The de Bruyère C 1 was a prototype French single seat pusher canard Fighter of unusual design produced during World War I.
[1] Developed by Marcel de Bruyere, the C 1 was a single-bay biplane with staggered equal-span wings and inverted V-struts.
[2] A 150 hp Hispano-Suiza 8Aa water-cooled engine[3] located immediately aft of the wings drove a two blade pusher propeller mounted at the extreme tail, via a long shaft.
Designed to have an unrestricted forward field of fire, the fuselage also had two large circular windows on each side for downward visibility.
[3] The C 1 reached an altitude of roughly 25 feet before entering an uncontrolled roll before crashing inverted.