Bishop_(artillery) Bishop_(artillery)

Bishop (artillery) - Definition

The Bishop was a British self-propelled artillery vehicle based on the Valentine II chassis.

It built as a rushed conversion to create a self-propelled gun armed with the 25 Pounder howitzer. As a result, the vehicle had numerous problems.

The Bishop's gun had a limited elevation which lowered its range considerably. In order to compensate, its crews would often have to build large ramps out of the earth so that the vehicle could be tilted. Also, in order to accommodate the 25 pounder gun, the vehicle also had to have a high silhouette.

Due to these factors, compounding the Valentine's characteristic slow speed and thin armor, the Bishop was poorly received almost universally and soon replaced by the M7 Priest and Sexton. Only around 140 of these vehicles were produced.

It first saw action during the Second Battle of El Alamein in North Africa and continued to serve during the early part of the Italian Campaign.

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British armored fighting vehicles of World War II
Cruiser Tanks
Mk I | Mk II | Mk III | Mk IV | Mk V Covenanter | Mk VI Crusader | Mk VII Cavalier | Mk VIII Centaur | Mk VIII Cromwell | Challenger | Comet
Infantry Tanks
Mk I Matilda | Mk II Matilda | Mk III Valentine | Mk IV Churchill
Self-propelled artillery
Bishop | Sexton
Tank destroyers
Archer
Experimental vehicles
Avenger | Black Prince | Tortoise | Valiant
British armored fighting vehicle production during World War II


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