The V2 rocket
was also invented and manufactured by Germany during World War II. Prior to the
start out of World War II, the German forces had invested little money into the
development and research of rockets. After
WWII broke out, the Germans became heavily interested in liquid fuel rockets.
The German Army and Air Force soon set up a cooperative research center in order
to develop and test such rockets.
This research centre came to be called the “Peenemunde Research Centre”
because it was located near a village calle Peenemunde on the Baltic Island of
Usedom. Many different types
of rockets were developed and tested at the “Centre” but only two went into
mass production (the V1 and V2 rockets). Both
the V1 and V2 rockets were manufactured heavily between 1938 and 1944.
The rockets were named using the letter “V” because
the letter “V” stood for "Vergeltungswaffe" (vengeance
weapon); the rockets were to be used to get revenge for the Allied air invasion
on Germany.
However, the name of this rocket was not always V2. During the development and manufacturing the V2-Rocket, was known as the A-4. The “A” stood for “aggregate”, a term used for devices consisting of a number of subassemblies.