howitzer being assembled With the new
metallurgical methods and
precision engineering of the
Industrial Revolution, a revolution in armaments, including
artillery took place. In the 1860s, the industrialist Sir
William Armstrong, who had already built one of
the first breech-loading rifled artillery pieces, constructed a 'monster gun' of then extraordinary size at the
Elswick Ordnance Company in
Newcastle. The gun was a rifled muzzle-loader of that fired shells of up to and could pierce of iron armour. Armstrong identified them as "shunt" guns, but they were soon popularly known as "monster" guns. By the 1880s he had built guns of over in length that could fire shells and punch through of iron at a range of . The gun was exhibited at the
Royal Mining Engineering Jubilee Exhibition held at Newcastle in 1887 for
Queen Victoria's golden jubilee. Prior to
World War I, the German military was especially interested in the development of
superweapons due to the need for the
Schlieffen plan to march past a line of Belgian fortifications constructed specifically to stop such an invasion route. During the opening phases of the war, the Germans employed a
Krupp howitzer (the
Big Bertha) and two
Skoda Mörser M. 11 mortars to reduce the famous fortresses of
Liège and
Namur. Their low overland mobility made them arrive later than the infantry at Liège, so several infantry assaults were made with heavy loss of life and generally little success. The guns arrived a few days later and reduced the forts at Liège one-by-one over a short period of a few days. Larger artillery after this opening period was generally limited to
railway guns, which had much greater mobility, or naval
monitors (two of the British
Lord Clive class monitors were fitted with a gun, and
HMS General Wolfe fired at a railway bridge in Belgium). All of the major powers involved employed such weapons in limited numbers, typically between although some larger weapons were also used. The longest-ranged and longest-barreled of the heavy guns deployed in World War I was the
Paris Gun, which was used to bombard
Paris from a distance of over . The gun had a bore diameter of and a barrel length of . It was fired from concealed fixed positions in the forest of
Coucy. The British attempted to develop weapons to counter the Paris Gun, but none was ready for testing until after the
Armistice. A gun under development by
Vickers for a class of never-built Russian battleships was converted and lined down to , with the designation "8-inch sub-calibre Mark I". The barrel was 120
calibres long. Testing commenced in February 1919, but after only six rounds were fired a crack was discovered, and the gun was scrapped in 1928. A weapon of similar concept, the "8-inch sub-calibre Mark II", was converted from a gun (either Mark XI, XI*, or XII), producing a /75 calibre weapon. However, with the war ending before the gun was ready, this weapon was soon scrapped. Development continued during the inter-war era, although at a more limited pace as
aircraft were expected to take over in the long-range bombardment role. Nevertheless, the Germans built a handful of powerful
Krupp K5s and the largest artillery pieces (by caliber) ever used in combat: the
Schwerer Gustav and
Dora. The latter had been designed specifically to defeat the
Maginot Line, firing a shell to a range of . Although their original role proved unnecessary, Gustav was used successfully to destroy Soviet heavy fortifications, most notably those at
Sevastopol. Dora was readied for combat at
Stalingrad, but was withdrawn before it could be used. Development might have continued but for the ever-increasing Allied air power, which limited
Hitler's options in terms of re-opening bombing attacks on
London. This led to the development of the
V-3 "London Gun" or "
Hochdruckpumpe", fired from
Mimoyecques in the
Pas de Calais, about away. Two attempts to build underground bunkers for the huge weapons were thwarted by massive
Royal Air Force bombing raids, which made further attempts futile. Two smaller prototype versions of the gun were used during the
Battle of the Bulge. During World War II, the British developed an experimental
13.5/8 inch hypervelocity gun named Bruce, which was deployed near
St Margaret's in
Kent among their
cross-Channel guns. It was intended only for
stratospheric experiments, primarily with smoke shells. These experiments were important in the development of the
Grand Slam bomb. It was used from March 1943 through February 1945. ==The "Supergun Affair"==