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Weapons of World War I

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  • Depth charge

    Depth charges were first developed by the Royal Navy during World War I to combat German submarines.

  • Military aircraft

    World War I was a crucible for military aircraft development. Between 1914 and 1918, planes advanced from barely airworthy craft to effective weapons platforms.

  • Rifle

    Infantry weapons underwent a massive change in the late 19th century, as repeating rifles entered widespread use. The World War I infantryman could produce a volume of fire that dwarfed that of his mid-19th-century predecessors.

  • Zeppelin

    German airships achieved moderate success in long-range bombing operations, as Zeppelins could attain higher altitudes than the airplanes of the era.

  • Chemical weapons

    Chemical weapons, such as diphosgene and mustard gas, were employed extensively on the Western Front.

  • Artillery

    Artillery literally shaped the battlefield in World War I. It ranged in size from the French 75-mm field gun to the massive 420-mm Big Bertha and the 210-mm Paris Gun.

  • Cavalry

    Despite the advances in technology, cavalry retained a significant role in World War I, and horses died by the millions in the conflict.

  • Battleship

    The age of the battleship reached its apotheosis in World War I, as even the Dreadnought, the archetypal “big-gun” ship, found itself outgunned. Super dreadnoughts, such as the HMS Orion, ruled the waves; their reign was short, however, as developments in naval aviation would soon render such ships obsolete.

  • Machine gun

    Machine guns were an exceptionally lethal addition to the battlefield in World War I. Heavy guns, such as the Maxim and Hotchkiss, made “no man's land” a killing zone, and Isaac Newton Lewis's light machine gun saw widespread use at the squad level and as an aircraft armament.

  • Tank

    Tanks were used primarily in a supporting role. The armoured vehicle would not truly come into its own until the doctrines of J.F.C. Fuller and Basil Liddell Hart were more widely adopted in World War II.

  • Unexploded ordnance

    The French government estimates that millions of unexploded shells from World War I remain buried or undiscovered in the French countryside. Every year, bomb-clearing units remove more than 40 tons of unexploded munitions from the Verdun area alone.