In medieval warfare a mantlet or mantelet was a portable wall or shelter used for stopping projectiles. Some versions used wheels for enhanced mobility. A mantlet could protect one or several soldiers.

In the First World War (1914-1918) French soldiers used a mantlet-style device to attack barbed wire entanglements.[1]

Gun mantlet

In military use from pre-WW2 onward, a mantlet is the thick, protective steel frontal shield, usually able to elevate and depress, which houses the main gun on an armoured tank, examples being Tiger Tank, Sherman Tank and Churchill Tank.

See also

References

  1. ^ Popular Science. Bonnier Corporation. January 1919. One of the simpler and more satisfactory devices, developed by the French, is a shield of steel, bent so as to protect the head of the wire-snipping soldier in front and on top. It is attached to the axle of two hollow wheels filled with sand to give them greater weight. The soldier using the device crawled toward the enemy's entanglement[...], pushing the shield forward as he progressed. When he reached the entanglement, he thrust his wire nippers through an opening in the front of the shield and cut the wires. [...] The device is small, inconspicuous, and very effective.

Further reading

  • Farrow's military encyclopedia: a dictionary of military knowledge By Edward Samuel Farrow. Page 259


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