Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

South African Army Artillery Formation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
icon
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "South African Army Artillery Formation" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(December 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
South African Army Artillery Formation
SANDF Artillery Formation emblem
Active1999 to date
Country South Africa
Allegiance South African Army
Branch South African Army
TypeArtillery
SizeBrigade size
Part ofSouth African Army
Garrison/HQSebokeng Military Complex,Pretoria
NicknameThe Gunners
PatronSt Barbara
MottosFirst in, last out
ColorsGuardsmen Red and Oxford Blue[1]
Anniversaries1 April
Commanders
General Officer Commanding (GOC)Brig GenJongile Maso
General of the GunnersLt GenJabu Mbuli
Chief of Staff (CoS)Col JK Moraka
Notable
commanders
Insignia
Collar BadgeBursting grenade with seven flames
Beret ColourOxford Blue
Artillery Battery EmblemsSANDF Artillery Battery emblems
Artillery Beret Bar circa 1992SANDF Artillery Beret Bar
Branch of ServiceBranch of Service
Military unit

TheSouth African Army Artillery Formation is the controlling entity of allSouth African Armyartillery units. It draws much of its history from theSouth African Artillery, established in 1934 but with roots that reach back to 1921. The formation consists of both regular and reserve units. There is a separateSouth African Army Air Defence Artillery Formation that directs armyanti-aircraft warfare units.

History

[edit]

Origins

[edit]

The South African Permanent Force, created in 1913 as the Permanent Force and re-designated with effect from 23 February 1923, included the South African Field Artillery (SAFA), and the South African Permanent Garrison Artillery (SAPGA). The SAPGA had begun operations some time before, when the coastal defences of the Cape Peninsula (manned by theCape Garrison Artillery) had been handed over to South Africa in December 1921.

SANDF G5 artillery Lohatla

In Proclamation No. 246 of 1934,[2] theGovernor General of the Union of South Africa merged the two organisations with effect from 1 September 1934 and created one Corps titled the South African Artillery (SAA) (seeSouth African Army corps and branches).

World War II

[edit]

Nine field regiments, two medium regiments, and three anti-tank regiments served in North Africa and Italy during theSecond World War.[3]

1st Medium Regiment SAA (SAHA) was formed briefly from 1 October 1939 - July 1941, when it was broken up in Egypt to provide replacements for the field regiments of the SAA. It was reformed with headquarters atCape Town from 1 January 1946. It was transferred fromCape Town and out ofCape Command toOudtshoorn from 31 December 1953, but was then disbanded after aCitizen Force reorganisation on 1 March 1960.[4]

Post World War II

[edit]

From 1 July 1951 8 Field Regiment SAA was active, but was redesignated theJohannesburg Regiment in 1960.

Bush War period

[edit]

10 Artillery Brigade South Africa, was active with 4 and 14 Regiments since 1983, and 14 Artillery Regiment disbanded on January 1, 1993.

National Defence Force Reorganisation

[edit]

The army's reorganisation after the creation of the new South African National Defence Force was lengthy. The SA Army Office was established. The Corps were restructured with Regular and Reserve Regiments under command. The so-called “Type Formations” were established which assumed responsibility for the provisioning of combat-ready forces to be employed under the direction ofJoint Operations Division.

G6 Rhino Howitzers at the Klipdrift military base

Air Defence Artillery becomes a separate formation

[edit]
  • In 1997 the7th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment, active since the 1960s, was disestablished.
  • Regiment Overvaal (ROV) which was established on 1 April 1969 as an Anti-Aircraft Regiment based on Vereeniging Military Base inVereeniging. P Battery of Regiment Vaalrivier was transferred on 1 October 1969 to form 8th Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment (8LLA). The name changed from 8LLA to ROV on 27 April 1993. The regiment was disestablished in 1997.[5]

The Artillery Formation

[edit]

The South African Artillery re-organised itself into the South African Army Artillery Formation, directed by the SA ArmyArtillery Formation Headquarters.[1][6]The South African Army Artillery Formation HQ was established in April 1999.[7]: 4–5 

SAMIL 100 carrying aVulture UAV.

The GOC Artillery Formation is responsible for managing the appointment ofMaster Gunners of the Artillery.

Regional Co-operation

[edit]

In the annual report for the 2013-14 fiscal year, the SANDF reported the development of artillery cooperation and the establishment of the Namibian Army School of Artillery.[8] The SA Army assisted theNamibian Defence Force with the development of courses and ultimately the establishment of theNamibian School of Artillery.

Qualification and Appointment insignia

[edit]
General of the Gunners (Post)
Black on Thatch beige, Embossed.Crossed gun barrels with grenade
Master Gunner Badge (Qualification and Decoration)
Black on Thatch beige, Embossed.Crossed gun barrels
Artillery No 1 (Qualification)
Black on Thatch beige, Embossed.Gun image


Regular units

[edit]

Reserve units

[edit]
Maj GenRoy Andersen with the GOC, Brig GenDeon Holtzhausen, and Sgt Maj of the Formation accompanied by theNFA OC, Major Craig Nel, just after the NFA gunners fired the salute at the Gunner's Memorial Service in Durban 2014

Equipment

[edit]

The Formation uses the following equipment, among others:

To be acquired:

Conventional Artillery

[edit]

Cannon

[edit]
VariantDescriptionCommentImage
G1 Gun Quick Firing25-pounder, high explosive, anti tank and smoke shellsUnited Kingdom designSANDF G1 Cannon
G2 Gun Breach Loading5.5 inch medium gun, high explosiveUnited Kingdom designSANDF G2 Cannon
G4 Gun Breach Loading155mm, high explosiveIsrael design, stopgap until the G5 cannon entered serviceSANDF G4 Cannon
G5 Gun/Howitzer155mm, high explosive, Samil 100 Gun tractorSouth Africa designG5 with Samil 100 Gun tractor
G6 Gun/Howitzer155mm, high explosive, Self drivenSouth Africa designSANDF G6 Rhino
Vulture UAVVulture Forward ObservationSouth Africa design. Used for target acquisition, fall-of-shot detection and fire correction in support of Towed and Self Propelled Gun Howitzer Systems.[9]Vulture Launcher Samil 100

Multiple Rocket Launcher Systems

[edit]
VariantDescriptionCommentImage
Valkiri MLRS127 mm rocket MLRSSouth Africa design Unimog chassis, pre fragmented warhead, 24 launch tubesValkiri multiple rocket launcher system
Bateleur MLRS127 mm rocket MLRSSouth Africa design Kwevoel chassis, pre fragmented warhead, 40 launch tubesBateleur Multiple Rocket Launcher

References

[edit]
  1. ^abEngelbrecht, Leon (9 February 2010)."Fact file: The SA Artillery".DefenceWeb. ITWEB. Retrieved25 September 2014.
  2. ^"South Africa Government Gazette number 2238 - Gazettemachine".South Africa Government Gazette.XCVIII (2238). Pretoria:525–526. 1934-12-14.
  3. ^Nigel F Evans (2014-06-14)."South African Artillery Regiments". Nigelef.tripod.com. Retrieved2021-11-19.
  4. ^Clinometer, A.K.A. (1986)."1 Medium Regiment, (S.A.H.A.), S.A.A."Scientia Militaria: South African Journal of Military Studies.16 (4).doi:10.5787/16-4-464.ISSN 2224-0020.
  5. ^"War In Angola: - HOME".warinangola.com.
  6. ^"Artillery School : SA Army Artillery Formation Officers' Dinner".Gunner's Association South Africa. Gunner's Association. 22 June 2014. Retrieved25 September 2014.
  7. ^"South African Artillery"(PDF).South African Gunner. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 13 June 2013. Retrieved14 April 2023.
  8. ^Martin, Guy (2014-11-06)."South African Army overstretched – DoD".defenceWeb. Retrieved2023-01-07.
  9. ^"The Vulture UAV".Paramount Group. 2012. Retrieved2015-04-01.

External links

[edit]
South African Army Units
Divisions and Brigades
Brigades
Training
Tank
Armoured Car
Training
Parachute Infantry
Air Assault Infantry
Seaborne Infantry
Light Infantry
Mechanised Infantry
Motorised Infantry
Training
Regular
Reserve
Training
Regular
Reserve
Training
Regular
Reserve
Regular
  • 1 Signal Regt
  • 2 Signal Regt
  • 3 Signal Regt
  • 4 Signal Regt
  • 5 Signal Regt
Reserve
Commands
  • Eastern Province Command (Port Elizabeth)
  • Eastern Transvaal Command (Nelspruit)
  • Natal Command (Durban)
  • Northern Transvaal Command (Swartkop, Pretoria)
  • Northern Cape Command (Kimberly)
  • Orange Free State Command (Bloemfontein)
  • Western Province Command (Cape Town)
  • Southern Cape Command (Oudsthoorn)
  • West Transvaal Command/North West Command (Potchefstroom)
  • Witwatersrand Command (Johannesburg)
  • Far North Command (Pietersburg)
  • Northern Logistic Command (Grootfontein, South West Africa)
  • South West Africa Command (Windhoek, South West Africa)
  • Northern Logistics Command (Grootfontein, South West Africa)
  • Gauteng Command post 1994 SANDF (Amalgamation of Wits and Northern Transvaal Commands)
  • Corps
    Divisions
    Brigades
    Battlegroups
    UDF and SADF
    Regiments and Battalions
    Regiment
    University
    Field Engineer
    Homeland Battalions
    Military Areas
    Training Areas
    UDF and SADF Commando System
    State Presidents Guard
    Mobilisation Units
    (Reception Depots)
    Bantustan Defence Forces (1977/1981–1994)
    Bophuthatswana Defence Force
    1977–1994
    Venda Defence Force
    1979–1994
    Ciskei Defence Force 1981–1994
    Transkei Defence Force
    1981–1994
    SWATF (1977–1989)
    Divisions
    Infantry
    Armoured
    Brigades
    Infantry
    Citizens Batteries
    Military Districts
    World War I 1914–1918
    Europe Campaign 1914–1918
    Brigades
    Regiments
    East Africa Campaign 1914–1915
    German South West Africa Campaign 1915
    S.A.M.R. Regiments
    Volunteer Militias 1903–1909
    Field Artillery
    Horse
    Light Horse
    Light Infantry
    Mounted Rifles
    Rifles
    Non-Statutory Forces 1961–1994
    Colonial Armies 1885–1902
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=South_African_Army_Artillery_Formation&oldid=1277841470"
    Category:
    Hidden categories:

    [8]ページ先頭

    ©2009-2025 Movatter.jp