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  2. Stop That Tank! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_That_Tank!

    Stop That Tank! (aka Boys Anti-Tank Rifle) is a 22-minute 1942 instructional film created during World War II by Walt Disney Productions for the Directorate of Military Training, The Department of National Defence and the National Film Board of Canada (NFB).

  3. Outer London Defence Ring - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outer_London_Defence_Ring

    It was intended as a defence against a German invasion, and was part of a national network of similar "Stop Lines". In June 1940, under the direction of General Edmund Ironside , concentric rings of anti-tank defences and pillboxes were constructed in and around London.

  4. German encounter of Soviet T-34 and KV tanks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_encounter_of_Soviet...

    At the beginning of Operation Barbarossa, the Germans were expecting little from their opponent's tank forces, which were composed of the old T-26 and BTs.While most of the Soviet Union's armoured forces were composed of such tanks, the T-34 and the KV designs, which were previously unknown, took the Germans by surprise. [4]

  5. Anti-tank warfare - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-tank_warfare

    The most predominant anti-tank weapons at the start of World War II in 1939 included the tank-mounted gun, anti-tank guns and anti-tank grenades used by the infantry, and ground-attack aircraft. British Indian Army tank-hunting squad with anti-tank rifle and molotov cocktails in North Africa, 6 October 1940

  6. Anti-tank gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-tank_gun

    Most anti-tank guns were developed in the 1930s as improvements in tanks were noted, [5] and nearly every major arms manufacturer produced one type or another. [3] Anti-tank guns deployed during World War II were often manned by specialist infantry rather than artillery crews, and issued to light infantry units accordingly. [5]

  7. Anti-tank obstacles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-tank_obstacles

    Anti-tank obstacles include, but are not limited to: The Czech hedgehog, dragon's teeth and cointet-element are the most famous types of World War II anti-tank obstacles. Anti-tank trenches were used on the western front during World War I, and in the Pacific, Europe, and Russia in World War II. Anti-tank mines are the most common anti-tank ...

  8. Czech hedgehog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Czech_hedgehog

    Examples of Czech hedgehogs deployed on the Atlantic Wall in the vicinity of Calais. The Czech hedgehog's name refers to its origin in Czechoslovakia.The hedgehogs were originally used on the Czech–German border by the Czechoslovak border fortifications – a massive but never-completed fortification system that was turned over to Germany in 1938 after the occupation of the Sudetenland as a ...

  9. Zinoviy Kolobanov - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zinoviy_Kolobanov

    At the Battle of Leningrad on 20 August 1941, in Krasnogvardeysk (now Gatchina), Kolobanov's unit ambushed a column of German armour.The vanguard of the German 8th, 6th and 1st Panzer Divisions was approaching Krasnogvardeysk near Leningrad (now St Petersburg), and the only Soviet force available to stop it consisted of five well-hidden KV-1 tanks, dug in within a grove at the edge of a swamp.