Turkish
guns
In 1912 at the outbreak of
Balkan Wars Turkish artillery had: -
6 horse artillery batteries (all in -
162 field artillery batteries ( -
90 field artillery batteries with 540
75mm and 87mm Krupp M. 1875 and M. 1885 slow firing field guns -
36 and half mountain artillery batteries
( -
30 mountain batteries with 180 70mm
Krupp M. 1890 and 75mm Krupp M. 1873
guns -
6 field howitzers division ( - 3 siege gun batteries
with 18 105mm Krupp L/30 M. 1905 QF guns -
3 howitzer batteries with 18 150mm
Krupp L/14 M. 1905 QF howitzers - 13 fortress artillery
regiments. In 1912 49 more batteries
were under order: -
12 field batteries with 48 75mm Krupp
M. 1911 QF guns, -
10 field batteries of lighter pattern
for the horse artillery with 40 75mm Krupp M. 1911 QF guns, -
27 mountain artillery batteries with 108
75mm Schneider M.
1911 QF guns. In
1912-13 much more than half of the artillery of the Eastern Army fighting in In
order to strengthen the defence of the Chataldzha
position, already in mid-March 1913 the 2nd Assistant chief of Turkish
General Staff, col. Pertev bey,
had left Turkey and went to Germany in order to secure additional heavy guns
from the two principal German firms, Krupp and Rheinmetall. But, in spite of
the efforts of the Field Marshal Colmar von der Goltz,
who had served as military advisor in According
with British War Office (Military Notes
on the Balkan States. Compiled by The general Staff, August 1915, p. 30),
during the war the Bulgarian Army captured from the Turks (only field
artillery) : - 144 field guns (Krupp 75mm QF), - 130 field guns (Krupp 87mm), - 11
mountain guns (Krupp 75mm QF), - 6 field howitzers (Krupp 120mm), - 14 heavy howitzer (Krupp 150mm
QF). The
War Office booklet said that all these artillery pieces were quick-firing,
but I think that this is not correct, since Turkish Army had not 87mm or
120mm quick-firing guns/howitzers. To these guns we must add a great number
of artillery pieces
captured in Odrin. At least 4 of the 75mm QF field guns,
were of the lighter model designed for horse artillery. During
the Balkan war Bulgarian Army had already started introducing Turkish
guns : 2nd division of 8th not QF Artillery
Regiment was rearmed with 75mm Krupp QF guns and 1st battery of the 5th
not QF Artillery Regiment obtained four QF horse artillery guns. After the Interallied war many
ex Turkish guns were assigned to artillery regiments in order to achieve the
established strength. According with the British major Philip Howell, who
visited the Headquarters of the Bulgarian Army in 1912 during the armistice,
quite a number of Bulgarian artillery officers informed me that on the whole
they preferred the Krupp guns to the Creusot
(HOWELL, The Campaign in Thrace 1912
,
p. 161). At the beginning of 1914 according with the book Top ve Topηu Atış Okulu 150nci Yıl Hatırası
1795-1945 (150th Anniversary of Artillery and Artillery War School 1795-1945),
p. 128, Turkish Army had: 344 75mm Krupp field guns with 900 shells per
gun; 52 75mm Schneider-Canet field guns with 900
shells per gun; 192 75mm mountain guns Krupp and Schneider-Canet
with 867 shells per gun; 18 105mm field howitzers with 1147 shells per
gun; 2 100mm Krupp trial mountain howitzers with 466
shells per gun; 2 105mm Skoda field howitzers with 229 shells
per gun; 12 150mm Krupp heavy howitzers; 1 57mm gun in a
mobile armour housing (at |