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Angus Konstam - Big Guns in the Atlantic: Germany’s battleships and cruisers raid the convoys, 1939–41

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Big Guns in the Atlantic: Germany’s battleships and cruisers raid the convoys, 1939–41: summary, description and annotation

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At the outbreak of World War II the German Kriegsmarine still had a relatively small U-boat arm. To reach Britains convoy routes in the North Atlantic, these boats had to pass around the top of the British Isles - a long and dangerous voyage to their hunting grounds. Germanys larger surface warships were much better suited to this kind of long-range operation. So, during late 1939 the armoured cruiser Deutschland, and later the battlecruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau were used as commerce raiders, to strike at Allied convoys in the North Atlantic. These sorties met with mixed results, but for Germanys naval high command they showed that this kind of operation had potential. Then, the fall of France, Denmark and Norway in early 1940 dramatically altered the strategic situation. The Atlantic was now far easier to reach, and to escape from.
During 1940, further moderately successful sorties were made by the cruisers Admiral Scheer and Admiral Hipper. By the end of the year, with British mercantile losses mounting to surface raiders and U-Boats, plans were developed for a much larger raid, first using both cruisers, and then the two battlecruisers. The climax of this was Operation Berlin, the Kriegsmarines largest and most wide-ranging North Atlantic sortie so far. Scharnhorst and Gneisenau remained at sea for two months, destroying 22 Allied merchant ships, and severely disrupting Britains lifeline convoys. So, when the operation ended, the German commander, Admiral Ltjens was ordered to repeat his success - this time with the brand new battleship Bismarck. The rest, as they say, is history. These earlier Atlantic raids demonstrated that German surface ships could be highly effective commerce raiders. For those willing to see though, they also demonstrated just how risky this strategy could be. Covering a fascinating and detailed analysis of the Kriegsmarines Atlantic raids between 1939 and 1941, this book will appeal to readers interested in World War II and in particular in Germanys naval operations.

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BIG GUNS
Casemate Short History
BIG GUNS
ARTILLERY ON THE BATTLEFIELD Angus Konstam Published in Great Britain and - photo 1
ARTILLERY ON THE BATTLEFIELD
Angus Konstam
Published in Great Britain and the United States of America in 2017 by CASEMATE - photo 2
Published in Great Britain and
the United States of America in 2017 by
CASEMATE PUBLISHERS
The Old Music Hall, 106108 Cowley Road, Oxford OX4 1JE, UK
1950 Lawrence Road, Havertown, PA 19083, USA
Casemate Publishers 2017
Paperback Edition: ISBN 978-1-61200-488-4
Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-61200-489-1
Mobi Edition: ISBN 978-1-61200-489-1
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the publisher in writing.
A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library
For a complete list of Casemate titles, please contact:
CASEMATE PUBLISHERS (UK)
Telephone (01865) 241249
Email:
www.casematepublishers.co.uk
CASEMATE PUBLISHERS (US)
Telephone (610) 853-9131
Fax (610) 853-9146
Email:
www.casematepublishers.com
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
T HE DISCOVERY OF GUNPOWDER LED TO the creation of a weapon capable of fully devastating force. For the next seven centuries this weapon the artillery piece would evolve from being little more than a battlefield novelty into one of the most deadly weapons in mankinds arsenal. Artillery was once a status symbol of monarchs eager to display their states wealth and power. As the black art of gunnery evolved into a science it became a military necessity the means by which armies could capture fortresses, or secure a military edge on the battlefield. Artillery became the cornerstone of the technological revolution that transformed both ships and naval warfare, and more than any other weapon it reflected the great inventive achievements of its age. This, though, led to artillery pieces becoming the ultimate killing machine of the industrial age, whether in the batteries massed behind the trench lines of World War I, or arming the great battleships that symbolised the fusion of destructive firepower with technological achievement. Artillery was the key to victory in two world wars, and even today it remains a potent force on the modern battlefield. This is its story, a 700-year tapestry of invention, technological breakthroughs, industrial ingenuity and deadly intent.
TIMELINE
C7th Use of Greek Fire by the Byzantine navy.
C10th First recorded use of gunpowder weapons by the Chinese.
1241 Mongols may have used gunpowder weapons at the battle of Mohi, the first use of this technology in Europe.
1326 First written evidence of the use of artillery in Europe.
c.1380 Venetians use cast-iron balls, and mounting bombards in their galleys.
c.1509 First gunports on warships.
1515 Battle of Marignano historys full-scale artillery bombardment on a battlefield.
1537 First Western artillery treatise, Nicolo Tartaglias La Nova Sciento Invento .
C16th First development of indirect fire mortars and howitzers.
C16th/17th Fortifications redesigned to resist artillery, culminating in the designs of Vauban.
161848 Thirty Years War. Gustavus II Adolphus divides his artillery train into field guns and siege guns.
Late C17th Cartridges begin to be used rather than loose powder, speeding up loading.
1693 French army establish a permanent regiment of artillery.
c.1700 Invention of grenade throwers and more effective howitzers.
175663 Seven Years War. Frederick the Great forms batteries of horse artillery.
1765 Gribeauval artillery system approved by Louis XVI of France.
1803 Shrapnel shells adopted by the British army.
1837 Paixhans guns firing explosive shells enter service in France.
1840s Royal Navy starts to use 68-pounder smoothbore shell guns. Percussion system of ignition adopted for artillery use, later replaced by friction primer system.
1850s/60s Adoption of Beaulieu rifled muzzle- loading guns by the French; Armstrong rifled breech-loading guns (RBLs) by the British; and Krupp rifled breech-loading guns by the Prussians.
1865 Development of first type of smokeless gunpowder.
1877 French produce the De Bange 90-mm, the first modern breech-loading gun.
1880s Development of time fuses for shells; armour-piercing rounds; and Quick Firing guns.
1897 The 75-mm Quick Firing Gun enters service with the French Army. Development of accurate sighting devices improve accuracy.
1905 The launch of HMS Dreadnought transformed naval warfare, ushering in the Dreadnought Era.
191418 World War I. Development of rolling barrage, box barrage. Development of the first tracked artillery transports, and anti-aircraft guns.
1916 British and German navies clash at Jutland, the only full-scale naval battle of the war.
193945 World War II. Development of armour-piercing discarding sabot (APDS) rounds, and high explosive anti-tank (HEAT) rounds. Invention of radar enables sophisticated fire control systems.
CHAPTER 1
Big Guns in the Atlantic Germanys battleships and cruisers raid the convoys 193941 - image 3
MEDIEVAL ORIGINS
14th15th centuries
W E ALL KNOW THAT ARTILLERY CAME to be a battle-winning weapon the queen of the battlefield or the god of war. This though is a modern idea, born a century ago amid the blood and carnage of World War I, when hundreds of guns pulverised enemy trench lines before the infantry went over the top. Even then it was a notion more than 600 years in the making. When artillery first made its appearance it was seen as little more than a novelty a toy for princes to play with. Back then, those who created and fired these strange new weapons were seen as practitioners of a black art, not unlike alchemy, medicine, and witchcraft. Everything though, has to start somewhere, and artillery quickly emerged from its misty origins to become first a reliable military weapon, and then a crucial part of any self-respecting army. This journey was a tricky one, with more than a few wrong turnings along the way. Even today historians disagree where the road actually began. What follows is the most commonly agreed version of the way artillery was first invented, and how it developed.
The first guns
In September 1325, at Altopascio in Tuscany, the Florentine army was soundly defeated on the battlefield. The Florentines dug deep into their coffers to raise and equip another force to defend the city, and the ledgers listing this great outlay still survive. Hidden in one dated 1326 is an entry that shows that medieval Florence was at the cutting edge of military technology. It records the appointment of gunfounders, hired to produce bronze guns for the Florentine arsenal, together with the iron balls and arrows for them to fire. This is the earliest written evidence for the use of artillery in Europe.
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