On September 15, 1916, during the Battle of the Somme, the British sent into action eleven vehicles of an entirely new kind, the Mark I
tank. When the British army was developing the vehicles, known as 'landships', they didn't want to give the Germans any clue what they were up to – so the name 'tank,' which doesn't mean anything, was used to throw them off. It stuck.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhxealJ44GUyUN3BE6x_NsjgkxWV8ABl51q3swMbV5fdIr9hXJiT-4z6ic5AngZMxyR5d9ogK4urAonmXIRxX10XH3XQ2cMe_APZUOxrsAdusqixHNhq23Z9Ssxp9JXQgA3KglxFkEqVaXb/w640-h318/British_Mark_V-star_Tank.jpg) |
British World War I Mark V* tank
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