artillery features in national emblems and institutional insignia, such as the U.S. Army Field Artillery branch's gold crossed cannons, adopted in 1834 and approved in its current form on July 17, 1902, representing firepower and support. Museums further embody this symbolism; the in showcases artillery pieces like 15-inch naval guns from battleships, positioned as monumental sentinels outside the entrance to evoke the era's . These displays, including a artillery piece repurposed as a in the "Witnesses to War" exhibit, preserve artifacts as cultural touchstones. In modern settings, deactivated artillery graces public spaces and veteran memorials, fostering community reflection on service. For instance, M114 155mm howitzers, used from through the , are installed in parks like Veterans Memorial Park in New York Mills, Minnesota, as tributes to local soldiers. Similarly, M109 self-propelled howitzers from the Vietnam era appear in town squares, such as , Kentucky's Veterans Memorial Park, symbolizing sacrifice and resilience without operational threat.

References

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