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Gribeauval system

The Gribeauval system (French: système Gribeauval) was an artillery system introduced by Lieutenant General Jean Baptiste Vaquette de Gribeauval during the 18th century. This system revolutionized French cannons, with a new production system that allowed lighter, more uniform guns without sacrificing range. The Gribeauval system superseded the Vallière system beginning in 1765. The new guns contributed to French military victories during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars. The system included improvements to cannons, howitzers, and mortars. The Year XI system partly replaced the field guns in 1803 and the Valée system completely superseded the Gribeauval system in 1829.

Gribeauval system
Gribeauval system field artillery gun barrels are shown. From left to right, they are 12-, 8-, and 4-pounders.
TypeArtillery
Place of origin Kingdom of France
First French Republic
First French Empire
Service history
In service1765–1829
Used byFrance, French satellites
WarsAmerican Revolutionary War
French Revolutionary Wars
Napoleonic Wars
Production history
DesignerJean Baptiste Vaquette de Gribeauval
Designed15 October 1765

Development edit

The mid-18th Century saw the development of mobile field artillery. Ballistics engineers and metallurgy technicians introduced reforms that lowered the weight of gun tubes while other experts devised lighter gun carriages. Gun calibers were standardized, easing the logistical headache caused by a multitude of calibers. Gribeauval was a veteran combat officer and an able artillery theoretician. With the advent of the Gribeauval system, the French enjoyed the best artillery in Europe.[1] One historian called it "arguably the best artillery system in Europe at that time".[2]

Benjamin Robins put artillery on a scientific basis in 1742. Bronze – an alloy of 10 parts copper to one part tin – was preferred for cannons because it was lighter than iron and more durable. At that time, cannons were cast hollow around a core and the core often moved within the mold, producing an imperfect bore. This problem was solved at The Hague foundry in 1747.[3] Jean Maritz began casting guns as a single, solid block, and then drilling the bore on a large machine.[4] The Dutch tried to maintain the secret, but the new process soon became widely known in Europe. After Maritz's invention, a cannon could be manufactured with a better-aligned bore and tighter tolerances. This resulted in less windage – the gap between the cannonball and the bore – which meant less gas pressure escaped, so that smaller gunpowder charges could hurl the projectile farther and more accurately. When less gunpowder could be used to achieve the same power and range, the ballistics experts found that cannon barrels could be made thinner, shorter, and lighter.[3]

The army of the Habsburg monarchy discovered that its artillery was outmatched by Prussian cannons during the War of the Austrian Succession. In 1744, the new Director General Joseph Wenzel I, Prince of Liechtenstein began a series of reforms to improve the design of Austria's field artillery and provide training to its gunners. By the start of the Seven Years' War the Austrians upgraded their artillery with lighter cannons and introduced a very good howitzer. These were so successful that other nations rushed to manufacture similar weapons. Gribeauval, who served in the Austrian artillery in 1756–1762, got a first-hand look at the new field guns. Upon his return to France, Gribeauval was requested to reorganize the artillery.[5]

 
Gribeauval

France already possessed the only unified range of artillery in Europe. Earlier, Florent-Jean de Valliere standardized guns from 4-pounders through 24-pounders, though they were all very heavy.[6] The Gribeauval system was introduced through royal order on 15 October 1765.[7] The new system was strenuously resisted by Vallière's son, Joseph Florent de Vallière and other officers. Because of their opposition, the Gribeauval system was not completely implemented until 1776.[8] The 1-pounder Rostaing gun and the Swedish 4-pounder battalion guns were retained from the previous system.[4]

Gribeauval's reforms encompassed not only the cannons, but the gun carriages, limbers, ammunition chests, and the accompanying tools.[5] The system's field guns included 4-, 8-, and 12-pounder cannons and 6- and 8-inch howitzers. The gun barrels were cast shorter and thinner, while gun carriages were built lighter and narrower. These improvements dramatically reduced the weight of an artillery piece. The carriages were standardized and built with interchangeable parts. The carriages had two positions for the trunnions, a forward position for firing and a rear position for traveling. The draft horses were harnessed in pairs, rather than single file. The guns were fitted with a rear calibrated gunsight and an elevating screw.[8] The last two improvements allowed gunners to more easily aim the cannons.[9]

The new system incorporated other innovations that were widely shared in Europe. One was the quick-match tube which generated a better ignition of the gunpowder charge. Other general improvements were the adoption of gunpowder charges in pre-packaged flannel bags, a more effective gunpowder mixture, and the use of a vent-pricker – a special tool to make a hole in the gunpowder bags. Around 1791, French chemist Nicholas Leblanc invented a process to manufacture soda ash, allowing to more cheaply convert calcium nitrate from guano to saltpeter, a necessary ingredient of gunpowder.[9] Finally, since better gunners were needed to operate the new field pieces, France set up artillery schools to train its soldiers.[10]

Gun types edit

Field guns edit

The Gribeauval field artillery pieces were approximately half the weight of the Vallière guns of the same caliber, without sacrificing range.[8]

No Gribeauval guns were shipped to the American forces during the American Revolutionary War. However, it is probable that the French forces employed Gribeauval siege cannons during that conflict.[11]

Note that the Old French pound (livre) was approximately one-tenth heavier than the English pound.[12] Also, the Old French inch (pouce) was slightly longer than the English inch. Therefore, the French guns threw somewhat heavier shot and shell than the same-rated English and American guns, so that a French 8-pounder was similar in power to a British 9-pounder.[13]

Gribeauval field gun calibers, crews, ranges, rates of fire, and ammunition carried[14]
Name Gun calibre Gun
crew
Canister
range
Effective
range shot
Maximum
range shot
Rate of Fire
per minute
Trail Chest
round shot
Caisson
round shot
Caisson
canister shot
Caissons
per gun[15]
12-pounder cannon 121 mm
(4.8 in)
15 575 m
(629 yd)
900 m
(980 yd)
1,800 m
(2,000 yd)
1 shot 9 48 20 3
8-pounder cannon 100 mm
(3.9 in)
13 475 m
(519 yd)
800 m
(870 yd)
1,500 m
(1,600 yd)
2 shots 15 62 20 2
4-pounder cannon 84 mm
(3.3 in)
8 375 m
(410 yd)
700 m
(770 yd)
1,200 m
(1,300 yd)
2–3 shots 18 100 50 1
6-inch howitzer 166 mm
(6.5 in)
13 200 m
(220 yd)
700 m
(770 yd)
1,200 m
(1,300 yd)
1 shell 4 49 11 3

Historian Gunther E. Rothenberg published a table giving similar numbers, except that it listed 30 caisson-carried canister rounds for the 8-pounder and three rounds of canister for the 6-inch howitzer.[15] Scotty Bowden and Charlie Tarbox gave canister shot ranges in meters as 600 for the 12-pounder, 550 for the 8-pounder, 400 for the 4-pounder, and 250 for the 6-inch howitzer. Other ranges were in agreement with the table above. They also listed a Gribeauval 24-pounder howitzer that had a canister range of 300 meters and a maximum range of 1,500 meters.[16]

Gribeauval Field Gun Lengths, Weights, Gunpowder Charge Weights, and No. Balls per Canister Round
Name Barrel Length[14] Barrel Weight[14] Carriage Weight[14] Round Shot
Charge Weight[17]
Large Canister
Balls per Round[18]
Small Canister
Balls per Round[18]
Canister Round
Charge Weight[19]
12-pounder cannon 7 feet 7 inches (2.31 m) 2,172 lb (985.2 kg) 2,192 lb (994.3 kg) 4 lb (1.8 kg) 41 112 4.25 lb (1.9 kg)
8-pounder cannon 6 feet 7 inches (2.01 m) 1,286 lb (583.3 kg) 1,851 lb (839.6 kg) 2.5 lb (1.1 kg) 41 112 2.75 lb (1.2 kg)
4-pounder cannon 5 feet 3 inches (1.60 m) 637 lb (288.9 kg) 1,454 lb (659.5 kg) 1.5 lb (0.7 kg) 41 63 1.75 lb (0.8 kg)
6-inch howitzer 2 feet 4 inches (0.71 m) 701 lb (318.0 kg) 1,895 lb (859.6 kg) 1.0625 lb (0.5 kg) 60 none not stated

The canister varied in size according to the caliber of the gun. Also, there were two different sizes of balls in the small canister round. The 12-pounder employed 6 ounce balls in large canister rounds and 2 and 3 oz. balls in small canister rounds. The 8-pounder used 4 oz. balls in large canister rounds and 1 and 2 oz. balls in small canister rounds. The 4-pounder had ¾ and 2 oz. balls in small canister rounds.[20] An 8-inch howitzer had a barrel weight of 1,120 lb (508.0 kg) and required a gunpowder charge weighing 1.75 lb (0.8 kg).[21]

Siege and garrison guns edit

For siege and garrison artillery he retained the same proportions as the earlier Vallière System of 1732 but with the removal of the decoration and simplification of the dolphins.[22]

According to one author, only the Gribeauval siege guns were first used for major operations in the American Revolutionary War. They were employed by Jean-Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur, comte de Rochambeau's French expeditionary corps, from 1780 to late 1782, and especially at the Siege of Yorktown in 1781.[23] A second source believed that the Yorktown siege guns were Gribeauval pieces. Rochambeau's siege train included 12 24-pounders, 8 16-pounders, and 16 mortars.[11] A third author stated that it is debatable whether Gribeauval guns were used at Yorktown,[24] though he pointed out that one French source insisted the siege guns were, in fact, Gribeauval guns.[25]

Mortars edit

 
12-inch Gribeauval mortar

Gribeauval also designed a range of mortars, as follows.[22]

  • Mortier de 12 Gribeauval – 12-inch mortar
  • Mortier court de 10 Gribeauval – Short 10-inch mortar
  • Mortier long de 10 Gribeauval – Long 10-inch mortar
  • Mortier de 8 Gribeauval – 8-inch mortar

Gribeauval also incorporated in his system an anti-personnel 15-inch stone mortar from the de Vallière system.[22] Mortars and the barrels of 24-pounder siege guns were moved from place to place on special "saddle wagons".[26]

Gribeauval Mortar Specifications[21]
Name Weight of Mortar Weight of Carriage Weight of Charge
12-inch mortar 3,150 lb (1,429 kg) 3,000 lb (1,361 kg) not stated
Long 10-inch mortar 2,050 lb (930 kg) 2,616 lb (1,187 kg) 6.5 lb (2.9 kg)
Short 10-inch mortar 1,600 lb (726 kg) 1,739 lb (789 kg) 3.5 lb (1.6 kg)
8-inch mortar 550 lb (249 kg) 820 lb (372 kg) 1.25 lb (0.6 kg)

History edit

 
12-pounder heavy Gribeauval cannon, 1780

In the early years of the French Revolutionary Wars, the artillery arm lost the fewest officers by emigration. That was because many of its officers came from middle-class instead of aristocratic families. Thanks to the Gribeauval system, the French field artillery was Europe's finest. The artillerists had to rely on hired civilian drivers and horses to carry their guns into battle. This problem was not rectified until shortly after 1800, when the drivers became soldiers.[27] At the Battle of Jemappes in 1792, the French superiority in artillery contributed to the victory. The commanding general Charles François Dumouriez remarked that French soldiers were more impetuous when their guns dominated the enemy, and that when the artillery was not successful, the infantry hung back. Historian Ramsay Weston Phipps noted that the French artillery in the War of the First Coalition was "excellent" and helped overcome some of the failings of the new armies.[28] After the Battle of Wattignies in 1793, one Allied observer wrote that the French victory was due to "their immense artillery".[29]

 
Inscription on the breech of the 4-pounder at Chalmette National Battlefield in New Orleans reads "Périer Frères PARIS Nivose An 2" (21 Dec. 1793–19 Jan. 1794).

For his expert handling of the artillery at the Siege of Toulon in 1793, Napoleon Bonaparte was promoted to general of brigade and began his climb to fame and political power.[30] When Napoleon became First Consul and later emperor, he appointed Auguste de Marmont to carry out most of his artillery improvements. Already in 1800, there were eight foot and six horse artillery regiments, two sapper battalions, and eight battalions of artillery train soldiers, for a total of 28,000 gunners, sappers, and drivers.[31] At first, each infantry unit was allocated some 4-pounders, the so-called regimental artillery. These were suppressed in 1800 but reinstated in 1809 as the infantry declined in quality.[32] Napoleon decided to replace the 4-pounders with 6-pounders in order to increase his artillery's hitting power.[12] This would utilize the large number of 6-pounders captured from Austria and Prussia in 1794–1800.[32]

From 1805, the Year XI system started to replace the captured ordnance. Gradually, the Gribeauval 4- and 8-pounders began to be replaced by the Year XI 6-pounder and the Gribeauval 6-pouce (6.4-inch) howitzer was replaced by the Year XI 24-pounder howitzer. In 1808, due to financial considerations, the old Gribeauval carriages were cannibalised to create new carriages for the Year XI gun tubes.[33] During this period, many Gribeauval 4- and 8-pounders were withdrawn into arsenals. However, the 8-pounder continued to be used in Spain since the terrain was not suitable for the heavier 12-pounder.[34] The new Year XI 6-pounder was rushed into production, but it ultimately proved to be too fragile.[35] In 1810 a commission headed by Nicolas-Marie Songis des Courbons determined that the Year XI system should be discontinued and the Gribeauval system retained, but that a new 6-pounder should be introduced. Under the Bourbon Restoration in 1815, the 4- and 8-pounders were brought back into service and the new 6-pounders withdrawn based on a survey carried out by Charles-Étienne-François Ruty.[34]

In 1829, the Gribeauval system was replaced by the Valée system which was developed by Sylvain Charles Valée. The new system reduced the calibers of field artillery to 8- and 12-pound cannons and 24-pound and 6-inch howitzers. Mobility was increased by standardizing limbers so that 8-pounders and 24-pound howitzers used the smaller size while 12-pounders and 6-inch howitzers used the larger size. Gunners rode into action while sitting on the limbers rather than walking beside the guns. All batteries were armed with four cannons and two howitzers.[36]

Notes edit

 
16-pounder Gribeauval siege cannon
  1. ^ Wright 1989, p. 5.
  2. ^ Chartrand & Hutchins 2003a, p. 3.
  3. ^ a b Rothenberg 1980, p. 24.
  4. ^ a b Chartrand & Hutchins 2003a, p. 10.
  5. ^ a b Rothenberg 1980, p. 25.
  6. ^ Rothenberg 1980, pp. 24–25.
  7. ^ Chartrand & Hutchins 2003a, p. 7.
  8. ^ a b c Rothenberg 1980, p. 26.
  9. ^ a b Rothenberg 1980, p. 27.
  10. ^ Rothenberg 1980, pp. 27–28.
  11. ^ a b Tucker 2018, p. 56.
  12. ^ a b Rothenberg 1980, p. 75.
  13. ^ Greene 2005, p. 368.
  14. ^ a b c d Chandler 1966, pp. 358–359.
  15. ^ a b Rothenberg 1980, p. 79.
  16. ^ Bowden & Tarbox 1980, p. 35.
  17. ^ Pivka 1979, pp. 23–25.
  18. ^ a b Rothenberg 1980, p. 78.
  19. ^ Rothenberg 1980, p. 28.
  20. ^ Pivka 1979, p. 28.
  21. ^ a b Pivka 1979, p. 25.
  22. ^ a b c Chartrand & Hutchins 2003b, p. 10.
  23. ^ Chartrand & Hutchins 2003b, p. 14.
  24. ^ Greene 2005, p. 369.
  25. ^ Greene 2005, p. 472.
  26. ^ Pivka 1979, p. 26.
  27. ^ Chandler 1966, p. 69.
  28. ^ Phipps 2011, p. 142.
  29. ^ Phipps 2011, p. 261.
  30. ^ Chandler 1966, p. 28.
  31. ^ Chandler 1966, pp. 356–357.
  32. ^ a b Chandler 1966, p. 360.
  33. ^ Dawson, Dawson & Summerfield 2007, pp. 74–78.
  34. ^ a b Bruce et al. 2008, p. 184.
  35. ^ Rothenberg 1980, p. 143.
  36. ^ Duparcq & Cullum 1863, pp. 146–147.

References edit

  • Bowden, Scotty; Tarbox, Charlie (1980). Armies on the Danube 1809. Arlington, Tex.: Empire Games Press.
  • Bruce, Robert Bowman; Dickie, Iain; Kiley, Kevin; Pavkovic, Michael; Schneid, Frederick S. (2008). Fighting Techniques of the Napoleonic Age: Equipment, Combat Skills and Tactics. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9780312375874.
  • Chandler, David G. (1966). The Campaigns of Napoleon. New York: Macmillan.
  • Chartrand, René; Hutchins, Ray (2003a). Napoleon's guns 1792-1815: Field Artillery. Vol. 1. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-458-2.
  • Chartrand, René; Hutchins, Ray (2003b). Napoleon's guns 1792-1815: Heavy and Siege Artillery. Vol. 2. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 1-84176-460-4.
  • Dawson, A. L.; Dawson, P. L.; Summerfield, Stephen (2007). Napoleonic Artillery. Crowood Press. ISBN 978-1-86126-923-2.
  • Duparcq, Édouard La Barre; Cullum, George Washington (1863). Elements of Military Art and History. New York: D. Van Nostrand. Retrieved 23 January 2019. Valee system.
  • Greene, Jerome A. (2005). The Guns of Independence: The Siege of Yorktown, 1781. New York: Savas Beatie. ISBN 1-932714-05-7.
  • Phipps, Ramsay Weston (2011) [1926]. The Armies of the First French Republic and the Rise of the Marshals of Napoleon I: The Armée du Nord. Vol. 1. Pickle Partners Publishing. ISBN 978-1-908692-24-5.
  • Pivka, Otto von (1979). Armies of the Napoleonic Era. New York: Taplinger Publishing. ISBN 0-8008-5471-3.
  • Rothenberg, Gunther (1980). The Art of War in the Age of Napoleon. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-31076-8.
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (2018). American Revolution: The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO LLC. p. 56. ISBN 978-1851097395.
  • Wright, Robert K. Jr. (1989). The Continental Army. Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. CMH Pub 60-4.

See also edit

  • Graves, Donald (2011). "Louis de Tousard and his "Artillerists Companion": An Investigation of Source Material for Napoleonic Period Ordnance". Smoothbore Ordnance Journal (1): 88–97. ISBN 978-1-907417-13-9.
  • Smith, Digby (2011). "The 18 Questions on Austrian Artillery that Gribeauval Answered in his report Dated March 1762". Smoothbore Ordnance Journal (1): 60–65. ISBN 978-1-907417-13-9.
  • Summerfield, Stephen (2011a). "Summary of Gribeauval's Life". Smoothbore Ordnance Journal (2): 9–23. ISBN 978-1-907417-14-6.
  • Summerfield, Stephen (2011b). "Gribeauval Garrison Carriage". Smoothbore Ordnance Journal (2): 36–56. ISBN 978-1-907417-14-6.

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Artillery". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 685–696. (See pp. 687–688.)
  Media related to Gribeauval system at Wikimedia Commons

Conversions edit

This website is useful for converting Old French pounds (livres) into English pounds and Old French inches (pouces) into English inches.

  • Gershtein, Sergey; Gershtein, Anna (2013). "Livre Conversion Chart (Weight and Mass Converter, Old French)". Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  • Gershtein, Sergey; Gershtein, Anna (2013). "Pouce Conversion Chart (Length Units Converter, Old French)". Retrieved 19 January 2018.

gribeauval, system, french, système, gribeauval, artillery, system, introduced, lieutenant, general, jean, baptiste, vaquette, gribeauval, during, 18th, century, this, system, revolutionized, french, cannons, with, production, system, that, allowed, lighter, m. The Gribeauval system French systeme Gribeauval was an artillery system introduced by Lieutenant General Jean Baptiste Vaquette de Gribeauval during the 18th century This system revolutionized French cannons with a new production system that allowed lighter more uniform guns without sacrificing range The Gribeauval system superseded the Valliere system beginning in 1765 The new guns contributed to French military victories during the French Revolutionary Wars and Napoleonic Wars The system included improvements to cannons howitzers and mortars The Year XI system partly replaced the field guns in 1803 and the Valee system completely superseded the Gribeauval system in 1829 Gribeauval systemGribeauval system field artillery gun barrels are shown From left to right they are 12 8 and 4 pounders TypeArtilleryPlace of originKingdom of France First French Republic First French EmpireService historyIn service1765 1829Used byFrance French satellitesWarsAmerican Revolutionary WarFrench Revolutionary WarsNapoleonic WarsProduction historyDesignerJean Baptiste Vaquette de GribeauvalDesigned15 October 1765 Contents 1 Development 2 Gun types 2 1 Field guns 2 2 Siege and garrison guns 2 3 Mortars 3 History 4 Notes 5 References 6 See also 7 ConversionsDevelopment editThe mid 18th Century saw the development of mobile field artillery Ballistics engineers and metallurgy technicians introduced reforms that lowered the weight of gun tubes while other experts devised lighter gun carriages Gun calibers were standardized easing the logistical headache caused by a multitude of calibers Gribeauval was a veteran combat officer and an able artillery theoretician With the advent of the Gribeauval system the French enjoyed the best artillery in Europe 1 One historian called it arguably the best artillery system in Europe at that time 2 Benjamin Robins put artillery on a scientific basis in 1742 Bronze an alloy of 10 parts copper to one part tin was preferred for cannons because it was lighter than iron and more durable At that time cannons were cast hollow around a core and the core often moved within the mold producing an imperfect bore This problem was solved at The Hague foundry in 1747 3 Jean Maritz began casting guns as a single solid block and then drilling the bore on a large machine 4 The Dutch tried to maintain the secret but the new process soon became widely known in Europe After Maritz s invention a cannon could be manufactured with a better aligned bore and tighter tolerances This resulted in less windage the gap between the cannonball and the bore which meant less gas pressure escaped so that smaller gunpowder charges could hurl the projectile farther and more accurately When less gunpowder could be used to achieve the same power and range the ballistics experts found that cannon barrels could be made thinner shorter and lighter 3 The army of the Habsburg monarchy discovered that its artillery was outmatched by Prussian cannons during the War of the Austrian Succession In 1744 the new Director General Joseph Wenzel I Prince of Liechtenstein began a series of reforms to improve the design of Austria s field artillery and provide training to its gunners By the start of the Seven Years War the Austrians upgraded their artillery with lighter cannons and introduced a very good howitzer These were so successful that other nations rushed to manufacture similar weapons Gribeauval who served in the Austrian artillery in 1756 1762 got a first hand look at the new field guns Upon his return to France Gribeauval was requested to reorganize the artillery 5 nbsp GribeauvalFrance already possessed the only unified range of artillery in Europe Earlier Florent Jean de Valliere standardized guns from 4 pounders through 24 pounders though they were all very heavy 6 The Gribeauval system was introduced through royal order on 15 October 1765 7 The new system was strenuously resisted by Valliere s son Joseph Florent de Valliere and other officers Because of their opposition the Gribeauval system was not completely implemented until 1776 8 The 1 pounder Rostaing gun and the Swedish 4 pounder battalion guns were retained from the previous system 4 Gribeauval s reforms encompassed not only the cannons but the gun carriages limbers ammunition chests and the accompanying tools 5 The system s field guns included 4 8 and 12 pounder cannons and 6 and 8 inch howitzers The gun barrels were cast shorter and thinner while gun carriages were built lighter and narrower These improvements dramatically reduced the weight of an artillery piece The carriages were standardized and built with interchangeable parts The carriages had two positions for the trunnions a forward position for firing and a rear position for traveling The draft horses were harnessed in pairs rather than single file The guns were fitted with a rear calibrated gunsight and an elevating screw 8 The last two improvements allowed gunners to more easily aim the cannons 9 The new system incorporated other innovations that were widely shared in Europe One was the quick match tube which generated a better ignition of the gunpowder charge Other general improvements were the adoption of gunpowder charges in pre packaged flannel bags a more effective gunpowder mixture and the use of a vent pricker a special tool to make a hole in the gunpowder bags Around 1791 French chemist Nicholas Leblanc invented a process to manufacture soda ash allowing to more cheaply convert calcium nitrate from guano to saltpeter a necessary ingredient of gunpowder 9 Finally since better gunners were needed to operate the new field pieces France set up artillery schools to train its soldiers 10 Gun types editField guns edit The Gribeauval field artillery pieces were approximately half the weight of the Valliere guns of the same caliber without sacrificing range 8 Canon de 12 Gribeauval 12 pounder cannon Canon de 8 Gribeauval 8 pounder cannon Canon de 4 Gribeauval 4 pounder cannon Obusier de 6 pouces Gribeauval 6 inch howitzerNo Gribeauval guns were shipped to the American forces during the American Revolutionary War However it is probable that the French forces employed Gribeauval siege cannons during that conflict 11 Note that the Old French pound livre was approximately one tenth heavier than the English pound 12 Also the Old French inch pouce was slightly longer than the English inch Therefore the French guns threw somewhat heavier shot and shell than the same rated English and American guns so that a French 8 pounder was similar in power to a British 9 pounder 13 Gribeauval field gun calibers crews ranges rates of fire and ammunition carried 14 Name Gun calibre Guncrew Canisterrange Effectiverange shot Maximumrange shot Rate of Fireper minute Trail Chestround shot Caissonround shot Caissoncanister shot Caissonsper gun 15 12 pounder cannon 121 mm 4 8 in 15 575 m 629 yd 900 m 980 yd 1 800 m 2 000 yd 1 shot 9 48 20 38 pounder cannon 100 mm 3 9 in 13 475 m 519 yd 800 m 870 yd 1 500 m 1 600 yd 2 shots 15 62 20 24 pounder cannon 84 mm 3 3 in 8 375 m 410 yd 700 m 770 yd 1 200 m 1 300 yd 2 3 shots 18 100 50 16 inch howitzer 166 mm 6 5 in 13 200 m 220 yd 700 m 770 yd 1 200 m 1 300 yd 1 shell 4 49 11 3Historian Gunther E Rothenberg published a table giving similar numbers except that it listed 30 caisson carried canister rounds for the 8 pounder and three rounds of canister for the 6 inch howitzer 15 Scotty Bowden and Charlie Tarbox gave canister shot ranges in meters as 600 for the 12 pounder 550 for the 8 pounder 400 for the 4 pounder and 250 for the 6 inch howitzer Other ranges were in agreement with the table above They also listed a Gribeauval 24 pounder howitzer that had a canister range of 300 meters and a maximum range of 1 500 meters 16 Gribeauval Field Gun Lengths Weights Gunpowder Charge Weights and No Balls per Canister Round Name Barrel Length 14 Barrel Weight 14 Carriage Weight 14 Round ShotCharge Weight 17 Large CanisterBalls per Round 18 Small CanisterBalls per Round 18 Canister RoundCharge Weight 19 12 pounder cannon 7 feet 7 inches 2 31 m 2 172 lb 985 2 kg 2 192 lb 994 3 kg 4 lb 1 8 kg 41 112 4 25 lb 1 9 kg 8 pounder cannon 6 feet 7 inches 2 01 m 1 286 lb 583 3 kg 1 851 lb 839 6 kg 2 5 lb 1 1 kg 41 112 2 75 lb 1 2 kg 4 pounder cannon 5 feet 3 inches 1 60 m 637 lb 288 9 kg 1 454 lb 659 5 kg 1 5 lb 0 7 kg 41 63 1 75 lb 0 8 kg 6 inch howitzer 2 feet 4 inches 0 71 m 701 lb 318 0 kg 1 895 lb 859 6 kg 1 0625 lb 0 5 kg 60 none not statedThe canister varied in size according to the caliber of the gun Also there were two different sizes of balls in the small canister round The 12 pounder employed 6 ounce balls in large canister rounds and 2 and 3 oz balls in small canister rounds The 8 pounder used 4 oz balls in large canister rounds and 1 and 2 oz balls in small canister rounds The 4 pounder had and 2 oz balls in small canister rounds 20 An 8 inch howitzer had a barrel weight of 1 120 lb 508 0 kg and required a gunpowder charge weighing 1 75 lb 0 8 kg 21 nbsp A 4 pounder Gribeauval cannon is sited in Battery 5 at Chalmette National Battlefield in New Orleans La nbsp An 8 pounder Gribeauval cannon is sited in Battery 6 at Chalmette National Battlefield in New Orleans La nbsp A 12 pounder Gribeauval cannon is located in Les Invalides in Paris France nbsp A 6 inch Gribeauval howitzer is located in Les Invalides in Paris France Siege and garrison guns edit For siege and garrison artillery he retained the same proportions as the earlier Valliere System of 1732 but with the removal of the decoration and simplification of the dolphins 22 Canon de 24 Gribeauval 24 pounder siege cannon Canon de 16 Gribeauval 16 pounder siege cannon Canon lourd de 12 Gribeauval 12 pounder siege cannon Canon lourd de 8 Gribeauval 8 pounder siege cannonAccording to one author only the Gribeauval siege guns were first used for major operations in the American Revolutionary War They were employed by Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur comte de Rochambeau s French expeditionary corps from 1780 to late 1782 and especially at the Siege of Yorktown in 1781 23 A second source believed that the Yorktown siege guns were Gribeauval pieces Rochambeau s siege train included 12 24 pounders 8 16 pounders and 16 mortars 11 A third author stated that it is debatable whether Gribeauval guns were used at Yorktown 24 though he pointed out that one French source insisted the siege guns were in fact Gribeauval guns 25 nbsp 8 pounder heavy Gribeauval cannon nbsp 12 pounder heavy Gribeauval cannon nbsp 16 pounder Gribeauval cannon nbsp 24 pounder Gribeauval cannonMortars edit nbsp 12 inch Gribeauval mortarGribeauval also designed a range of mortars as follows 22 Mortier de 12 Gribeauval 12 inch mortar Mortier court de 10 Gribeauval Short 10 inch mortar Mortier long de 10 Gribeauval Long 10 inch mortar Mortier de 8 Gribeauval 8 inch mortarGribeauval also incorporated in his system an anti personnel 15 inch stone mortar from the de Valliere system 22 Mortars and the barrels of 24 pounder siege guns were moved from place to place on special saddle wagons 26 Gribeauval Mortar Specifications 21 Name Weight of Mortar Weight of Carriage Weight of Charge12 inch mortar 3 150 lb 1 429 kg 3 000 lb 1 361 kg not statedLong 10 inch mortar 2 050 lb 930 kg 2 616 lb 1 187 kg 6 5 lb 2 9 kg Short 10 inch mortar 1 600 lb 726 kg 1 739 lb 789 kg 3 5 lb 1 6 kg 8 inch mortar 550 lb 249 kg 820 lb 372 kg 1 25 lb 0 6 kg History edit nbsp 12 pounder heavy Gribeauval cannon 1780In the early years of the French Revolutionary Wars the artillery arm lost the fewest officers by emigration That was because many of its officers came from middle class instead of aristocratic families Thanks to the Gribeauval system the French field artillery was Europe s finest The artillerists had to rely on hired civilian drivers and horses to carry their guns into battle This problem was not rectified until shortly after 1800 when the drivers became soldiers 27 At the Battle of Jemappes in 1792 the French superiority in artillery contributed to the victory The commanding general Charles Francois Dumouriez remarked that French soldiers were more impetuous when their guns dominated the enemy and that when the artillery was not successful the infantry hung back Historian Ramsay Weston Phipps noted that the French artillery in the War of the First Coalition was excellent and helped overcome some of the failings of the new armies 28 After the Battle of Wattignies in 1793 one Allied observer wrote that the French victory was due to their immense artillery 29 nbsp Inscription on the breech of the 4 pounder at Chalmette National Battlefield in New Orleans reads Perier Freres PARIS Nivose An 2 21 Dec 1793 19 Jan 1794 For his expert handling of the artillery at the Siege of Toulon in 1793 Napoleon Bonaparte was promoted to general of brigade and began his climb to fame and political power 30 When Napoleon became First Consul and later emperor he appointed Auguste de Marmont to carry out most of his artillery improvements Already in 1800 there were eight foot and six horse artillery regiments two sapper battalions and eight battalions of artillery train soldiers for a total of 28 000 gunners sappers and drivers 31 At first each infantry unit was allocated some 4 pounders the so called regimental artillery These were suppressed in 1800 but reinstated in 1809 as the infantry declined in quality 32 Napoleon decided to replace the 4 pounders with 6 pounders in order to increase his artillery s hitting power 12 This would utilize the large number of 6 pounders captured from Austria and Prussia in 1794 1800 32 From 1805 the Year XI system started to replace the captured ordnance Gradually the Gribeauval 4 and 8 pounders began to be replaced by the Year XI 6 pounder and the Gribeauval 6 pouce 6 4 inch howitzer was replaced by the Year XI 24 pounder howitzer In 1808 due to financial considerations the old Gribeauval carriages were cannibalised to create new carriages for the Year XI gun tubes 33 During this period many Gribeauval 4 and 8 pounders were withdrawn into arsenals However the 8 pounder continued to be used in Spain since the terrain was not suitable for the heavier 12 pounder 34 The new Year XI 6 pounder was rushed into production but it ultimately proved to be too fragile 35 In 1810 a commission headed by Nicolas Marie Songis des Courbons determined that the Year XI system should be discontinued and the Gribeauval system retained but that a new 6 pounder should be introduced Under the Bourbon Restoration in 1815 the 4 and 8 pounders were brought back into service and the new 6 pounders withdrawn based on a survey carried out by Charles Etienne Francois Ruty 34 In 1829 the Gribeauval system was replaced by the Valee system which was developed by Sylvain Charles Valee The new system reduced the calibers of field artillery to 8 and 12 pound cannons and 24 pound and 6 inch howitzers Mobility was increased by standardizing limbers so that 8 pounders and 24 pound howitzers used the smaller size while 12 pounders and 6 inch howitzers used the larger size Gunners rode into action while sitting on the limbers rather than walking beside the guns All batteries were armed with four cannons and two howitzers 36 Notes edit nbsp 16 pounder Gribeauval siege cannon Wright 1989 p 5 Chartrand amp Hutchins 2003a p 3 a b Rothenberg 1980 p 24 a b Chartrand amp Hutchins 2003a p 10 a b Rothenberg 1980 p 25 Rothenberg 1980 pp 24 25 Chartrand amp Hutchins 2003a p 7 a b c Rothenberg 1980 p 26 a b Rothenberg 1980 p 27 Rothenberg 1980 pp 27 28 a b Tucker 2018 p 56 a b Rothenberg 1980 p 75 Greene 2005 p 368 a b c d Chandler 1966 pp 358 359 a b Rothenberg 1980 p 79 Bowden amp Tarbox 1980 p 35 Pivka 1979 pp 23 25 a b Rothenberg 1980 p 78 Rothenberg 1980 p 28 Pivka 1979 p 28 a b Pivka 1979 p 25 a b c Chartrand amp Hutchins 2003b p 10 Chartrand amp Hutchins 2003b p 14 Greene 2005 p 369 Greene 2005 p 472 Pivka 1979 p 26 Chandler 1966 p 69 Phipps 2011 p 142 Phipps 2011 p 261 Chandler 1966 p 28 Chandler 1966 pp 356 357 a b Chandler 1966 p 360 Dawson Dawson amp Summerfield 2007 pp 74 78 a b Bruce et al 2008 p 184 Rothenberg 1980 p 143 Duparcq amp Cullum 1863 pp 146 147 References editBowden Scotty Tarbox Charlie 1980 Armies on the Danube 1809 Arlington Tex Empire Games Press Bruce Robert Bowman Dickie Iain Kiley Kevin Pavkovic Michael Schneid Frederick S 2008 Fighting Techniques of the Napoleonic Age Equipment Combat Skills and Tactics New York St Martin s Press ISBN 9780312375874 Chandler David G 1966 The Campaigns of Napoleon New York Macmillan Chartrand Rene Hutchins Ray 2003a Napoleon s guns 1792 1815 Field Artillery Vol 1 Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 458 2 Chartrand Rene Hutchins Ray 2003b Napoleon s guns 1792 1815 Heavy and Siege Artillery Vol 2 Osprey Publishing ISBN 1 84176 460 4 Dawson A L Dawson P L Summerfield Stephen 2007 Napoleonic Artillery Crowood Press ISBN 978 1 86126 923 2 Duparcq Edouard La Barre Cullum George Washington 1863 Elements of Military Art and History New York D Van Nostrand Retrieved 23 January 2019 Valee system Greene Jerome A 2005 The Guns of Independence The Siege of Yorktown 1781 New York Savas Beatie ISBN 1 932714 05 7 Phipps Ramsay Weston 2011 1926 The Armies of the First French Republic and the Rise of the Marshals of Napoleon I The Armee du Nord Vol 1 Pickle Partners Publishing ISBN 978 1 908692 24 5 Pivka Otto von 1979 Armies of the Napoleonic Era New York Taplinger Publishing ISBN 0 8008 5471 3 Rothenberg Gunther 1980 The Art of War in the Age of Napoleon Bloomington Ind Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 31076 8 Tucker Spencer C 2018 American Revolution The Definitive Encyclopedia and Document Collection Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO LLC p 56 ISBN 978 1851097395 Wright Robert K Jr 1989 The Continental Army Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History CMH Pub 60 4 See also editGraves Donald 2011 Louis de Tousard and his Artillerists Companion An Investigation of Source Material for Napoleonic Period Ordnance Smoothbore Ordnance Journal 1 88 97 ISBN 978 1 907417 13 9 Smith Digby 2011 The 18 Questions on Austrian Artillery that Gribeauval Answered in his report Dated March 1762 Smoothbore Ordnance Journal 1 60 65 ISBN 978 1 907417 13 9 Summerfield Stephen 2011a Summary of Gribeauval s Life Smoothbore Ordnance Journal 2 9 23 ISBN 978 1 907417 14 6 Summerfield Stephen 2011b Gribeauval Garrison Carriage Smoothbore Ordnance Journal 2 36 56 ISBN 978 1 907417 14 6 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Artillery Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 685 696 See pp 687 688 nbsp Media related to Gribeauval system at Wikimedia CommonsConversions editThis website is useful for converting Old French pounds livres into English pounds and Old French inches pouces into English inches Gershtein Sergey Gershtein Anna 2013 Livre Conversion Chart Weight and Mass Converter Old French Retrieved 19 January 2018 Gershtein Sergey Gershtein Anna 2013 Pouce Conversion Chart Length Units Converter Old French Retrieved 19 January 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gribeauval system amp oldid 1188333951, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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