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Dragon's teeth (fortification)

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During World War II, the term "Dragon's teeth" came to designate square-pyramidal fortifications used to impede the progress of mechanized armies. They were employed extensively, particularly on the Siegfried Line. In 1942, Upton Sinclair published a novel named Dragon's Teeth, about the Nazi takeover of Germany during the 1930s.

Military fortification

Dragon's teeth on the Siegfried Line in 2004.
File:Dragonsteeth.jpg
US Army troops passing through dragon's teeth on the Siegfried Line, 1944.
Dragon's teeth made of stone outside Boden Fortress, Sweden.

World War II

Dragon's teeth (German: Höcker, "humps") were square-pyramidal fortifications of concrete used during the Second World War to impede the movement of tanks. The idea was to slow down and channel tanks into "killing zones" where they could easily be disposed of by anti-tank weapons. In practice, however, the use of combat engineers and specialist clearance vehicles enabled them to be disposed of relatively quickly, and they proved far less of an obstacle than many had expected.

They were extensively used by all sides in the European Theatre. The Germans made extensive use of them in the Siegfried Line and the Atlantic Wall (serving a similar purpose in the Atlantic wall was the Czech hedgehog); typically, each "tooth" was about four feet (1.2m) tall, often with landmines laid between the individual "teeth." The French employed them in the Maginot Line, while many were laid in the United Kingdom in 1939-1940 as part of the effort to strengthen the country's defences against a possible German invasion.

"Behind minefields were the dragon's teeth. They rested on a concrete mat between ten and thirty meters wide, sunk in a meter or two into the ground (to prevent any attempt to tunnel underneath them and place explosive charges). On top of the mat were the teeth themselves, truncated pyramids of reinforced concrete about a meter in height in the front row, to two meters high in the back. They were staggered and spaced in such a manner that a tank could not drive through. Interspersed among the teeth were minefields, barbed wire, and pillboxes that were virtually impregnable by the artillery and set in such a way as to give the Germans crossing fire across the entire front. The only way to take those pillboxes was for infantry to get behind them and attack the rear entry. But behind the first row of pillboxes and dragon’s teeth, there was a second, and often a third, and sometimes a fourth." - Stephen Ambrose, Victors, pg 256

Due to the huge numbers laid and their durable construction, many thousands of dragon's teeth can still be seen today, especially in the remains of the Siegfried and Maginot Lines.

Post World War II

Switzerland, which is heavily militarized, continues to maintain lines of dragon's teeth in certain strategic areas, and has roadways rigged with teeth that are ready to 'pop up' and complete defensive lines that stretch past the roadways themselves. In the military jargon these constructions are often referred to as 'Toblerone' after the chocolate bar.

The term has survived into the present day and now also can be used to describe any line of posts or pegs set into the ground to deter vehicle access, for example in rural car parking areas, or alongside roads. Bollard is another term for such a post.

Some countries, such as those made after the breakup of Yugoslavia, have movable teeth, positioned at roadsides at strategic locations, which are to be lifted and placed on the roads.

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