Levavasseur project
| Levavasseur project | |
|---|---|
The Levavasseur project. | |
| Type | Tank |
| Place of origin | France |
| Service history | |
| In service | project only |
| Production history | |
| Designer | Captain L.R. Levavasseur |
| Designed | 1903 |
| Specifications | |
| Crew | 1 commander, 3 crew |
Main armament | 1 Canon de 75 |
| Engine | gasoline internal combustion engine 80 hp |
The Levavasseur project was an early project for a tank designed in 1903 by the French Captain Léon René Levavasseur (1860-1942) of the 6th Artillery Battalion, described as a "self propelled cannon project" (French: Projet de canon autopropulseur). It is considered as the first description, made by a soldier, of what would come to be known as the tank. Levavasseur was a graduate of Ecole Polytechnique, of the promotion of 1881. According to Armoured Fighting Vehicles of the World:
A project for a vehicle which had all the characteristics later thought desirable in a tank was put forward to the French War Ministry as early as 1903. Devised by a Captain Levavasseur of the 6th Artillery Battalion, who called it a "canon autopropulseur", the vehicle was envisaged as carrying a 75mm gun mounted in a box-like steel caisson which ran on crawler tracks, or "roues articulées" as Levavasseur called them. Powered by an 80hp petrol engine, the Levavasseur machine would have had a crew of three, storage for ammunition, and a cross-country ability.
— Armoured Fighting Vehicles of the World, by Chris Ellis and Peter Chamberlain.