Howitzers
A howitzer is a type of field artillery. The name derives (via German: Haubitze and Dutch: houwitser) from the Czech word houfnice, denoting a 15th century cannon used by Hussites during the Hussite Wars. Howitzers are distinguished from other types of cannon artillery by their trajectory in that they tend to fire at high angles and deliver plunging fire. In addition to this, the barrel of a howitzer is commonly below 30 calibers (the length of the barrel is less than 30 times as long as the diameter of the bore), whereas other cannon and field guns tend to fire at no more than 45° and have a caliber of 30 or over. Development of the gun-howitzer, a weapon that can fire at both high and low angles, was continued after the Second World War. Gun-howitzers have much longer barrels than howitzers – barrel lengths of 39, 45 or longer are now common – and have replaced separate guns and howitzers on the battlefield.
Modern howitzers are either towed or self-propelled, where they gain protection from maneuverability and partial armouring. Smaller howitzers can be towed by a light vehicle or carried by helicopter.
Types of Howitzers
The "pack" howitzer (such as the 25 Pounder Short Mark 1) has
existed since before the First World War. It can be disassembled
into several main components and carried by mule through very
difficult terrain, although the gun size is still a limiting factor
and smaller howitzers have generally been abandoned in favor of
larger guns with greater capabilities.
The Big Bertha was a large, 42 centimeter howitzer used in the
German push of 1914. The gun was based on a similar 42 centimeter
gun manufactured for a short while by Krupp for the German military.
That similar, older 42 centimeter gun was based almost completely on
a gun designed by Louis Gathmann in the late 1800s. Louis was known
as the inventor of the "Big Berthas" up through his death in June of
1917.
Modern self-propelled howitzers such as the South African G6 fire
155 mm diameter shells in standard configuration up to 30 km at a
maximum rate of about 10 per minute and special ammunition at ranges
exceeding 70 km.
The Dutch, German, Italian and Greek armies have been using or will
be using shortly the PzH 2000 howitzer (155 mm, self-propelled).
In November 1990 British customs officers seized parts of a 1000 mm
howitzer destined for the Iraq Project Babylon "supergun", which,
had it been built, would have been the largest gun ever constructed.
Examples
* 6 inch 26cwt howitzer - British First World War howitzer
* QF 25 pounder – British gun-howitzer of WW2
* L118 Light Gun Modern British 105 mm towed gun-howitzer
* M198 howitzer Modern US 155 mm towed gun-howitzer
* M109 howitzer Modern 155 mm self-propelled howitzer
* SSPH Primus Modern 155 mm self-propelled gun-howitzer
* PzH 2000 Modern 155 mm self-propelled gun-howitzer
* M110 howitzer Post-WW2 8 inch self-propelled howitzer