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Mark V 'Hermaphrodite' (or 'Composite') Tank. The entry/exit doors can be seen below the "female" sponson. The "Female" tank was a variation of the British heavy tank deployed during the First World War. It carried multiple machine guns instead of the mix of machine guns and cannons mounted on the "male" tank.
A female Mark IV tank C14. Photographed with German forces after the Battle of Cambrai. December 1917. The Mark IV was a more heavily armoured version of the Mark I, and went into production in May 1917. Fundamental mechanical improvements had originally been intended, but had to be postponed.
Male Mark V tank showing short 6 pounder gun barrel. The "Male" tank was a category of tank prevalent in the First World War.As opposed to the five machine guns of the female version of the Mark I tank, the male version of the Mark I had a QF 6 pounder 6 cwt Hotchkiss and three machine guns.
Mark IV Female Liberty: stored at Anniston Army Depot, Anniston, Alabama, US. After decades of exposure to the elements it is in poor condition, but is now in the Armor Restoration Shop at Fort Benning, Georgia where it is being stored ahead of restoration. A Mark IV Female, D51: Deborah, was excavated at the village of Flesquières in France ...
Britannia is a preserved First World War British Mark IV Female heavy tank. It toured Canada and the United States to raise money. [1] Later renamed Liberty it is now displayed at the United States Army Ordnance Museum, Aberdeen, Maryland. [2]
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In the cartoon version Dogtanian and the Three Muskehounds and its sequel The Return of Dogtanian, Milady (voice of Eiko Masuyama in the Japanese dub and by Edie Mirman in the English dub of The Return of Dogtanian) is a female cat while most of the characters are dogs. With the exception of her real name (Countess de Winter), her origins are ...
Marcella is a Roman cognomen and Italian given name, the feminine version of Marcello (Mark in English). Marcella means warlike, martial, and strong. It could also mean 'young warrior'. The origin of the name Marcella is Latin. Marcella may refer to: