with wounded Canadian soldiers, 6 June 1944. The same bunker in September 2006. Finally, the view of the bunker's enfilading field of fire with respect to the
seawall A formation or position is "in enfilade" if weapon fire can be directed along its longest axis. For instance, a
trench is enfiladed if the opponent can fire down the length of the trench. A
column of marching troops is enfiladed if fired on from the front or rear such that the projectiles travel the length of the column. A
rank or line of advancing troops is enfiladed if fired on from the side (from the flank). Although sophisticated archery tactics grew rare in Western Europe during the
Early Middle Ages, enfilade fire was reemphasized by the late medieval
English using ranked archers combined with dismounted knights, first employed at the
Battle of Dupplin Moor in 1332 and used to devastating effect against the French in the
Hundred Years War. The benefit of enfilading an enemy formation is that, by firing along the long axis, it becomes easier to hit targets within that formation. Enfilade fire takes advantage of the fact that it is usually easier to aim laterally (
traversing the weapon) than to correctly estimate the range to avoid shooting too long or short. Additionally, both indirect and direct fire projectiles that might miss an intended target are more likely to hit another valuable target within the formation if firing along the long axis. When planning field and other fortifications, it became common for mutually supporting positions to be arranged so that it became impossible to attack any one position without exposing oneself to enfilading fire from the others, this being found for example in the mutually supporting bastions of
star forts, and the
caponiers of later fortifications. Fire is delivered so that the long axis of the target coincides or nearly coincides with the long axis of the beaten zone. File:Bundesarchiv Bild 101I-291-1230-13, Dieppe, Landungsversuch, tote alliierte Soldaten.jpg|The deadly result of enfilade fire during the
Dieppe Raid of 1942: dead Canadian soldiers lie where they fell on "Blue Beach". Trapped between the beach and fortified sea wall, they made easy targets for
MG 34 machineguns in a German bunker. The bunker firing slit is visible in the distance, just above the German soldier's head. File:German POWs Juno Beach.jpg|
Juno Beach on
D-Day, 1944. The barbed wire fence is crude and not very high. However, when combined with the steep, curving sea wall it slows down any attacker, giving time for the
machinegun bunker (visible on the far left) to enfilade any attackers. Note the soldier in the background, forced to use a ladder. == Defilade ==