Mark I tank

E430086

The Mark I tank was the world’s first operational armored fighting vehicle, introduced by Britain during World War I to break the stalemate of trench warfare.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Mark I tank canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf armoured fighting vehicle
military vehicle
tank
armamentVariant Female version armed with only machine guns
Male version armed with naval 6-pounder guns and machine guns
armourThickness up to about 12 mm
conflict World War I
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
crew 8
crewIncludes commander
driver
gearsmen
gunners
designedFor crossing trenches
supporting infantry assaults
designedTo break trench warfare stalemate
designer Walter Gordon Wilson NERFINISHED
William Tritton NERFINISHED
developmentFrom Little Willie prototype
engine Daimler 6-cylinder petrol engine NERFINISHED
enginePower about 105 hp
firstOperationalUse Battle of the Somme NERFINISHED
firstOperationalUseYear 1916
hadSteeringTail true
hasVariant Mark I Female NERFINISHED
Mark I Male
height about 2.41 metres
introducedInYear 1916
length about 9.94 metres
manufacturer Fosters of Lincoln NERFINISHED
Metropolitan Carriage, Wagon and Finance Company NERFINISHED
maximumSpeed about 6 km/h
nickname Mother NERFINISHED
notableFor being the first operational tank in history
numberBuilt about 150
primaryArmour riveted steel plate
propulsion petrol engine
retiredFromService 1918
serviceEntry 1916
steeringMethod differential braking and steering tail
successor Mark II tank
Mark IV tank NERFINISHED
trackType full-length all-around tracks
usedBy British Army
usedInRole breakthrough vehicle
infantry support vehicle
weight approximately 28 tons
width about 4.27 metres

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.