Jump to content

Panzer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 204.14.12.98 (talk) at 18:10, 12 May 2009. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

File:PzKpfw IV Ausf A.jpg
Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf. A, a medium tank first built in 1937
Kampfpanzer Leopard 2, a modern main battle tank

A panzer, pronunced [ˈpænzɝ], is a German tank, especially in the context of World War II. Attributively, the term also refers to armoured military forces, as in panzer divisions or panzer battles.[1]

It derives through the French [pancier] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), ‘breastplate’, from Latin [pantex] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), ‘belly, paunch’,[2] and possibly related to [panus] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), ‘swelling’.[3] The word has been calqued in many other languages, such as Swedish [pansarvagn] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) or Finnish [panssarivaunu] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), ‘tracked armoured fighting vehicle’, Danish [panservogn] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help), ‘armored vehicle’, but [kampvogn] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help) means ‘tank’.

Panzers in World War II

Panzers during the Battle of Greece, April 1941.

Although the post-World War I Treaty of Versailles greatly restricted its military development, Germany started to secretly develop armoured tactics in the 1920s, in cooperation with the Soviet Union (while assisting in the establishment of a Soviet tank-building industry). In the 1930s, the light Panzer I and Panzer II tanks were built primarily for training, and tested in battle during the Spanish Civil War.

At the beginning of the Second World War, German forces gained notoriety for the rapid and successful invasions of Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium and France, and the Soviet Union, in 1939–41. Although the early-war Panzer II, III, and IV were clearly inferior to some of their French and Soviet counterparts, this blitzkrieg (‘lightning warfare’) was made possible by several factors: the German military experience in World War I, their excellent training, integrated communications, coordinated use of airpower, and, perhaps most famously, by the combined-arms employment of integrated infantry and armoured forces, the panzer divisions of the Germany Army and Waffen-SS.[4]

As the blitzkrieg began to stall on the Eastern Front, and a mobile war pushed back and forth across North Africa, Germany was quickly forced into an arms race in armour and antitank weapons. 88 mm antiaircraft guns were used as antitank weapons, thousands of captured antitank guns were marshaled into German service as the 7.62 cm PaK 36(r), new inexpensive tank destroyers such as the Marder series and the Hetzer were put into production, and Panzer IV tanks hastily up-armoured and up-gunned.

A new generation of big tanks, the heavy Tiger, Panther, and King Tiger tanks were developed and rushed into the battlefield. During the war, the mass of a panzer increased from the 5.4 tonnes of a pre-war Panzer I light tank, to the whopping 68.5 tonnes of the Tiger II. In the meantime, the Soviets continued to produce the T-34 by the tens of thousands, and U.S. industry nearly matched them in the number of M4 Sherman tanks built and deployed in Europe after D-Day.

Throughout the war, the panzer was a key piece of the combined arms doctrines supporting the German blitzkrieg. The tanks were used in most every theater of German involvement. Their largest engagement occurred at The Battle of Prokhorovka, which saw about three hundred panzers pitted against five hundred Soviet tanks.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Panzer” at Dictionary.com.
  2. ^ Panzer” in the Online Etymology Dictionary.
  3. ^ Search for “panus” in the Online Etymology Dictionary.
  4. ^ White, B. T. (1983). TANKS and other Armoured Fighting Vehicles of World War II. New York: Exeter Books. p. 5. ISBN 0-671-06009-0.