To break the stalemate of the First World War.
He certainly produced drawings for a mobile armoured battleship that could fire weapons.
the tiger tank was one of the Germans most heavily armoured tanks
Leanardo davinci invented it on drawing in 1678.
Tank as a container is "Tank"Tank as in an armoured vehicle is "Panzer"
M1 Abrams Tank. Mainly used by British and US forces but, this is a popular tank and is used by other military's aswell. Type 99KM Tank. This is the most powerful and heavily armoured tank in the world. Used mostly by Chinese and Russian forces.
it was called honda
if you mean the MTT as in multi troop transport it is not included in star wars battlefront 2, the only vehicles included are: AT-AT - all terrain armoured transport AT-RT - all terrain recon transport AT-TE - all terrain tactical enforcer hailfire tank spider walker AAC 1 IFT-X AT-ST - all terrain scout transport IFT-T AAT - armoured assault tank armoured tank droid (actual called snail tank droid)
the US Army invented the Sherman tank.
A tank was indeed invented in the 1400s. This tank was considered the armored car (tank) Invented by Leonardo Da Vinci in Italy. ___________________________________________________________________ Da Vinci's design was for a wheeled, man-powered vehicle that gave protection to the crew and carried armament that could be fired from the inside. Although it incorporated some of the principles of the tank, it did not run on tracks and can therefore be considered an armoured car. But it was only one of many attempts over the centuries to create a machine that fulfilled this purpose. The tank as we know it only became a reality with the invention of the internal combustion engine and what we now call caterpillar tracks. The first true tanks were produced in Britain and France in 1915.
There is a vehcle with the nomenclature of M577, but it's not a tank - it's a command vehicle, and a variant of the M113 armoured personnel carrier.
The first tanks were invented in WW1 by the British as armoured gun platforms to break the stalemate of trench warfare and cross the shell-pitted and lethal environs of no-mans-land in relative safety, which neither men nor artillery could do. The rest of the fighting nations including Germany and France followed suit and thus the tank was born. Coincidentally, the term 'tank' comes from the fact that the British labelled them armoured water carriers bound for Mesopotamia (IE, water 'tanks') to throw off enemy intelligence, and the name stuck
it goes back to the o'l west even, so its kinda hard to say for sure.