It looks like the carriage is not WW1 vintage, but I managed to get a few photos today of the breech. It says, Gio Ansaldo C. Genova 1918, and then there are some numbers on the bottom.
"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
I agree the basic gun is a 149mm Krupp M12 but the carriage, shield and apparently the recoil assembly were redesigned by Ansaldo. it looks like Ansaldo also increased the maximum elevation of the gun - the original M12 had a max. elevation of 43 deg.
It's notable that this howitzer has rear positioned trunnions like the sFH 13.
I think the bottom line of the breech ring markings says the barrel weight is 870 kg - about the same as the sFH 13.
Regards,
Charlie
-- Edited by CharlieC on Sunday 17th of July 2011 12:34:44 PM
-- Edited by CharlieC on Sunday 17th of July 2011 12:39:15 PM
I typed in some of those clues and found some more pictures. There's one of these in the Brussels Army Museum, and it looks very similar - carriage, limber, muzzle etc.
Looking at those photos, it seems to me that it's just the wheels that are odd - am I mistaken?
And, I confess, I was confused: is this an Italian made gun, or is it a gun made by Krupp that Ansaldo have added to/modified? But I see from Peter Kempf's article that this gun is an Italian made copy of a Krupp design, "The 149mm howitzer was a German design, made by Krupp, but many, if not most, were built in Italy under license."
I just took those snaps in passing, thinking it was just another leftover gun from some forgotten incident. But it seems, to my mind at least, that this is a rather old and rather valuable piece that should be better cared for. Shame there's no room and no money (if I was a rich man...).