Serbian guns
In
1912, at the beginning of the
Balkan wars, Serbian Army had: - 168
quick firing 75mm Schneider-Creusot M. 1907 field
guns, - 60
quick firing 75mm Schneider-Creusot M. 1907 and M.
1907A field guns, - 36
quick firing 70mm Schneider-Creusot M. 1907
mountain guns, - 32
quick firing 120mm Schneider-Canet M. 1910 field howitzers, - 8
quick firing 150mm Schneider-Canet M. 1910 QF howitzers, - 180
slow firing 80mm De Bange M. 1885 field guns, - 30
slow firing 80mm De Bange M. 1885 mountain guns, - 22
slow firing 120mm Schneider-Canet M. 1897 howitzers, - 6
slow firing 150mm Schneider-Canet M. 1897 mortars, - 17
slow firing 120mm Schneider-Canet M. 1897 long guns, - 65
old guns in the siege artillery park. According with
KUTSCHBACH, Die Serben im Balkankrieg
1912-1913 und im Kriege gegen die Bulgaren, pp. 95-96, during the Balkan War the Serbian Army
captured from the Turks: - 39
855 magazine rifles and carbines, - 8
machine guns with 33 barrels, - 126 field guns (Krupp 75mm QF), - 6
mountain guns (Krupp 75mm QF), - 30
field howitzers (Krupp 120mm), - 47
403 cases with infantry ammunitions, - 16
977 shrapnel and 4852 shells for field guns, - 919
shrapnel and 1811 shells for field howitzers, - 216
ordinary shells. According
with the same book, p. 127, during the Interallied War
the 1st and 2nd Serbian Army captured from the Bulgars: - 5
000 magazine rifles and carbines, - 7
machine guns, - 11 QF
field guns (Schneider
75mm), - 30
not QF field guns (Krupp 75mm) - 7
mountain guns (Schneider 75mm), - 2
QF turret guns (Gruson 57mm) - 30
ammunition wagons. As
for the artillery, these numbers are different from those published in According
with James Lyon, who could consult Serbian archival sources, in August 1914
Serbian Army had only 617 artillery pieces, among them 381 modern
quick-firing weapons. Due to the unsettled situation along the Bulgarian and
Albanian borders, - 272
quick firing 75mm Schneider-Creusot M. 1907 and M.
1907A field guns, - 29
quick firing 70mm Schneider-Creusot M. 1907
mountain guns, - 8
quick firing 75mm Schneider-Danglis mountain guns, - 32
quick firing 120mm Schneider-Canet M. 1910 field howitzers, - 8
quick firing 150mm Schneider-Canet M. 1910 QF howitzers, - 216
slow firing 80mm De Bange M. 1885 field guns, - 18
slow firing 80mm De Bange M. 1885 mountain guns, - 22
slow firing 120mm Schneider-Canet M. 1897 howitzers, - 6
slow firing 150mm Schneider-Canet M. 1897 mortars, - 2
slow firing 120mm long guns captured from the Turks, - 16
slow firing 120mm Schneider-Canet M. 1897 long guns. At
the beginning of the war some captured Turkish field guns were assembled in a
three batteries division with 12-75mm Krupp guns, called Krupp field division
and attached to the Morava I Division. Another artillery division armed with
12 ex Turkish Krupp guns was later attached to the Morava II Division. By
November one of them was withdrawn to the rear due to a lack of ammunition
and replaced by 3 four guns batteries armed with Austrian 8cm (actually
76.5mm) field M. 5 guns. In addition, two more batteries were
raised: one with 4 10cm (actually 104mm) Austrian field howitzers M.
99, and one with 3 75mm Turkish mountain guns. On 8 May 1915
an anti-aircraft battery armed with cannons taken from the Bulgarians in 1913
was deployed at Prahovo near the Danube. By
August 1914, very little of the artillery ammunition used during the Balkan
Wars had been replaced, and During
1914 Serbian Army suffered heavy losses both in men and in weapons, but it
also captured a lot of materiel, that were used in order to replace the
losses. In the battle of the Jadar Serbians
captured 46 guns, 30 machine-guns, 140 ammunition wagons and during the third
Austro-Hungarian invasion they captured 133 guns, 71 machine-guns, 29 gun
carriages, 386 ammunition wagons. The
Entente contributed very little to the strengthening of the Serbian Army. On
10/23 January 1914 Serbian Prime Minister Nikola Pasich
requested, through an official Serbian delegation in Russia, the delivery of
120,000 Rifles,
24 107mm long guns and 36 mountain guns. During the spring of the same
year, the request was submitted several times in
various forms, but only the rifles arrived, when the war has already begun. In
January 1915 France delivered to Serbian army 3 batteries of four 75mm
Schneider-Canet M. 1901 mountain guns with 500 rounds each, while Russia sent
only a dozen of 76.2mm quick-firing field and mountain guns. To
defend 3 138.6mm French naval guns M. 1891,
under the command of Lt. Picot; 8 4.7inch English guns, under the command of Lt-Commander Kerr; 2 152.4mm Russian fortress guns M. 1877 (190 pud);
2 75mm Russian guns on platform. On
9 October, after the beginning of Mackensen
offensive, the Commander-in-Chief of the French Army, gen. Joseph Joffre,
accepted to send to Serbia 15 75mm field artillery batteries, one every two
or three months. But the advance of the Armies of the Central Powers was so
fast, that the plan should be abandoned. In
September 1915 when Mackensen crossed the Danube
and - against
3rd Austrian Army and 11th German Army : 362 guns, - against
1st Bulgarian Army : 248 guns, - against
2nd Bulgarian Army : 44 guns, - along Albanian
border : 24 guns. Among
these 678 guns there were a few captured Austrian guns and in addition to
them there were some fortress and siege guns. In
September-December 1914 Serbian Army was completely defeated and lost almost
all its equipment. On 31th December the rest of Serbian Army, concentrated in
Albania between Durazzo and San Giovanni di Medua, had only 81 guns and 179 machine guns, but only 49
guns were transferred to Corfu by Italian and French Navy (the remaining 32
guns were delivered to the Montenegrin Army, that was faced the
Austro-Hungarian offensive): 24
75mm field guns, 2
75mm mountain guns, 5
70mm mountain guns, 14
80mm field guns; 4
80mm mountain guns. During
the retreat Serbian GHQ, in Pech, decided to
abandon most of its artillery, knowing that Albanians mountains are impassable
for towed guns. It was decided to bring only mountain (pack) guns, one
battery per division, to maintain any kind of artillery support. So, the town
of The
total amount of guns captured by - according
with Austrian Official History of the War (Oesterreich-Ungarns letzer Krieg
III, p. 236) Austria and Germany captured 397 guns, 48 machine guns, 12 mine
launchers and 208 ammunition wagons, while Bulgarians captured about 200
guns; - according
with German Official History of the War (Der
Weltkrieg IX, p. 276) Mackensen
Army Group and Bulgarian 2nd Army as a whole captured 502 guns till November
and about 100 guns in December; - according
with Mackensen Memories (Briefe und Aufzeichnungen, p. 242) they
captured about 500 guns till November: about 1/3 of them was captured by
Bulgarians; - according
Manuel Lon (Bulgaria en The
captured Serbian guns were immediately employed by the Bulgarian Army.
Already on During
1916 August-December battles, Serbian artillery was strongly supported with
French heavy batteries, but lost 11 guns (some captured by Bulgarians), most
of them during defensive fighting in August. Unfortunately
I don't know how many guns captured from Serbians were used by Bulgarian Army
during the war. But according with CORDIER, Victoire eclair en Orient, p. 58, the 5th
battery of 2nd Field Artillery Regiment had four 120mm Schneider-Canet
howitzers. The
guns and howitzers used by Serbian Army during World War I were generally
very similar to those adopted by Bulgarian Army. Obviously the artillery of a
more recent pattern had some little improvements, but no really significant
alteration was introduced between 1907 and 1912. |