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Mitrailleuse Montigny
Montigny Mitrailleuse
Montigny mitrailleuse.
Type Regimental artillery field gun
Place of origin Belgium
Service history
In service 1863
Used by Belgium
Production history
Designer Joseph Montigny
Produced 1863
Specifications
Shell bullets
Caliber 11 mm
Barrels 37

The Montigny mitrailleuse was an early type of crank-operated machine-gun developed by the Belgian gun works of Joseph Montigny between 1859 and 1870. It was an improved version of the "Mitrailleuse", (English: Grapeshot shooter) invented by Belgian Captain Fafschamps in 1851 which was a fixed 50-barrelled volley gun.[1]

The Montigny mitrailleuse was designed to defend narrow defensive positions such as the moats of fortresses. The Belgian army initially purchased Fafschamps volley guns. Only later did they acquire Montigny mitrailleuses.

Joseph Montigny also promoted and sold the weapon for offensive field use by placing the weapon on an artillery carriage.

Specifications[]

Magazine plate of a Montigny Mitrailleuse

Magazine plate of a Montigny mitrailleuse, designed to hold 37 cartridges and to be slid into the breech before firing.

Chinese officers with Montigny Mitrailleuse

Chinese Qing Empire officers with Montigny mitrailleuse.

The weapon consisted of 37 barrels of 11 mm inside a cylindrical protective casing. Loading was performed with a loading plate containing 37 cartridges. It was inserted against the breech in one stroke and locked in with a hinged loading lever attached to the rear of the gun. The ammunition had a brass head and thin rolled brass foil body and was fired by needle pins.[2] With the rotation of a crank, all shots were fired simultaneously, although later improvements used a cam which permitted the progressive firing of the 37 shots.[1] Around 150–250 shots per minute could be fired depending on the skills of the operators.[1][3] The whole weapon was very heavy, weighing 2,000 pounds (910 kg).[1]

The Montigny Mitrailleuse was built in numbers and used mostly to defend Belgian forts and other defensive positions.[4]

Development of the Reffye mitrailleuse[]

Mitrailleuse front

The 25-barrels Reffye mitrailleuse ("Canon à balles modèle 1866") was adapted from the 37 barrels Montigny mitrailleuse.

Napoleon III showed personal interest in the mitrailleuse. Montigny had approached the French army for the purpose of a sale. Experiments to evaluate the weapon began in 1863 in a French facility near Paris but the decision was made to build a similar weapon by sole French means.[5] Manufacture began at Meudon in 1866 under the direction of Verchères de Reffye and the undisclosed assistance of Montigny. Hence the weapon is usually known as the "Reffye mitrailleuse". Altogether 215 mitrailleuses were manufactured for the French Army before the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71. They were of the 13mm, 25-barrels type,[1] and used elongated shotgun shell style cartridges instead of foil cartridges as in the Montigny mitrailleuse.[6] The weapon, which was on an artillery carriage, was deployed in six gun batteries and manned by artillery personnel. Most of the time, they were used quite ineffectively to engage distant targets.[7] When the weapon was engaged at the Battle of Gravelotte in 1871, in an infantry support role and at shorter distances, it produced devastating effects.[8]

See also[]

External links[]

Notes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Machine Guns by James H. Willbanks p.35
  2. An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology By Ian McNeil, p.985
  3. A History of Firearms By W. Y. Carman p.84
  4. "...produced in small numbers by ordnance engineers Joseph Montigny and Louis Christophe to arm fortifications." Soul of the Sword: An Illustrated History of Weaponry and Warfare by Robert L. O'Connell, John Batchelor — 2002 — page 198
  5. The Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-century Land Warfare: An Illustrated World View by Byron Farwell p.566
  6. An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology by Ian McNeil, p.985
  7. The Social History of the Machine Gun, page 63, by John Ellis
  8. The Social History of the Machine Gun, page 64, by John Ellis
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