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Battlecruiser

The battlecruiser (also written as battle cruiser or battle-cruiser) was a type of capital ship of the first half of the 20th century. These were similar in displacement, armament and cost to battleships, but differed in form and balance of attributes. Battlecruisers typically had thinner armour (to a varying degree) and a somewhat lighter main gun battery than contemporary battleships, installed on a longer hull with much higher engine power in order to attain greater speeds. The first battlecruisers were designed in the United Kingdom, as a development of the armoured cruiser, at the same time as the dreadnought succeeded the pre-dreadnought battleship. The goal of the design was to outrun any ship with similar armament, and chase down any ship with lesser armament; they were intended to hunt down slower, older armoured cruisers and destroy them with heavy gunfire while avoiding combat with the more powerful but slower battleships. However, as more and more battlecruisers were built, they were increasingly used alongside the better-protected battleships.

HMS Hood, the largest battlecruiser ever built,[1] in Australia on 17 March 1924

Battlecruisers served in the navies of the United Kingdom, Germany, the Ottoman Empire, Australia and Japan during World War I, most notably at the Battle of the Falkland Islands and in the several raids and skirmishes in the North Sea which culminated in a pitched fleet battle, the Battle of Jutland. British battlecruisers in particular suffered heavy losses at Jutland, where poor fire safety and ammunition handling practices left them vulnerable to catastrophic magazine explosions following hits to their main turrets from large-calibre shells. This dismal showing led to a persistent general belief that battlecruisers were too thinly armoured to function successfully. By the end of the war, capital ship design had developed, with battleships becoming faster and battlecruisers becoming more heavily armoured, blurring the distinction between a battlecruiser and a fast battleship. The Washington Naval Treaty, which limited capital ship construction from 1922 onwards, treated battleships and battlecruisers identically, and the new generation of battlecruisers planned by the United States, Great Britain and Japan were scrapped under the terms of the treaty.

Improvements in armour design and propulsion created the 1930s "fast battleship" with the speed of a battlecruiser and armour of a battleship, making the battlecruiser in the traditional sense effectively an obsolete concept. Thus from the 1930s on, only the Royal Navy continued to use "battlecruiser" as a classification for the World War I–era capital ships that remained in the fleet; while Japan's battlecruisers remained in service, they had been significantly reconstructed and were re-rated as full-fledged fast battleships.[Note 1]

Battlecruisers were put into action again during World War II, and only one survived to the end. There was also renewed interest in large "cruiser-killer" type warships, but few were ever begun, as construction of battleships and battlecruisers was curtailed in favor of more-needed convoy escorts, aircraft carriers, and cargo ships. Near the end, and after the Cold War era, the Soviet Kirov class of large guided missile cruisers have been the only active ships termed "battlecruisers".

Background

The battlecruiser was developed by the Royal Navy in the first years of the 20th century as an evolution of the armoured cruiser.[5] The first armoured cruisers had been built in the 1870s, as an attempt to give armour protection to ships fulfilling the typical cruiser roles of patrol, trade protection and power projection. However, the results were rarely satisfactory, as the weight of armour required for any meaningful protection usually meant that the ship became almost as slow as a battleship. As a result, navies preferred to build protected cruisers with an armoured deck protecting their engines, or simply no armour at all.

In the 1890s, technology began to change this balance. New Krupp steel armour meant that it was now possible to give a cruiser side armour which would protect it against the quick-firing guns of enemy battleships and cruisers alike.[6] In 1896–97 France and Russia, who were regarded as likely allies in the event of war, started to build large, fast armoured cruisers taking advantage of this. In the event of a war between Britain and France or Russia, or both, these cruisers threatened to cause serious difficulties for the British Empire's worldwide trade.[7]

Britain, which had concluded in 1892 that it needed twice as many cruisers as any potential enemy to adequately protect its empire's sea lanes, responded to the perceived threat by laying down its own large armoured cruisers. Between 1899 and 1905, it completed or laid down seven classes of this type, a total of 35 ships.[8] This building program, in turn, prompted the French and Russians to increase their own construction. The Imperial German Navy began to build large armoured cruisers for use on their overseas stations, laying down eight between 1897 and 1906.[9]

The cost of this cruiser arms race was significant. In the period 1889–1896, the Royal Navy spent £7.3 million on new large cruisers. From 1897 to 1904, it spent £26.9 million.[10] Many armoured cruisers of the new kind were just as large and expensive as the equivalent battleship.

 
HMS Shannon, a Minotaur-class armoured cruiser

The increasing size and power of the armoured cruiser led to suggestions in British naval circles that cruisers should displace battleships entirely. The battleship's main advantage was its 12-inch heavy guns, and heavier armour designed to protect from shells of similar size. However, for a few years after 1900 it seemed that those advantages were of little practical value. The torpedo now had a range of 2,000 yards, and it seemed unlikely that a battleship would engage within torpedo range. However, at ranges of more than 2,000 yards it became increasingly unlikely that the heavy guns of a battleship would score any hits, as the heavy guns relied on primitive aiming techniques. The secondary batteries of 6-inch quick-firing guns, firing more plentiful shells, were more likely to hit the enemy.[11] As naval expert Fred T. Jane wrote in June 1902,

Is there anything outside of 2,000 yards that the big gun in its hundreds of tons of medieval castle can affect, that its weight in 6-inch guns without the castle could not affect equally well? And inside 2,000, what, in these days of gyros, is there that the torpedo cannot effect with far more certainty?[12]

In 1904, Admiral John "Jacky" Fisher became First Sea Lord, the senior officer of the Royal Navy. He had for some time thought about the development of a new fast armoured ship. He was very fond of the "second-class battleship" Renown, a faster, more lightly armoured battleship.[13] As early as 1901, there is confusion in Fisher's writing about whether he saw the battleship or the cruiser as the model for future developments. This did not stop him from commissioning designs from naval architect W. H. Gard for an armoured cruiser with the heaviest possible armament for use with the fleet. The design Gard submitted was for a ship between 14,000–15,000 long tons (14,000–15,000 t), capable of 25 knots (46 km/h; 29 mph), armed with four 9.2-inch and twelve 7.5-inch (190 mm) guns in twin gun turrets and protected with six inches of armour along her belt and 9.2-inch turrets, 4 inches (102 mm) on her 7.5-inch turrets, 10 inches on her conning tower and up to 2.5 inches (64 mm) on her decks. However, mainstream British naval thinking between 1902 and 1904 was clearly in favour of heavily armoured battleships, rather than the fast ships that Fisher favoured.[14]

The Battle of Tsushima proved conclusively the effectiveness of heavy guns over intermediate ones and the need for a uniform main caliber on a ship for fire control. Even before this, the Royal Navy had begun to consider a shift away from the mixed-calibre armament of the 1890s pre-dreadnought to an "all-big-gun" design, and preliminary designs circulated for battleships with all 12-inch or all 10-inch guns and armoured cruisers with all 9.2-inch guns.[15] In late 1904, not long after the Royal Navy had decided to use 12-inch guns for its next generation of battleships because of their superior performance at long range, Fisher began to argue that big-gun cruisers could replace battleships altogether. The continuing improvement of the torpedo meant that submarines and destroyers would be able to destroy battleships; this in Fisher's view heralded the end of the battleship or at least compromised the validity of heavy armour protection. Nevertheless, armoured cruisers would remain vital for commerce protection.[16]

Of what use is a battle fleet to a country called (A) at war with a country called (B) possessing no battleships, but having fast armoured cruisers and clouds of fast torpedo craft? What damage would (A's) battleships do to (B)? Would (B) wish for a few battleships or for more armoured cruisers? Would not (A) willingly exchange a few battleships for more fast armoured cruisers? In such a case, neither side wanting battleships is presumptive evidence that they are not of much value.

— Fisher to Lord Selborne (First Lord of the Admiralty), 20 October 1904[17]

Fisher's views were very controversial within the Royal Navy, and even given his position as First Sea Lord, he was not in a position to insist on his own approach. Thus he assembled a "Committee on Designs", consisting of a mixture of civilian and naval experts, to determine the approach to both battleship and armoured cruiser construction in the future. While the stated purpose of the committee was to investigate and report on future requirements of ships, Fisher and his associates had already made key decisions.[18] The terms of reference for the committee were for a battleship capable of 21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph) with 12-inch guns and no intermediate calibres, capable of docking in existing drydocks;[19] and a cruiser capable of 25.5 knots (47.2 km/h; 29.3 mph), also with 12-inch guns and no intermediate armament, armoured like Minotaur, the most recent armoured cruiser, and also capable of using existing docks.[18]

First battlecruisers

Under the Selborne plan of 1902, the Royal Navy intended to start three new battleships and four armoured cruisers each year. However, in late 1904 it became clear that the 1905–1906 programme would have to be considerably smaller, because of lower than expected tax revenue and the need to buy out two Chilean battleships under construction in British yards, lest they be purchased by the Russians for use against the Japanese, Britain's ally. These economies meant that the 1905–1906 programme consisted only of one battleship, but three armoured cruisers. The battleship became the revolutionary battleship Dreadnought, and the cruisers became the three ships of the Invincible class. Fisher later claimed, however, that he had argued during the committee for the cancellation of the remaining battleship.[20]

The construction of the new class was begun in 1906 and completed in 1908, delayed perhaps to allow their designers to learn from any problems with Dreadnought.[19][21] The ships fulfilled the design requirement quite closely. On a displacement similar to Dreadnought, the Invincibles were 40 feet (12.2 m) longer to accommodate additional boilers and more powerful turbines to propel them at 25 knots (46 km/h; 29 mph). Moreover, the new ships could maintain this speed for days, whereas pre-dreadnought battleships could not generally do so for more than an hour.[22] Armed with eight 12-inch Mk X guns, compared to ten on Dreadnought, they had 6–7 inches (152–178 mm) of armour protecting the hull and the gun turrets. (Dreadnought's armour, by comparison, was 11–12 inches (279–305 mm) at its thickest.)[23] The class had a very marked increase in speed, displacement and firepower compared to the most recent armoured cruisers but no more armour.[24]

While the Invincibles were to fill the same role as the armoured cruisers they succeeded, they were expected to do so more effectively. Specifically their roles were:

  • Heavy reconnaissance. Because of their power, the Invincibles could sweep away the screen of enemy cruisers to close with and observe an enemy battlefleet before using their superior speed to retire.
  • Close support for the battle fleet. They could be stationed at the ends of the battle line to stop enemy cruisers harassing the battleships, and to harass the enemy's battleships if they were busy fighting battleships. Also, the Invincibles could operate as the fast wing of the battlefleet and try to outmanoeuvre the enemy.
  • Pursuit. If an enemy fleet ran, then the Invincibles would use their speed to pursue, and their guns to damage or slow enemy ships.
  • Commerce protection. The new ships would hunt down enemy cruisers and commerce raiders.[25]
 
Invincible, Britain's first battlecruiser

Confusion about how to refer to these new battleship-size armoured cruisers set in almost immediately. Even in late 1905, before work was begun on the Invincibles, a Royal Navy memorandum refers to "large armoured ships" meaning both battleships and large cruisers. In October 1906, the Admiralty began to classify all post-Dreadnought battleships and armoured cruisers as "capital ships", while Fisher used the term "dreadnought" to refer either to his new battleships or the battleships and armoured cruisers together.[26] At the same time, the Invincible class themselves were referred to as "cruiser-battleships", "dreadnought cruisers"; the term "battlecruiser" was first used by Fisher in 1908. Finally, on 24 November 1911, Admiralty Weekly Order No. 351 laid down that "All cruisers of the “Invincible” and later types are for the future to be described and classified as “battle cruisers” to distinguish them from the armoured cruisers of earlier date."[27]

Along with questions over the new ships' nomenclature came uncertainty about their actual role due to their lack of protection. If they were primarily to act as scouts for the battle fleet and hunter-killers of enemy cruisers and commerce raiders, then the seven inches of belt armour with which they had been equipped would be adequate. If, on the other hand, they were expected to reinforce a battle line of dreadnoughts with their own heavy guns, they were too thin-skinned to be safe from an enemy's heavy guns. The Invincibles were essentially extremely large, heavily armed, fast armoured cruisers. However, the viability of the armoured cruiser was already in doubt. A cruiser that could have worked with the Fleet might have been a more viable option for taking over that role.[24][28]

Because of the Invincibles' size and armament, naval authorities considered them capital ships almost from their inception—an assumption that might have been inevitable. Complicating matters further was that many naval authorities, including Lord Fisher, had made overoptimistic assessments from the Battle of Tsushima in 1905 about the armoured cruiser's ability to survive in a battle line against enemy capital ships due to their superior speed. These assumptions had been made without taking into account the Russian Baltic Fleet's inefficiency and tactical ineptitude. By the time the term "battlecruiser" had been given to the Invincibles, the idea of their parity with battleships had been fixed in many people's minds.[24][28]

Not everyone was so convinced. Brassey's Naval Annual, for instance, stated that with vessels as large and expensive as the Invincibles, an admiral "will be certain to put them in the line of battle where their comparatively light protection will be a disadvantage and their high speed of no value."[29] Those in favor of the battlecruiser countered with two points—first, since all capital ships were vulnerable to new weapons such as the torpedo, armour had lost some of its validity; and second, because of its greater speed, the battlecruiser could control the range at which it engaged an enemy.[30]

Battlecruisers in the dreadnought arms race

Between the launching of the Invincibles to just after the outbreak of the First World War, the battlecruiser played a junior role in the developing dreadnought arms race, as it was never wholeheartedly adopted as the key weapon in British imperial defence, as Fisher had presumably desired. The biggest factor for this lack of acceptance was the marked change in Britain's strategic circumstances between their conception and the commissioning of the first ships. The prospective enemy for Britain had shifted from a Franco-Russian alliance with many armoured cruisers to a resurgent and increasingly belligerent Germany. Diplomatically, Britain had entered the Entente cordiale in 1904 and the Anglo-Russian Entente. Neither France nor Russia posed a particular naval threat; the Russian navy had largely been sunk or captured in the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905, while the French were in no hurry to adopt the new dreadnought-type design. Britain also boasted very cordial relations with two of the significant new naval powers: Japan (bolstered by the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, signed in 1902 and renewed in 1905), and the US. These changed strategic circumstances, and the great success of the Dreadnought ensured that she rather than the Invincible became the new model capital ship. Nevertheless, battlecruiser construction played a part in the renewed naval arms race sparked by the Dreadnought.[31]

 
HMS Queen Mary, the last battlecruiser built before World War I

For their first few years of service, the Invincibles entirely fulfilled Fisher's vision of being able to sink any ship fast enough to catch them, and run from any ship capable of sinking them. An Invincible would also, in many circumstances, be able to take on an enemy pre-dreadnought battleship. Naval circles concurred that the armoured cruiser in its current form had come to the logical end of its development and the Invincibles were so far ahead of any enemy armoured cruiser in firepower and speed that it proved difficult to justify building more or bigger cruisers.[32] This lead was extended by the surprise both Dreadnought and Invincible produced by having been built in secret; this prompted most other navies to delay their building programmes and radically revise their designs.[33] This was particularly true for cruisers, because the details of the Invincible class were kept secret for longer; this meant that the last German armoured cruiser, Blücher, was armed with only 21-centimetre (8.3 in) guns, and was no match for the new battlecruisers.[34]

The Royal Navy's early superiority in capital ships led to the rejection of a 1905–1906 design that would, essentially, have fused the battlecruiser and battleship concepts into what would eventually become the fast battleship. The 'X4' design combined the full armour and armament of Dreadnought with the 25-knot speed of Invincible. The additional cost could not be justified given the existing British lead and the new Liberal government's need for economy; the slower and cheaper Bellerophon, a relatively close copy of Dreadnought, was adopted instead.[35] The X4 concept would eventually be fulfilled in the Queen Elizabeth class and later by other navies.[36]

The next British battlecruisers were the three Indefatigable class, slightly improved Invincibles built to fundamentally the same specification, partly due to political pressure to limit costs and partly due to the secrecy surrounding German battlecruiser construction, particularly about the heavy armour of SMS Von der Tann.[37] This class came to be widely seen as a mistake[38] and the next generation of British battlecruisers were markedly more powerful. By 1909–1910 a sense of national crisis about rivalry with Germany outweighed cost-cutting, and a naval panic resulted in the approval of a total of eight capital ships in 1909–1910.[39] Fisher pressed for all eight to be battlecruisers,[40] but was unable to have his way; he had to settle for six battleships and two battlecruisers of the Lion class. The Lions carried eight 13.5-inch guns, the now-standard caliber of the British "super-dreadnought" battleships. Speed increased to 27 knots (50 km/h; 31 mph) and armour protection, while not as good as in German designs, was better than in previous British battlecruisers, with nine-inch (230 mm) armour belt and barbettes. The two Lions were followed by the very similar Queen Mary.[41]

 
SMS Seydlitz

By 1911 Germany had built battlecruisers of her own, and the superiority of the British ships could no longer be assured. Moreover, the German Navy did not share Fisher's view of the battlecruiser. In contrast to the British focus on increasing speed and firepower, Germany progressively improved the armour and staying power of their ships to better the British battlecruisers.[42] Von der Tann, begun in 1908 and completed in 1910, carried eight 11.1-inch guns, but with 11.1-inch (283 mm) armour she was far better protected than the Invincibles. The two Moltkes were quite similar but carried ten 11.1-inch guns of an improved design.[43] Seydlitz, designed in 1909 and finished in 1913, was a modified Moltke; speed increased by one knot to 26.5 knots (49.1 km/h; 30.5 mph), while her armour had a maximum thickness of 12 inches, equivalent to the Helgoland-class battleships of a few years earlier. Seydlitz was Germany's last battlecruiser completed before World War I.[44]

The next step in battlecruiser design came from Japan. The Imperial Japanese Navy had been planning the Kongō-class ships from 1909, and was determined that, since the Japanese economy could support relatively few ships, each would be more powerful than its likely competitors. Initially the class was planned with the Invincibles as the benchmark. On learning of the British plans for Lion, and the likelihood that new U.S. Navy battleships would be armed with 14-inch (360 mm) guns, the Japanese decided to radically revise their plans and go one better. A new plan was drawn up, carrying eight 14-inch guns, and capable of 27.5 knots (50.9 km/h; 31.6 mph), thus marginally having the edge over the Lions in speed and firepower. The heavy guns were also better-positioned, being superfiring both fore and aft with no turret amidships. The armour scheme was also marginally improved over the Lions, with nine inches of armour on the turrets and 8 inches (203 mm) on the barbettes. The first ship in the class was built in Britain, and a further three constructed in Japan.[45] The Japanese also re-classified their powerful armoured cruisers of the Tsukuba and Ibuki classes, carrying four 12-inch guns, as battlecruisers; nonetheless, their armament was weaker and they were slower than any battlecruiser.[46]

 
Kongō

The next British battlecruiser, Tiger, was intended initially as the fourth ship in the Lion class, but was substantially redesigned. She retained the eight 13.5-inch guns of her predecessors, but they were positioned like those of Kongō for better fields of fire. She was faster (making 29 knots (54 km/h; 33 mph) on sea trials), and carried a heavier secondary armament. Tiger was also more heavily armoured on the whole; while the maximum thickness of armour was the same at nine inches, the height of the main armour belt was increased.[47] Not all the desired improvements for this ship were approved, however. Her designer, Sir Eustace Tennyson d'Eyncourt, had wanted small-bore water-tube boilers and geared turbines to give her a speed of 32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph), but he received no support from the authorities and the engine makers refused his request.[48]

1912 saw work begin on three more German battlecruisers of the Derfflinger class, the first German battlecruisers to mount 12-inch guns. These ships, like Tiger and the Kongōs, had their guns arranged in superfiring turrets for greater efficiency. Their armour and speed was similar to the previous Seydlitz class.[49] In 1913, the Russian Empire also began the construction of the four-ship Borodino class, which were designed for service in the Baltic Sea. These ships were designed to carry twelve 14-inch guns, with armour up to 12 inches thick, and a speed of 26.6 knots (49.3 km/h; 30.6 mph). The heavy armour and relatively slow speed of these ships made them more similar to German designs than to British ships; construction of the Borodinos was halted by the First World War and all were scrapped after the end of the Russian Civil War.[50]

World War I

Construction

For most of the combatants, capital ship construction was very limited during the war. Germany finished the Derfflinger class and began work on the Mackensen class. The Mackensens were a development of the Derfflinger class, with 13.8-inch guns and a broadly similar armour scheme, designed for 28 knots (52 km/h; 32 mph).[51]

In Britain, Jackie Fisher returned to the office of First Sea Lord in October 1914. His enthusiasm for big, fast ships was unabated, and he set designers to producing a design for a battlecruiser with 15-inch guns. Because Fisher expected the next German battlecruiser to steam at 28 knots, he required the new British design to be capable of 32 knots. He planned to reorder two Revenge-class battleships, which had been approved but not yet laid down, to a new design. Fisher finally received approval for this project on 28 December 1914 and they became the Renown class. With six 15-inch guns but only 6-inch armour they were a further step forward from Tiger in firepower and speed, but returned to the level of protection of the first British battlecruisers.[52]

At the same time, Fisher resorted to subterfuge to obtain another three fast, lightly armoured ships that could use several spare 15-inch (381 mm) gun turrets left over from battleship construction. These ships were essentially light battlecruisers, and Fisher occasionally referred to them as such, but officially they were classified as large light cruisers. This unusual designation was required because construction of new capital ships had been placed on hold, while there were no limits on light cruiser construction. They became Courageous and her sisters Glorious and Furious, and there was a bizarre imbalance between their main guns of 15 inches (or 18 inches (457 mm) in Furious) and their armour, which at three inches (76 mm) thickness was on the scale of a light cruiser. The design was generally regarded as a failure (nicknamed in the Fleet Outrageous, Uproarious and Spurious), though the later conversion of the ships to aircraft carriers was very successful.[53] Fisher also speculated about a new mammoth, but lightly built battlecruiser, that would carry 20-inch (508 mm) guns, which he termed HMS Incomparable; this never got beyond the concept stage.[54]

It is often held that the Renown and Courageous classes were designed for Fisher's plan to land troops (possibly Russian) on the German Baltic coast. Specifically, they were designed with a reduced draught, which might be important in the shallow Baltic. This is not clear-cut evidence that the ships were designed for the Baltic: it was considered that earlier ships had too much draught and not enough freeboard under operational conditions. Roberts argues that the focus on the Baltic was probably unimportant at the time the ships were designed, but was inflated later, after the disastrous Dardanelles Campaign.[55]

The final British battlecruiser design of the war was the Admiral class, which was born from a requirement for an improved version of the Queen Elizabeth battleship. The project began at the end of 1915, after Fisher's final departure from the Admiralty. While initially envisaged as a battleship, senior sea officers felt that Britain had enough battleships, but that new battlecruisers might be required to combat German ships being built (the British overestimated German progress on the Mackensen class as well as their likely capabilities). A battlecruiser design with eight 15-inch guns, 8 inches of armour and capable of 32 knots was decided on. The experience of battlecruisers at the Battle of Jutland meant that the design was radically revised and transformed again into a fast battleship with armour up to 12 inches thick, but still capable of 31.5 knots (58.3 km/h; 36.2 mph). The first ship in the class, Hood, was built according to this design to counter the possible completion of any of the Mackensen-class ship. The plans for her three sisters, on which little work had been done, were revised once more later in 1916 and in 1917 to improve protection.[56]

The Admiral class would have been the only British ships capable of taking on the German Mackensen class; nevertheless, German shipbuilding was drastically slowed by the war, and while two Mackensens were launched, none were ever completed.[57] The Germans also worked briefly on a further three ships, of the Ersatz Yorck class, which were modified versions of the Mackensens with 15-inch guns.[58] Work on the three additional Admirals was suspended in March 1917 to enable more escorts and merchant ships to be built to deal with the new threat from U-boats to trade. They were finally cancelled in February 1919.[57]

Battlecruisers in action

The first combat involving battlecruisers during World War I was the Battle of Heligoland Bight in August 1914. A force of British light cruisers and destroyers entered the Heligoland Bight (the part of the North Sea closest to Hamburg) to attack German destroyer patrols. When they met opposition from light cruisers, Vice Admiral David Beatty took his squadron of five battlecruisers into the Bight and turned the tide of the battle, ultimately sinking three German light cruisers and killing their commander, Rear Admiral Leberecht Maass.[59]

The German battlecruiser Goeben perhaps made the most impact early in the war. Stationed in the Mediterranean, she and the escorting light cruiser SMS Breslau evaded British and French ships on the outbreak of war, and steamed to Constantinople (Istanbul) with two British battlecruisers in hot pursuit. The two German ships were handed over to the Ottoman Navy, and this was instrumental in bringing the Ottoman Empire into the war as one of the Central Powers. Goeben herself, renamed Yavuz Sultan Selim, fought engagements against the Imperial Russian Navy in the Black Sea before being knocked out of the action for the remainder of the war after the Battle of Imbros against British forces in the Aegean Sea in January 1918.[60]

The original battlecruiser concept proved successful in December 1914 at the Battle of the Falkland Islands. The British battlecruisers Inflexible and Invincible did precisely the job for which they were intended when they chased down and annihilated the German East Asia Squadron, centered on the armoured cruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, along with three light cruisers, commanded by Admiral Maximilian Graf Von Spee, in the South Atlantic Ocean. Prior to the battle, the Australian battlecruiser Australia had unsuccessfully searched for the German ships in the Pacific.[61]

 
Seydlitz was heavily damaged in the Battle of Dogger Bank

During the Battle of Dogger Bank in 1915, the aftermost barbette of the German flagship Seydlitz was struck by a British 13.5-inch shell from HMS Lion. The shell did not penetrate the barbette, but it dislodged a piece of the barbette armour that allowed the flame from the shell's detonation to enter the barbette. The propellant charges being hoisted upwards were ignited, and the fireball flashed up into the turret and down into the magazine, setting fire to charges removed from their brass cartridge cases. The gun crew tried to escape into the next turret, which allowed the flash to spread into that turret as well, killing the crews of both turrets. Seydlitz was saved from near-certain destruction only by emergency flooding of her after magazines, which had been effected by Wilhelm Heidkamp. This near-disaster was due to the way that ammunition handling was arranged and was common to both German and British battleships and battlecruisers, but the lighter protection on the latter made them more vulnerable to the turret or barbette being penetrated. The Germans learned from investigating the damaged Seydlitz and instituted measures to ensure that ammunition handling minimised any possible exposure to flash.[62]

Apart from the cordite handling, the battle was mostly inconclusive, though both the British flagship Lion and Seydlitz were severely damaged. Lion lost speed, causing her to fall behind the rest of the battleline, and Beatty was unable to effectively command his ships for the remainder of the engagement. A British signalling error allowed the German battlecruisers to withdraw, as most of Beatty's squadron mistakenly concentrated on the crippled armoured cruiser Blücher, sinking her with great loss of life. The British blamed their failure to win a decisive victory on their poor gunnery and attempted to increase their rate of fire by stockpiling unprotected cordite charges in their ammunition hoists and barbettes.[63]

 
Queen Mary blows up during the Battle of Jutland

At the Battle of Jutland on 31 May 1916, both British and German battlecruisers were employed as fleet units. The British battlecruisers became engaged with both their German counterparts, the battlecruisers, and then German battleships before the arrival of the battleships of the British Grand Fleet. The result was a disaster for the Royal Navy's battlecruiser squadrons: Invincible, Queen Mary, and Indefatigable exploded with the loss of all but a handful of their crews.[64] The exact reason why the ships' magazines detonated is not known, but the plethora of exposed cordite charges stored in their turrets, ammunition hoists and working chambers in the quest to increase their rate of fire undoubtedly contributed to their loss.[65] Beatty's flagship Lion herself was almost lost in a similar manner, save for the heroic actions of Major Francis Harvey.[66]

The better-armoured German battlecruisers fared better, in part due to the poor performance of British fuzes (the British shells tended to explode or break up on impact with the German armour).[67] Lützow—the only German battlecruiser lost at Jutland—had only 128 killed,[68] for instance, despite receiving more than thirty hits. The other German battlecruisers, Moltke, Von der Tann, Seydlitz, and Derfflinger, were all heavily damaged and required extensive repairs after the battle, Seydlitz barely making it home, for they had been the focus of British fire for much of the battle.[69]

Interwar period

In the years immediately after World War I, Britain, Japan and the US all began design work on a new generation of ever more powerful battleships and battlecruisers. The new burst of shipbuilding that each nation's navy desired was politically controversial and potentially economically crippling. This nascent arms race was prevented by the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922, where the major naval powers agreed to limits on capital ship numbers.[70] The German navy was not represented at the talks; under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was not allowed any modern capital ships at all.[71]

Through the 1920s and 1930s only Britain and Japan retained battlecruisers, often modified and rebuilt from their original designs. The line between the battlecruiser and the modern fast battleship became blurred; indeed, the Japanese Kongōs were formally redesignated as battleships after their very comprehensive reconstruction in the 1930s.[72]

Plans in the aftermath of World War I

Hood, launched in 1918, was the last World War I battlecruiser to be completed. Owing to lessons from Jutland, the ship was modified during construction; the thickness of her belt armour was increased by an average of 50 percent and extended substantially, she was given heavier deck armour, and the protection of her magazines was improved to guard against the ignition of ammunition. This was hoped to be capable of resisting her own weapons—the classic measure of a "balanced" battleship. Hood was the largest ship in the Royal Navy when completed; thanks to her great displacement, in theory she combined the firepower and armour of a battleship with the speed of a battlecruiser, causing some to refer to her as a fast battleship. However, her protection was markedly less than that of the British battleships built immediately after World War I, the Nelson class.[1]

 
Lexington-class battlecruiser (painting, c. 1919)

The navies of Japan and the United States, not being affected immediately by the war, had time to develop new heavy 16-inch (410 mm) guns for their latest designs and to refine their battlecruiser designs in light of combat experience in Europe. The Imperial Japanese Navy began four Amagi-class battlecruisers. These vessels would have been of unprecedented size and power, as fast and well armoured as Hood whilst carrying a main battery of ten 16-inch guns, the most powerful armament ever proposed for a battlecruiser. They were, for all intents and purposes, fast battleships—the only differences between them and the Tosa-class battleships which were to precede them were 1 inch (25 mm) less side armour and a .25 knots (0.46 km/h; 0.29 mph) increase in speed.[73] The United States Navy, which had worked on its battlecruiser designs since 1913 and watched the latest developments in this class with great care, responded with the Lexington class. If completed as planned, they would have been exceptionally fast and well armed with eight 16-inch guns, but carried armour little better than the Invincibles—this after an 8,000-long-ton (8,100 t) increase in protection following Jutland.[74] The final stage in the post-war battlecruiser race came with the British response to the Amagi and Lexington types: four 48,000-long-ton (49,000 t) G3 battlecruisers. Royal Navy documents of the period often described any battleship with a speed of over about 24 knots (44 km/h; 28 mph) as a battlecruiser, regardless of the amount of protective armour, although the G3 was considered by most to be a well-balanced fast battleship.[75]

The Washington Naval Treaty meant that none of these designs came to fruition. Ships that had been started were either broken up on the slipway or converted to aircraft carriers. In Japan, Amagi and Akagi were selected for conversion. Amagi was damaged beyond repair by the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake and was broken up for scrap; the hull of one of the proposed Tosa-class battleships, Kaga, was converted in her stead.[76] The United States Navy also converted two battlecruiser hulls into aircraft carriers in the wake of the Washington Treaty: USS Lexington and USS Saratoga, although this was only considered marginally preferable to scrapping the hulls outright (the remaining four: Constellation, Ranger, Constitution and United States were scrapped).[77] In Britain, Fisher's "large light cruisers," were converted to carriers. Furious had already been partially converted during the war and Glorious and Courageous were similarly converted.[78]

Rebuilding programmes

 
Repulse as she was in 1919
 
Renown, as reconstructed, in 1939

In total, nine battlecruisers survived the Washington Naval Treaty, although HMS Tiger later became a victim of the London Naval Conference 1930 and was scrapped.[79] Because their high speed made them valuable surface units in spite of their weaknesses, most of these ships were significantly updated before World War II. Renown and Repulse were modernized significantly in the 1920s and 1930s. Between 1934 and 1936, Repulse was partially modernized and had her bridge modified, an aircraft hangar, catapult and new gunnery equipment added and her anti-aircraft armament increased. Renown underwent a more thorough reconstruction between 1937 and 1939. Her deck armour was increased, new turbines and boilers were fitted, an aircraft hangar and catapult added and she was completely rearmed aside from the main guns which had their elevation increased to +30 degrees. The bridge structure was also removed and a large bridge similar to that used in the King George V-class battleships installed in its place. While conversions of this kind generally added weight to the vessel, Renown's tonnage actually decreased due to a substantially lighter power plant. Similar thorough rebuildings planned for Repulse and Hood were cancelled due to the advent of World War II.[80]

Unable to build new ships, the Imperial Japanese Navy also chose to improve its existing battlecruisers of the Kongō class (initially the Haruna, Kirishima, and Kongō—the Hiei only later as it had been disarmed under the terms of the Washington treaty) in two substantial reconstructions (one for Hiei). During the first of these, elevation of their main guns was increased to +40 degrees, anti-torpedo bulges and 3,800 long tons (3,900 t) of horizontal armour added, and a "pagoda" mast with additional command positions built up. This reduced the ships' speed to 25.9 knots (48.0 km/h; 29.8 mph). The second reconstruction focused on speed as they had been selected as fast escorts for aircraft carrier task forces. Completely new main engines, a reduced number of boilers and an increase in hull length by 26 feet (7.9 m) allowed them to reach up to 30 knots once again. They were reclassified as "fast battleships," although their armour and guns still fell short compared to surviving World War I–era battleships in the American or the British navies, with dire consequences during the Pacific War, when Hiei and Kirishima were easily crippled by US gunfire during actions off Guadalcanal, forcing their scuttling shortly afterwards.[81] Perhaps most tellingly, Hiei was crippled by medium-caliber gunfire from heavy and light cruisers in a close-range night engagement.[82]

There were two exceptions: Turkey's Yavuz Sultan Selim and the Royal Navy's Hood. The Turkish Navy made only minor improvements to the ship in the interwar period, which primarily focused on repairing wartime damage and the installation of new fire control systems and anti-aircraft batteries.[83] Hood was in constant service with the fleet and could not be withdrawn for an extended reconstruction. She received minor improvements over the course of the 1930s, including modern fire control systems, increased numbers of anti-aircraft guns, and in March 1941, radar.[84]

Naval rearmament

In the late 1930s navies began to build capital ships again, and during this period a number of large commerce raiders and small, fast battleships were built that are sometimes referred to as battlecruisers. Germany and Russia designed new battlecruisers during this period, though only the latter laid down two of the 35,000-ton Kronshtadt class. They were still on the slipways when the Germans invaded in 1941 and construction was suspended. Both ships were scrapped after the war.[85]

The Germans planned three battlecruisers of the O class as part of the expansion of the Kriegsmarine (Plan Z). With six 15-inch guns, high speed, excellent range, but very thin armour, they were intended as commerce raiders. Only one was ordered shortly before World War II; no work was ever done on it. No names were assigned, and they were known by their contract names: 'O', 'P', and 'Q'. The new class was not universally welcomed in the Kriegsmarine. Their abnormally-light protection gained it the derogatory nickname Ohne Panzer Quatsch (without armour nonsense) within certain circles of the Navy.[86]

World War II

The Royal Navy deployed some of its battlecruisers during the Norwegian Campaign in April 1940. The Gneisenau and the Scharnhorst were engaged during the action off Lofoten by Renown in very bad weather and disengaged after Gneisenau was damaged. One of Renown's 15-inch shells passed through Gneisenau's director-control tower without exploding, severing electrical and communication cables as it went and destroyed the rangefinders for the forward 150 mm (5.9 in) turrets. Main-battery fire control had to be shifted aft due to the loss of electrical power. Another shell from Renown knocked out Gneisenau's aft turret.[87] The British ship was struck twice by German shells that failed to inflict any significant damage.[88] She was the only pre-war battlecruiser to survive the war.[89]

In the early years of the war various German ships had a measure of success hunting merchant ships in the Atlantic. Allied battlecruisers such as Renown, Repulse, and the fast battleships Dunkerque and Strasbourg were employed on operations to hunt down the commerce-raiding German ships. The one stand-up fight occurred when the battleship Bismarck and the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen sortied into the North Atlantic to attack British shipping and were intercepted by Hood and the battleship Prince of Wales in May 1941 in the Battle of the Denmark Strait. The elderly British battlecruiser was no match for the modern German battleship: within minutes, the Bismarck's 15-inch shells caused a magazine explosion in Hood reminiscent of the Battle of Jutland. Only three men survived.[90]

The first battlecruiser to see action in the Pacific War was Repulse when she was sunk by Japanese torpedo bombers north of Singapore on 10 December 1941 whilst in company with Prince of Wales. She was lightly damaged by a single 250-kilogram (550 lb) bomb and near-missed by two others in the first Japanese attack. Her speed and agility enabled her to avoid the other attacks by level bombers and dodge 33 torpedoes. The last group of torpedo bombers attacked from multiple directions and Repulse was struck by five torpedoes. She quickly capsized with the loss of 27 officers and 486 crewmen; 42 officers and 754 enlisted men were rescued by the escorting destroyers.[91] The loss of Repulse and Prince of Wales conclusively proved the vulnerability of capital ships to aircraft without air cover of their own.[92]

The Japanese Kongō-class battlecruisers were extensively used as carrier escorts for most of their wartime career due to their high speed. Their World War I–era armament was weaker and their upgraded armour was still thin compared to contemporary battleships. On 13 November 1942, during the First Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, Hiei stumbled across American cruisers and destroyers at point-blank range. The ship was badly damaged in the encounter and had to be towed by her sister ship Kirishima. Both were spotted by American aircraft the following morning and Kirishima was forced to cast off her tow because of repeated aerial attacks. Hiei's captain ordered her crew to abandon ship after further damage and scuttled Hiei in the early evening of 14 November.[93] On the night of 14/15 November during the Second Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, Kirishima returned to Ironbottom Sound, but encountered the American battleships South Dakota and Washington. While failing to detect Washington, Kirishima engaged South Dakota with some effect. Washington opened fire a few minutes later at short range and badly damaged Kirishima, knocking out her aft turrets, jamming her rudder, and hitting the ship below the waterline. The flooding proved to be uncontrollable and Kirishima capsized three and a half hours later.[94]

Returning to Japan after the Battle of Leyte Gulf, Kongō was torpedoed and sunk by the American submarine Sealion II on 21 November 1944.[72] Haruna was moored at Kure, Japan when the naval base was attacked by American carrier aircraft on 24 and 28 July 1945. The ship was only lightly damaged by a single bomb hit on 24 July, but was hit a dozen more times on 28 July and sank at her pier. She was refloated after the war and scrapped in early 1946.[95]

Large cruisers or "cruiser killers"

 
USS Alaska, one of the United States Navy's two "large cruisers"

A late renaissance in popularity of ships between battleships and cruisers in size occurred on the eve of World War II. Described by some as battlecruisers, but never classified as capital ships, they were variously described as "super cruisers", "large cruisers" or even "unrestricted cruisers". The Dutch, American, and Japanese navies all planned these new classes specifically to counter the heavy cruisers, or their counterparts, being built by their naval rivals.[96]

The first such battlecruisers were the Dutch Design 1047, designed to protect their colonies in the East Indies in the face of Japanese aggression. Never officially assigned names, these ships were designed with German and Italian assistance. While they broadly resembled the German Scharnhorst class and had the same main battery, they would have been more lightly armoured and only protected against eight-inch gunfire. Although the design was mostly completed, work on the vessels never commenced as the Germans overran the Netherlands in May 1940. The first ship would have been laid down in June of that year.[97]

The only class of these late battlecruisers actually built were the United States Navy's Alaska-class "large cruisers". Two of them were completed, Alaska and Guam; a third, Hawaii, was cancelled while under construction and three others, to be named Philippines, Puerto Rico and Samoa, were cancelled before they were laid down. They were classified as "large cruisers" instead of battlecruisers. These ships were named after territories or protectorates. (Battleships, were named after states and cruisers after cities.) With a main armament of nine 12-inch guns in three triple turrets and a displacement of 27,000 long tons (27,000 t), the Alaskas were twice the size of Baltimore-class cruisers and had guns some 50% larger in diameter. They lacked the thick armoured belt and intricate torpedo defence system of true capital ships. However, unlike most battlecruisers, they were considered a balanced design according to cruiser standards as their protection could withstand fire from their own caliber of gun, albeit only in a very narrow range band. They were designed to hunt down Japanese heavy cruisers, though by the time they entered service most Japanese cruisers had been sunk by American aircraft or submarines.[98] Like the contemporary Iowa-class fast battleships, their speed ultimately made them more useful as carrier escorts and bombardment ships than as the surface combatants they were developed to be.[99]

The Japanese started designing the B64 class, which was similar to the Alaska but with 310-millimetre (12.2 in) guns. News of the Alaskas led them to upgrade the design, creating Design B-65. Armed with 356 mm guns, the B65s would have been the best armed of the new breed of battlecruisers, but they still would have had only sufficient protection to keep out eight-inch shells. Much like the Dutch, the Japanese got as far as completing the design for the B65s, but never laid them down. By the time the designs were ready the Japanese Navy recognized that they had little use for the vessels and that their priority for construction should lie with aircraft carriers. Like the Alaskas, the Japanese did not call these ships battlecruisers, referring to them instead as super-heavy cruisers.[100]

Cold War–era designs

 
Admiral Lazarev, formerly Frunze, the second ship of her class

In spite of the fact that most navies abandoned the battleship and battlecruiser concepts after World War II, Joseph Stalin's fondness for big-gun-armed warships caused the Soviet Union to plan a large cruiser class in the late 1940s. In the Soviet Navy, they were termed "heavy cruisers" (tjazholyj krejser).[101] The fruits of this program were the Project 82 (Stalingrad) cruisers, of 36,500 tonnes (35,900 long tons) standard load, nine 305 mm (12 in) guns and a speed of 35 knots (65 km/h; 40 mph). Three ships were laid down in 1951–1952, but they were cancelled in April 1953 after Stalin's death. Only the central armoured hull section of the first ship, Stalingrad, was launched in 1954 and then used as a target.[102]

The Soviet Kirov class is sometimes referred to as a battlecruiser.[103] This description arises from their over 24,000-tonne (24,000-long-ton) displacement, which is roughly equal to that of a First World War battleship and more than twice the displacement of contemporary cruisers; upon entry into service, Kirov was the largest surface combatant to be built since World War II.[104] The Kirov class lacks the armour that distinguishes battlecruisers from ordinary cruisers and they are classified as heavy nuclear-powered missile cruisers (T'Yazholiy atomn'iy raketn'iy Krey'Ser) by Russia, with their primary surface armament consisting of twenty P-700 Granit surface to surface missiles. Four members of the class were completed during the 1980s and 1990s, but due to budget constraints only the Pyotr Velikiy is operational with the Russian Navy, though plans were announced in 2010 to return the other three ships to service. As of 2021, Admiral Nakhimov was being refitted, but the other two ships are reportedly beyond economical repair.[105][106]

Operators

Former operators

See also

Notes

Citations

  1. ^ The German Scharnhorst-class battleships and Deutschland-class cruisers and the French Dunkerque-class battleships are all sometimes referred to as battlecruisers, although the owning navies referred to them as "battleships" (German: Schlachtschiffe), "armoured ships" (German: Panzerschiffe) and "battleships" (French: Bâtiments de ligne) respectively. Since neither their operators nor a significant number of naval historians classify them as such, they are not discussed in this article.[2][3][4]

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Breyer, p. 168
  2. ^ Gröner, pp. 31, 60; Gille, p. 139; Koop & Schmolke, p. 4
  3. ^ Chesneau, p. 259
  4. ^ Bidlingmaier, pp. 73–74
  5. ^ Sondhaus, p. 199; Roberts, p. 13
  6. ^ Sumida, p. 19
  7. ^ Breyer, p. 47
  8. ^ Lambert 2002, pp. 20–22; Osborne, pp. 61–62
  9. ^ Gardiner & Gray, p. 142; Osborne, pp. 62, 74
  10. ^ Sumida, p. 351, Table 9. Figures are for First-Class Cruisers and exclude armament.
  11. ^ Sumida, pp. 42–44
  12. ^ Quoted in Sumida, p. 44
  13. ^ Roberts, p. 15; Mackay, pp. 212–13
  14. ^ Breyer, p. 48
  15. ^ Roberts, pp. 16–17
  16. ^ Mackay, pp. 324–25; Roberts, pp. 17–18; Sumida, p. 52
  17. ^ quoted in Sumida, p. 52
  18. ^ a b Roberts, p. 19
  19. ^ a b Breyer, p. 115
  20. ^ Sumida, p. 55
  21. ^ Roberts, pp. 24–25
  22. ^ Burr, pp. 7–8
  23. ^ Breyer, pp. 114–17
  24. ^ a b c Gardiner & Gray, p. 24
  25. ^ Roberts, p. 18
  26. ^ Mackay, pp. 325–26
  27. ^ Admiralty Weekly Orders. 351. – Description and Classification of Cruisers of the “Invincible” and Later Types. ADM 182/2, quoted at The Dreadnought Project: The Battle Cruiser in the Royal Navy.
  28. ^ a b Massie, p. 494
  29. ^ As quoted in Massie, pp. 494–95
  30. ^ Friedman, p. 10
  31. ^ Sondhaus, pp. 199–202
  32. ^ Roberts, p. 25; Mackay, pp. 324–25
  33. ^ Sondhaus, pp. 201–02
  34. ^ Staff, pp. 3–4
  35. ^ Roberts, p. 26
  36. ^ Breyer, pp. 61–62
  37. ^ Roberts, pp. 28–29
  38. ^ Brown 1999, p. 57
  39. ^ Sondhaus, p. 203
  40. ^ Roberts, p. 32
  41. ^ Roberts, pp. 31–33
  42. ^ Sondhaus, pp. 202–03
  43. ^ Breyer, pp. 269–72
  44. ^ Breyer, pp. 267, 272
  45. ^ Evans & Peattie, pp. 161–63
  46. ^ Gardiner & Gray, p. 233
  47. ^ Roberts, pp. 37–38
  48. ^ Breyer, p. 136
  49. ^ Breyer, pp. 277–78
  50. ^ Breyer, p. 399
  51. ^ Breyer, pp. 283–84
  52. ^ Roberts, pp. 46–47
  53. ^ Roberts, pp. 50–52
  54. ^ Breyer, p. 172
  55. ^ Roberts, p. 51
  56. ^ Roberts, pp. 55–61
  57. ^ a b Roberts, pp. 60–61
  58. ^ Gröner, pp. 58–59
  59. ^ Burr, pp. 21–22
  60. ^ Halpern, pp. 53–58; Staff, pp. 18–20
  61. ^ Burr, pp. 22–23
  62. ^ Staff, pp. 23–24, 43
  63. ^ Staff, pp. 43–44; Burr, pp. 24, 33
  64. ^ Halpern, pp. 318–21
  65. ^ Lambert 1998, pp. 54–55
  66. ^ Roberts, p. 116
  67. ^ Halpern, p. 328
  68. ^ Staff, pp. 41–42
  69. ^ Halpern, pp. 319–25
  70. ^ Breyer, pp. 62–64, 70–72
  71. ^ Chesneau, p. 218
  72. ^ a b Jentschura, Jung & Mickel, p. 35
  73. ^ Breyer, p. 353
  74. ^ Breyer, p. 234
  75. ^ Gardiner & Gray, pp. 41–42
  76. ^ Gardiner & Gray, p. 235
  77. ^ Gardiner & Gray, p. 119
  78. ^ Gardiner & Gray, p. 40
  79. ^ Burt, p. 48
  80. ^ Breyer, pp. 157–58, 172
  81. ^ Breyer, pp. 339–40
  82. ^ Stille, pp. 19–20
  83. ^ Chesneau, p. 406
  84. ^ Konstam, pp. 33–34
  85. ^ McLaughlin 2004, pp. 112, 114
  86. ^ Garzke & Dulin, pp. 353–54, 363; Gröner, p. 68
  87. ^ Garzke & Dulin, pp. 135–36
  88. ^ Burt, p. 243
  89. ^ Chesneau, pp. 9, 173
  90. ^ Whitley 1998, p. 127
  91. ^ Shores, Cull & Izawa, pp. 116–21, 123
  92. ^ Osborne, pp. 127–28
  93. ^ Hackett, Bob; Kingsepp, Sander; Ahlberg, Lars (2010). "IJN Hiei: Tabular Record of Movement". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  94. ^ Hackett, Bob; Kingsepp, Sander; Ahlberg, Lars (2010). "IJN Kirishima: Tabular Record of Movement". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  95. ^ Hackett, Bob; Kingsepp, Sander; Ahlberg, Lars (2012). "IJN Haruna: Tabular Record of Movement". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  96. ^ Chesneau, p. 388; Garzke & Dulin, p. 86; Friedman 1984, p. 288; McLaughlin 2006, p. 104
  97. ^ Noot, pp. 243, 249, 268
  98. ^ Friedman 1984, pp. 288–89, 296, 301–02
  99. ^ Whitley 1995, pp. 278–79
  100. ^ Jentschura, Jung & Mickel, p. 40; Garzke & Dulin, pp. 86–87
  101. ^ McLaughlin 2006, p. 104
  102. ^ McLaughlin 2006, pp. 116, 121–22
  103. ^ Gardiner, Chumbley & Budzbon, p. 328
  104. ^ "Russia to Relaunch Soviet-era Nuclear Battle Cruiser in 2018". Moscow Times. 16 October 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  105. ^ Saunders, p. 674
  106. ^ "Россия получит второй атомный крейсер-гигант". Яндекс Дзен | Платформа для авторов, издателей и брендов (in Russian). Retrieved 2 April 2020.

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External links

  • Maritimequest Battleships & Battlecruisers of the 20th century
  • British and German Battlecruisers of the First World War
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The battlecruiser also written as battle cruiser or battle cruiser was a type of capital ship of the first half of the 20th century These were similar in displacement armament and cost to battleships but differed in form and balance of attributes Battlecruisers typically had thinner armour to a varying degree and a somewhat lighter main gun battery than contemporary battleships installed on a longer hull with much higher engine power in order to attain greater speeds The first battlecruisers were designed in the United Kingdom as a development of the armoured cruiser at the same time as the dreadnought succeeded the pre dreadnought battleship The goal of the design was to outrun any ship with similar armament and chase down any ship with lesser armament they were intended to hunt down slower older armoured cruisers and destroy them with heavy gunfire while avoiding combat with the more powerful but slower battleships However as more and more battlecruisers were built they were increasingly used alongside the better protected battleships HMS Hood the largest battlecruiser ever built 1 in Australia on 17 March 1924 Battlecruisers served in the navies of the United Kingdom Germany the Ottoman Empire Australia and Japan during World War I most notably at the Battle of the Falkland Islands and in the several raids and skirmishes in the North Sea which culminated in a pitched fleet battle the Battle of Jutland British battlecruisers in particular suffered heavy losses at Jutland where poor fire safety and ammunition handling practices left them vulnerable to catastrophic magazine explosions following hits to their main turrets from large calibre shells This dismal showing led to a persistent general belief that battlecruisers were too thinly armoured to function successfully By the end of the war capital ship design had developed with battleships becoming faster and battlecruisers becoming more heavily armoured blurring the distinction between a battlecruiser and a fast battleship The Washington Naval Treaty which limited capital ship construction from 1922 onwards treated battleships and battlecruisers identically and the new generation of battlecruisers planned by the United States Great Britain and Japan were scrapped under the terms of the treaty Improvements in armour design and propulsion created the 1930s fast battleship with the speed of a battlecruiser and armour of a battleship making the battlecruiser in the traditional sense effectively an obsolete concept Thus from the 1930s on only the Royal Navy continued to use battlecruiser as a classification for the World War I era capital ships that remained in the fleet while Japan s battlecruisers remained in service they had been significantly reconstructed and were re rated as full fledged fast battleships Note 1 Battlecruisers were put into action again during World War II and only one survived to the end There was also renewed interest in large cruiser killer type warships but few were ever begun as construction of battleships and battlecruisers was curtailed in favor of more needed convoy escorts aircraft carriers and cargo ships Near the end and after the Cold War era the Soviet Kirov class of large guided missile cruisers have been the only active ships termed battlecruisers Contents 1 Background 2 First battlecruisers 3 Battlecruisers in the dreadnought arms race 4 World War I 4 1 Construction 4 2 Battlecruisers in action 5 Interwar period 5 1 Plans in the aftermath of World War I 5 2 Rebuilding programmes 5 3 Naval rearmament 6 World War II 6 1 Large cruisers or cruiser killers 7 Cold War era designs 8 Operators 8 1 Former operators 9 See also 10 Notes 10 1 Citations 10 2 Footnotes 11 References 12 External linksBackground EditThe battlecruiser was developed by the Royal Navy in the first years of the 20th century as an evolution of the armoured cruiser 5 The first armoured cruisers had been built in the 1870s as an attempt to give armour protection to ships fulfilling the typical cruiser roles of patrol trade protection and power projection However the results were rarely satisfactory as the weight of armour required for any meaningful protection usually meant that the ship became almost as slow as a battleship As a result navies preferred to build protected cruisers with an armoured deck protecting their engines or simply no armour at all In the 1890s technology began to change this balance New Krupp steel armour meant that it was now possible to give a cruiser side armour which would protect it against the quick firing guns of enemy battleships and cruisers alike 6 In 1896 97 France and Russia who were regarded as likely allies in the event of war started to build large fast armoured cruisers taking advantage of this In the event of a war between Britain and France or Russia or both these cruisers threatened to cause serious difficulties for the British Empire s worldwide trade 7 Britain which had concluded in 1892 that it needed twice as many cruisers as any potential enemy to adequately protect its empire s sea lanes responded to the perceived threat by laying down its own large armoured cruisers Between 1899 and 1905 it completed or laid down seven classes of this type a total of 35 ships 8 This building program in turn prompted the French and Russians to increase their own construction The Imperial German Navy began to build large armoured cruisers for use on their overseas stations laying down eight between 1897 and 1906 9 The cost of this cruiser arms race was significant In the period 1889 1896 the Royal Navy spent 7 3 million on new large cruisers From 1897 to 1904 it spent 26 9 million 10 Many armoured cruisers of the new kind were just as large and expensive as the equivalent battleship HMS Shannon a Minotaur class armoured cruiserThe increasing size and power of the armoured cruiser led to suggestions in British naval circles that cruisers should displace battleships entirely The battleship s main advantage was its 12 inch heavy guns and heavier armour designed to protect from shells of similar size However for a few years after 1900 it seemed that those advantages were of little practical value The torpedo now had a range of 2 000 yards and it seemed unlikely that a battleship would engage within torpedo range However at ranges of more than 2 000 yards it became increasingly unlikely that the heavy guns of a battleship would score any hits as the heavy guns relied on primitive aiming techniques The secondary batteries of 6 inch quick firing guns firing more plentiful shells were more likely to hit the enemy 11 As naval expert Fred T Jane wrote in June 1902 Is there anything outside of 2 000 yards that the big gun in its hundreds of tons of medieval castle can affect that its weight in 6 inch guns without the castle could not affect equally well And inside 2 000 what in these days of gyros is there that the torpedo cannot effect with far more certainty 12 In 1904 Admiral John Jacky Fisher became First Sea Lord the senior officer of the Royal Navy He had for some time thought about the development of a new fast armoured ship He was very fond of the second class battleship Renown a faster more lightly armoured battleship 13 As early as 1901 there is confusion in Fisher s writing about whether he saw the battleship or the cruiser as the model for future developments This did not stop him from commissioning designs from naval architect W H Gard for an armoured cruiser with the heaviest possible armament for use with the fleet The design Gard submitted was for a ship between 14 000 15 000 long tons 14 000 15 000 t capable of 25 knots 46 km h 29 mph armed with four 9 2 inch and twelve 7 5 inch 190 mm guns in twin gun turrets and protected with six inches of armour along her belt and 9 2 inch turrets 4 inches 102 mm on her 7 5 inch turrets 10 inches on her conning tower and up to 2 5 inches 64 mm on her decks However mainstream British naval thinking between 1902 and 1904 was clearly in favour of heavily armoured battleships rather than the fast ships that Fisher favoured 14 The Battle of Tsushima proved conclusively the effectiveness of heavy guns over intermediate ones and the need for a uniform main caliber on a ship for fire control Even before this the Royal Navy had begun to consider a shift away from the mixed calibre armament of the 1890s pre dreadnought to an all big gun design and preliminary designs circulated for battleships with all 12 inch or all 10 inch guns and armoured cruisers with all 9 2 inch guns 15 In late 1904 not long after the Royal Navy had decided to use 12 inch guns for its next generation of battleships because of their superior performance at long range Fisher began to argue that big gun cruisers could replace battleships altogether The continuing improvement of the torpedo meant that submarines and destroyers would be able to destroy battleships this in Fisher s view heralded the end of the battleship or at least compromised the validity of heavy armour protection Nevertheless armoured cruisers would remain vital for commerce protection 16 Of what use is a battle fleet to a country called A at war with a country called B possessing no battleships but having fast armoured cruisers and clouds of fast torpedo craft What damage would A s battleships do to B Would B wish for a few battleships or for more armoured cruisers Would not A willingly exchange a few battleships for more fast armoured cruisers In such a case neither side wanting battleships is presumptive evidence that they are not of much value Fisher to Lord Selborne First Lord of the Admiralty 20 October 1904 17 Fisher s views were very controversial within the Royal Navy and even given his position as First Sea Lord he was not in a position to insist on his own approach Thus he assembled a Committee on Designs consisting of a mixture of civilian and naval experts to determine the approach to both battleship and armoured cruiser construction in the future While the stated purpose of the committee was to investigate and report on future requirements of ships Fisher and his associates had already made key decisions 18 The terms of reference for the committee were for a battleship capable of 21 knots 39 km h 24 mph with 12 inch guns and no intermediate calibres capable of docking in existing drydocks 19 and a cruiser capable of 25 5 knots 47 2 km h 29 3 mph also with 12 inch guns and no intermediate armament armoured like Minotaur the most recent armoured cruiser and also capable of using existing docks 18 First battlecruisers EditUnder the Selborne plan of 1902 the Royal Navy intended to start three new battleships and four armoured cruisers each year However in late 1904 it became clear that the 1905 1906 programme would have to be considerably smaller because of lower than expected tax revenue and the need to buy out two Chilean battleships under construction in British yards lest they be purchased by the Russians for use against the Japanese Britain s ally These economies meant that the 1905 1906 programme consisted only of one battleship but three armoured cruisers The battleship became the revolutionary battleship Dreadnought and the cruisers became the three ships of the Invincible class Fisher later claimed however that he had argued during the committee for the cancellation of the remaining battleship 20 The construction of the new class was begun in 1906 and completed in 1908 delayed perhaps to allow their designers to learn from any problems with Dreadnought 19 21 The ships fulfilled the design requirement quite closely On a displacement similar to Dreadnought the Invincibles were 40 feet 12 2 m longer to accommodate additional boilers and more powerful turbines to propel them at 25 knots 46 km h 29 mph Moreover the new ships could maintain this speed for days whereas pre dreadnought battleships could not generally do so for more than an hour 22 Armed with eight 12 inch Mk X guns compared to ten on Dreadnought they had 6 7 inches 152 178 mm of armour protecting the hull and the gun turrets Dreadnought s armour by comparison was 11 12 inches 279 305 mm at its thickest 23 The class had a very marked increase in speed displacement and firepower compared to the most recent armoured cruisers but no more armour 24 While the Invincibles were to fill the same role as the armoured cruisers they succeeded they were expected to do so more effectively Specifically their roles were Heavy reconnaissance Because of their power the Invincibles could sweep away the screen of enemy cruisers to close with and observe an enemy battlefleet before using their superior speed to retire Close support for the battle fleet They could be stationed at the ends of the battle line to stop enemy cruisers harassing the battleships and to harass the enemy s battleships if they were busy fighting battleships Also the Invincibles could operate as the fast wing of the battlefleet and try to outmanoeuvre the enemy Pursuit If an enemy fleet ran then the Invincibles would use their speed to pursue and their guns to damage or slow enemy ships Commerce protection The new ships would hunt down enemy cruisers and commerce raiders 25 Invincible Britain s first battlecruiser Confusion about how to refer to these new battleship size armoured cruisers set in almost immediately Even in late 1905 before work was begun on the Invincibles a Royal Navy memorandum refers to large armoured ships meaning both battleships and large cruisers In October 1906 the Admiralty began to classify all post Dreadnought battleships and armoured cruisers as capital ships while Fisher used the term dreadnought to refer either to his new battleships or the battleships and armoured cruisers together 26 At the same time the Invincible class themselves were referred to as cruiser battleships dreadnought cruisers the term battlecruiser was first used by Fisher in 1908 Finally on 24 November 1911 Admiralty Weekly Order No 351 laid down that All cruisers of the Invincible and later types are for the future to be described and classified as battle cruisers to distinguish them from the armoured cruisers of earlier date 27 Along with questions over the new ships nomenclature came uncertainty about their actual role due to their lack of protection If they were primarily to act as scouts for the battle fleet and hunter killers of enemy cruisers and commerce raiders then the seven inches of belt armour with which they had been equipped would be adequate If on the other hand they were expected to reinforce a battle line of dreadnoughts with their own heavy guns they were too thin skinned to be safe from an enemy s heavy guns The Invincibles were essentially extremely large heavily armed fast armoured cruisers However the viability of the armoured cruiser was already in doubt A cruiser that could have worked with the Fleet might have been a more viable option for taking over that role 24 28 Because of the Invincibles size and armament naval authorities considered them capital ships almost from their inception an assumption that might have been inevitable Complicating matters further was that many naval authorities including Lord Fisher had made overoptimistic assessments from the Battle of Tsushima in 1905 about the armoured cruiser s ability to survive in a battle line against enemy capital ships due to their superior speed These assumptions had been made without taking into account the Russian Baltic Fleet s inefficiency and tactical ineptitude By the time the term battlecruiser had been given to the Invincibles the idea of their parity with battleships had been fixed in many people s minds 24 28 Not everyone was so convinced Brassey s Naval Annual for instance stated that with vessels as large and expensive as the Invincibles an admiral will be certain to put them in the line of battle where their comparatively light protection will be a disadvantage and their high speed of no value 29 Those in favor of the battlecruiser countered with two points first since all capital ships were vulnerable to new weapons such as the torpedo armour had lost some of its validity and second because of its greater speed the battlecruiser could control the range at which it engaged an enemy 30 Battlecruisers in the dreadnought arms race EditBetween the launching of the Invincibles to just after the outbreak of the First World War the battlecruiser played a junior role in the developing dreadnought arms race as it was never wholeheartedly adopted as the key weapon in British imperial defence as Fisher had presumably desired The biggest factor for this lack of acceptance was the marked change in Britain s strategic circumstances between their conception and the commissioning of the first ships The prospective enemy for Britain had shifted from a Franco Russian alliance with many armoured cruisers to a resurgent and increasingly belligerent Germany Diplomatically Britain had entered the Entente cordiale in 1904 and the Anglo Russian Entente Neither France nor Russia posed a particular naval threat the Russian navy had largely been sunk or captured in the Russo Japanese War of 1904 1905 while the French were in no hurry to adopt the new dreadnought type design Britain also boasted very cordial relations with two of the significant new naval powers Japan bolstered by the Anglo Japanese Alliance signed in 1902 and renewed in 1905 and the US These changed strategic circumstances and the great success of the Dreadnought ensured that she rather than the Invincible became the new model capital ship Nevertheless battlecruiser construction played a part in the renewed naval arms race sparked by the Dreadnought 31 HMS Queen Mary the last battlecruiser built before World War I For their first few years of service the Invincibles entirely fulfilled Fisher s vision of being able to sink any ship fast enough to catch them and run from any ship capable of sinking them An Invincible would also in many circumstances be able to take on an enemy pre dreadnought battleship Naval circles concurred that the armoured cruiser in its current form had come to the logical end of its development and the Invincibles were so far ahead of any enemy armoured cruiser in firepower and speed that it proved difficult to justify building more or bigger cruisers 32 This lead was extended by the surprise both Dreadnought and Invincible produced by having been built in secret this prompted most other navies to delay their building programmes and radically revise their designs 33 This was particularly true for cruisers because the details of the Invincible class were kept secret for longer this meant that the last German armoured cruiser Blucher was armed with only 21 centimetre 8 3 in guns and was no match for the new battlecruisers 34 The Royal Navy s early superiority in capital ships led to the rejection of a 1905 1906 design that would essentially have fused the battlecruiser and battleship concepts into what would eventually become the fast battleship The X4 design combined the full armour and armament of Dreadnought with the 25 knot speed of Invincible The additional cost could not be justified given the existing British lead and the new Liberal government s need for economy the slower and cheaper Bellerophon a relatively close copy of Dreadnought was adopted instead 35 The X4 concept would eventually be fulfilled in the Queen Elizabeth class and later by other navies 36 The next British battlecruisers were the three Indefatigable class slightly improved Invincibles built to fundamentally the same specification partly due to political pressure to limit costs and partly due to the secrecy surrounding German battlecruiser construction particularly about the heavy armour of SMS Von der Tann 37 This class came to be widely seen as a mistake 38 and the next generation of British battlecruisers were markedly more powerful By 1909 1910 a sense of national crisis about rivalry with Germany outweighed cost cutting and a naval panic resulted in the approval of a total of eight capital ships in 1909 1910 39 Fisher pressed for all eight to be battlecruisers 40 but was unable to have his way he had to settle for six battleships and two battlecruisers of the Lion class The Lions carried eight 13 5 inch guns the now standard caliber of the British super dreadnought battleships Speed increased to 27 knots 50 km h 31 mph and armour protection while not as good as in German designs was better than in previous British battlecruisers with nine inch 230 mm armour belt and barbettes The two Lions were followed by the very similar Queen Mary 41 SMS Seydlitz By 1911 Germany had built battlecruisers of her own and the superiority of the British ships could no longer be assured Moreover the German Navy did not share Fisher s view of the battlecruiser In contrast to the British focus on increasing speed and firepower Germany progressively improved the armour and staying power of their ships to better the British battlecruisers 42 Von der Tann begun in 1908 and completed in 1910 carried eight 11 1 inch guns but with 11 1 inch 283 mm armour she was far better protected than the Invincibles The two Moltkes were quite similar but carried ten 11 1 inch guns of an improved design 43 Seydlitz designed in 1909 and finished in 1913 was a modified Moltke speed increased by one knot to 26 5 knots 49 1 km h 30 5 mph while her armour had a maximum thickness of 12 inches equivalent to the Helgoland class battleships of a few years earlier Seydlitz was Germany s last battlecruiser completed before World War I 44 The next step in battlecruiser design came from Japan The Imperial Japanese Navy had been planning the Kongō class ships from 1909 and was determined that since the Japanese economy could support relatively few ships each would be more powerful than its likely competitors Initially the class was planned with the Invincibles as the benchmark On learning of the British plans for Lion and the likelihood that new U S Navy battleships would be armed with 14 inch 360 mm guns the Japanese decided to radically revise their plans and go one better A new plan was drawn up carrying eight 14 inch guns and capable of 27 5 knots 50 9 km h 31 6 mph thus marginally having the edge over the Lions in speed and firepower The heavy guns were also better positioned being superfiring both fore and aft with no turret amidships The armour scheme was also marginally improved over the Lions with nine inches of armour on the turrets and 8 inches 203 mm on the barbettes The first ship in the class was built in Britain and a further three constructed in Japan 45 The Japanese also re classified their powerful armoured cruisers of the Tsukuba and Ibuki classes carrying four 12 inch guns as battlecruisers nonetheless their armament was weaker and they were slower than any battlecruiser 46 Kongō The next British battlecruiser Tiger was intended initially as the fourth ship in the Lion class but was substantially redesigned She retained the eight 13 5 inch guns of her predecessors but they were positioned like those of Kongō for better fields of fire She was faster making 29 knots 54 km h 33 mph on sea trials and carried a heavier secondary armament Tiger was also more heavily armoured on the whole while the maximum thickness of armour was the same at nine inches the height of the main armour belt was increased 47 Not all the desired improvements for this ship were approved however Her designer Sir Eustace Tennyson d Eyncourt had wanted small bore water tube boilers and geared turbines to give her a speed of 32 knots 59 km h 37 mph but he received no support from the authorities and the engine makers refused his request 48 1912 saw work begin on three more German battlecruisers of the Derfflinger class the first German battlecruisers to mount 12 inch guns These ships like Tiger and the Kongōs had their guns arranged in superfiring turrets for greater efficiency Their armour and speed was similar to the previous Seydlitz class 49 In 1913 the Russian Empire also began the construction of the four ship Borodino class which were designed for service in the Baltic Sea These ships were designed to carry twelve 14 inch guns with armour up to 12 inches thick and a speed of 26 6 knots 49 3 km h 30 6 mph The heavy armour and relatively slow speed of these ships made them more similar to German designs than to British ships construction of the Borodinos was halted by the First World War and all were scrapped after the end of the Russian Civil War 50 World War I EditConstruction Edit For most of the combatants capital ship construction was very limited during the war Germany finished the Derfflinger class and began work on the Mackensen class The Mackensens were a development of the Derfflinger class with 13 8 inch guns and a broadly similar armour scheme designed for 28 knots 52 km h 32 mph 51 In Britain Jackie Fisher returned to the office of First Sea Lord in October 1914 His enthusiasm for big fast ships was unabated and he set designers to producing a design for a battlecruiser with 15 inch guns Because Fisher expected the next German battlecruiser to steam at 28 knots he required the new British design to be capable of 32 knots He planned to reorder two Revenge class battleships which had been approved but not yet laid down to a new design Fisher finally received approval for this project on 28 December 1914 and they became the Renown class With six 15 inch guns but only 6 inch armour they were a further step forward from Tiger in firepower and speed but returned to the level of protection of the first British battlecruisers 52 At the same time Fisher resorted to subterfuge to obtain another three fast lightly armoured ships that could use several spare 15 inch 381 mm gun turrets left over from battleship construction These ships were essentially light battlecruisers and Fisher occasionally referred to them as such but officially they were classified as large light cruisers This unusual designation was required because construction of new capital ships had been placed on hold while there were no limits on light cruiser construction They became Courageous and her sisters Glorious and Furious and there was a bizarre imbalance between their main guns of 15 inches or 18 inches 457 mm in Furious and their armour which at three inches 76 mm thickness was on the scale of a light cruiser The design was generally regarded as a failure nicknamed in the Fleet Outrageous Uproarious and Spurious though the later conversion of the ships to aircraft carriers was very successful 53 Fisher also speculated about a new mammoth but lightly built battlecruiser that would carry 20 inch 508 mm guns which he termed HMS Incomparable this never got beyond the concept stage 54 It is often held that the Renown and Courageous classes were designed for Fisher s plan to land troops possibly Russian on the German Baltic coast Specifically they were designed with a reduced draught which might be important in the shallow Baltic This is not clear cut evidence that the ships were designed for the Baltic it was considered that earlier ships had too much draught and not enough freeboard under operational conditions Roberts argues that the focus on the Baltic was probably unimportant at the time the ships were designed but was inflated later after the disastrous Dardanelles Campaign 55 The final British battlecruiser design of the war was the Admiral class which was born from a requirement for an improved version of the Queen Elizabeth battleship The project began at the end of 1915 after Fisher s final departure from the Admiralty While initially envisaged as a battleship senior sea officers felt that Britain had enough battleships but that new battlecruisers might be required to combat German ships being built the British overestimated German progress on the Mackensen class as well as their likely capabilities A battlecruiser design with eight 15 inch guns 8 inches of armour and capable of 32 knots was decided on The experience of battlecruisers at the Battle of Jutland meant that the design was radically revised and transformed again into a fast battleship with armour up to 12 inches thick but still capable of 31 5 knots 58 3 km h 36 2 mph The first ship in the class Hood was built according to this design to counter the possible completion of any of the Mackensen class ship The plans for her three sisters on which little work had been done were revised once more later in 1916 and in 1917 to improve protection 56 The Admiral class would have been the only British ships capable of taking on the German Mackensen class nevertheless German shipbuilding was drastically slowed by the war and while two Mackensens were launched none were ever completed 57 The Germans also worked briefly on a further three ships of the Ersatz Yorck class which were modified versions of the Mackensens with 15 inch guns 58 Work on the three additional Admirals was suspended in March 1917 to enable more escorts and merchant ships to be built to deal with the new threat from U boats to trade They were finally cancelled in February 1919 57 Battlecruisers in action Edit The first combat involving battlecruisers during World War I was the Battle of Heligoland Bight in August 1914 A force of British light cruisers and destroyers entered the Heligoland Bight the part of the North Sea closest to Hamburg to attack German destroyer patrols When they met opposition from light cruisers Vice Admiral David Beatty took his squadron of five battlecruisers into the Bight and turned the tide of the battle ultimately sinking three German light cruisers and killing their commander Rear Admiral Leberecht Maass 59 The German battlecruiser Goeben perhaps made the most impact early in the war Stationed in the Mediterranean she and the escorting light cruiser SMS Breslau evaded British and French ships on the outbreak of war and steamed to Constantinople Istanbul with two British battlecruisers in hot pursuit The two German ships were handed over to the Ottoman Navy and this was instrumental in bringing the Ottoman Empire into the war as one of the Central Powers Goeben herself renamed Yavuz Sultan Selim fought engagements against the Imperial Russian Navy in the Black Sea before being knocked out of the action for the remainder of the war after the Battle of Imbros against British forces in the Aegean Sea in January 1918 60 The original battlecruiser concept proved successful in December 1914 at the Battle of the Falkland Islands The British battlecruisers Inflexible and Invincible did precisely the job for which they were intended when they chased down and annihilated the German East Asia Squadron centered on the armoured cruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau along with three light cruisers commanded by Admiral Maximilian Graf Von Spee in the South Atlantic Ocean Prior to the battle the Australian battlecruiser Australia had unsuccessfully searched for the German ships in the Pacific 61 Seydlitz was heavily damaged in the Battle of Dogger Bank During the Battle of Dogger Bank in 1915 the aftermost barbette of the German flagship Seydlitz was struck by a British 13 5 inch shell from HMS Lion The shell did not penetrate the barbette but it dislodged a piece of the barbette armour that allowed the flame from the shell s detonation to enter the barbette The propellant charges being hoisted upwards were ignited and the fireball flashed up into the turret and down into the magazine setting fire to charges removed from their brass cartridge cases The gun crew tried to escape into the next turret which allowed the flash to spread into that turret as well killing the crews of both turrets Seydlitz was saved from near certain destruction only by emergency flooding of her after magazines which had been effected by Wilhelm Heidkamp This near disaster was due to the way that ammunition handling was arranged and was common to both German and British battleships and battlecruisers but the lighter protection on the latter made them more vulnerable to the turret or barbette being penetrated The Germans learned from investigating the damaged Seydlitz and instituted measures to ensure that ammunition handling minimised any possible exposure to flash 62 Apart from the cordite handling the battle was mostly inconclusive though both the British flagship Lion and Seydlitz were severely damaged Lion lost speed causing her to fall behind the rest of the battleline and Beatty was unable to effectively command his ships for the remainder of the engagement A British signalling error allowed the German battlecruisers to withdraw as most of Beatty s squadron mistakenly concentrated on the crippled armoured cruiser Blucher sinking her with great loss of life The British blamed their failure to win a decisive victory on their poor gunnery and attempted to increase their rate of fire by stockpiling unprotected cordite charges in their ammunition hoists and barbettes 63 Queen Mary blows up during the Battle of Jutland At the Battle of Jutland on 31 May 1916 both British and German battlecruisers were employed as fleet units The British battlecruisers became engaged with both their German counterparts the battlecruisers and then German battleships before the arrival of the battleships of the British Grand Fleet The result was a disaster for the Royal Navy s battlecruiser squadrons Invincible Queen Mary and Indefatigable exploded with the loss of all but a handful of their crews 64 The exact reason why the ships magazines detonated is not known but the plethora of exposed cordite charges stored in their turrets ammunition hoists and working chambers in the quest to increase their rate of fire undoubtedly contributed to their loss 65 Beatty s flagship Lion herself was almost lost in a similar manner save for the heroic actions of Major Francis Harvey 66 The better armoured German battlecruisers fared better in part due to the poor performance of British fuzes the British shells tended to explode or break up on impact with the German armour 67 Lutzow the only German battlecruiser lost at Jutland had only 128 killed 68 for instance despite receiving more than thirty hits The other German battlecruisers Moltke Von der Tann Seydlitz and Derfflinger were all heavily damaged and required extensive repairs after the battle Seydlitz barely making it home for they had been the focus of British fire for much of the battle 69 Interwar period EditIn the years immediately after World War I Britain Japan and the US all began design work on a new generation of ever more powerful battleships and battlecruisers The new burst of shipbuilding that each nation s navy desired was politically controversial and potentially economically crippling This nascent arms race was prevented by the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922 where the major naval powers agreed to limits on capital ship numbers 70 The German navy was not represented at the talks under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles Germany was not allowed any modern capital ships at all 71 Through the 1920s and 1930s only Britain and Japan retained battlecruisers often modified and rebuilt from their original designs The line between the battlecruiser and the modern fast battleship became blurred indeed the Japanese Kongōs were formally redesignated as battleships after their very comprehensive reconstruction in the 1930s 72 Plans in the aftermath of World War I Edit Hood launched in 1918 was the last World War I battlecruiser to be completed Owing to lessons from Jutland the ship was modified during construction the thickness of her belt armour was increased by an average of 50 percent and extended substantially she was given heavier deck armour and the protection of her magazines was improved to guard against the ignition of ammunition This was hoped to be capable of resisting her own weapons the classic measure of a balanced battleship Hood was the largest ship in the Royal Navy when completed thanks to her great displacement in theory she combined the firepower and armour of a battleship with the speed of a battlecruiser causing some to refer to her as a fast battleship However her protection was markedly less than that of the British battleships built immediately after World War I the Nelson class 1 Lexington class battlecruiser painting c 1919 The navies of Japan and the United States not being affected immediately by the war had time to develop new heavy 16 inch 410 mm guns for their latest designs and to refine their battlecruiser designs in light of combat experience in Europe The Imperial Japanese Navy began four Amagi class battlecruisers These vessels would have been of unprecedented size and power as fast and well armoured as Hood whilst carrying a main battery of ten 16 inch guns the most powerful armament ever proposed for a battlecruiser They were for all intents and purposes fast battleships the only differences between them and the Tosa class battleships which were to precede them were 1 inch 25 mm less side armour and a 25 knots 0 46 km h 0 29 mph increase in speed 73 The United States Navy which had worked on its battlecruiser designs since 1913 and watched the latest developments in this class with great care responded with the Lexington class If completed as planned they would have been exceptionally fast and well armed with eight 16 inch guns but carried armour little better than the Invincibles this after an 8 000 long ton 8 100 t increase in protection following Jutland 74 The final stage in the post war battlecruiser race came with the British response to the Amagi and Lexington types four 48 000 long ton 49 000 t G3 battlecruisers Royal Navy documents of the period often described any battleship with a speed of over about 24 knots 44 km h 28 mph as a battlecruiser regardless of the amount of protective armour although the G3 was considered by most to be a well balanced fast battleship 75 The Washington Naval Treaty meant that none of these designs came to fruition Ships that had been started were either broken up on the slipway or converted to aircraft carriers In Japan Amagi and Akagi were selected for conversion Amagi was damaged beyond repair by the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake and was broken up for scrap the hull of one of the proposed Tosa class battleships Kaga was converted in her stead 76 The United States Navy also converted two battlecruiser hulls into aircraft carriers in the wake of the Washington Treaty USS Lexington and USS Saratoga although this was only considered marginally preferable to scrapping the hulls outright the remaining four Constellation Ranger Constitution and United States were scrapped 77 In Britain Fisher s large light cruisers were converted to carriers Furious had already been partially converted during the war and Glorious and Courageous were similarly converted 78 Rebuilding programmes Edit Repulse as she was in 1919 Renown as reconstructed in 1939 In total nine battlecruisers survived the Washington Naval Treaty although HMS Tiger later became a victim of the London Naval Conference 1930 and was scrapped 79 Because their high speed made them valuable surface units in spite of their weaknesses most of these ships were significantly updated before World War II Renown and Repulse were modernized significantly in the 1920s and 1930s Between 1934 and 1936 Repulse was partially modernized and had her bridge modified an aircraft hangar catapult and new gunnery equipment added and her anti aircraft armament increased Renown underwent a more thorough reconstruction between 1937 and 1939 Her deck armour was increased new turbines and boilers were fitted an aircraft hangar and catapult added and she was completely rearmed aside from the main guns which had their elevation increased to 30 degrees The bridge structure was also removed and a large bridge similar to that used in the King George V class battleships installed in its place While conversions of this kind generally added weight to the vessel Renown s tonnage actually decreased due to a substantially lighter power plant Similar thorough rebuildings planned for Repulse and Hood were cancelled due to the advent of World War II 80 Unable to build new ships the Imperial Japanese Navy also chose to improve its existing battlecruisers of the Kongō class initially the Haruna Kirishima and Kongō the Hiei only later as it had been disarmed under the terms of the Washington treaty in two substantial reconstructions one for Hiei During the first of these elevation of their main guns was increased to 40 degrees anti torpedo bulges and 3 800 long tons 3 900 t of horizontal armour added and a pagoda mast with additional command positions built up This reduced the ships speed to 25 9 knots 48 0 km h 29 8 mph The second reconstruction focused on speed as they had been selected as fast escorts for aircraft carrier task forces Completely new main engines a reduced number of boilers and an increase in hull length by 26 feet 7 9 m allowed them to reach up to 30 knots once again They were reclassified as fast battleships although their armour and guns still fell short compared to surviving World War I era battleships in the American or the British navies with dire consequences during the Pacific War when Hiei and Kirishima were easily crippled by US gunfire during actions off Guadalcanal forcing their scuttling shortly afterwards 81 Perhaps most tellingly Hiei was crippled by medium caliber gunfire from heavy and light cruisers in a close range night engagement 82 There were two exceptions Turkey s Yavuz Sultan Selim and the Royal Navy s Hood The Turkish Navy made only minor improvements to the ship in the interwar period which primarily focused on repairing wartime damage and the installation of new fire control systems and anti aircraft batteries 83 Hood was in constant service with the fleet and could not be withdrawn for an extended reconstruction She received minor improvements over the course of the 1930s including modern fire control systems increased numbers of anti aircraft guns and in March 1941 radar 84 Naval rearmament Edit In the late 1930s navies began to build capital ships again and during this period a number of large commerce raiders and small fast battleships were built that are sometimes referred to as battlecruisers Germany and Russia designed new battlecruisers during this period though only the latter laid down two of the 35 000 ton Kronshtadt class They were still on the slipways when the Germans invaded in 1941 and construction was suspended Both ships were scrapped after the war 85 The Germans planned three battlecruisers of the O class as part of the expansion of the Kriegsmarine Plan Z With six 15 inch guns high speed excellent range but very thin armour they were intended as commerce raiders Only one was ordered shortly before World War II no work was ever done on it No names were assigned and they were known by their contract names O P and Q The new class was not universally welcomed in the Kriegsmarine Their abnormally light protection gained it the derogatory nickname Ohne Panzer Quatsch without armour nonsense within certain circles of the Navy 86 World War II EditSee also List of battlecruisers of the Second World War The Royal Navy deployed some of its battlecruisers during the Norwegian Campaign in April 1940 The Gneisenau and the Scharnhorst were engaged during the action off Lofoten by Renown in very bad weather and disengaged after Gneisenau was damaged One of Renown s 15 inch shells passed through Gneisenau s director control tower without exploding severing electrical and communication cables as it went and destroyed the rangefinders for the forward 150 mm 5 9 in turrets Main battery fire control had to be shifted aft due to the loss of electrical power Another shell from Renown knocked out Gneisenau s aft turret 87 The British ship was struck twice by German shells that failed to inflict any significant damage 88 She was the only pre war battlecruiser to survive the war 89 In the early years of the war various German ships had a measure of success hunting merchant ships in the Atlantic Allied battlecruisers such as Renown Repulse and the fast battleships Dunkerque and Strasbourg were employed on operations to hunt down the commerce raiding German ships The one stand up fight occurred when the battleship Bismarck and the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen sortied into the North Atlantic to attack British shipping and were intercepted by Hood and the battleship Prince of Wales in May 1941 in the Battle of the Denmark Strait The elderly British battlecruiser was no match for the modern German battleship within minutes the Bismarck s 15 inch shells caused a magazine explosion in Hood reminiscent of the Battle of Jutland Only three men survived 90 The first battlecruiser to see action in the Pacific War was Repulse when she was sunk by Japanese torpedo bombers north of Singapore on 10 December 1941 whilst in company with Prince of Wales She was lightly damaged by a single 250 kilogram 550 lb bomb and near missed by two others in the first Japanese attack Her speed and agility enabled her to avoid the other attacks by level bombers and dodge 33 torpedoes The last group of torpedo bombers attacked from multiple directions and Repulse was struck by five torpedoes She quickly capsized with the loss of 27 officers and 486 crewmen 42 officers and 754 enlisted men were rescued by the escorting destroyers 91 The loss of Repulse and Prince of Wales conclusively proved the vulnerability of capital ships to aircraft without air cover of their own 92 The Japanese Kongō class battlecruisers were extensively used as carrier escorts for most of their wartime career due to their high speed Their World War I era armament was weaker and their upgraded armour was still thin compared to contemporary battleships On 13 November 1942 during the First Naval Battle of Guadalcanal Hiei stumbled across American cruisers and destroyers at point blank range The ship was badly damaged in the encounter and had to be towed by her sister ship Kirishima Both were spotted by American aircraft the following morning and Kirishima was forced to cast off her tow because of repeated aerial attacks Hiei s captain ordered her crew to abandon ship after further damage and scuttled Hiei in the early evening of 14 November 93 On the night of 14 15 November during the Second Naval Battle of Guadalcanal Kirishima returned to Ironbottom Sound but encountered the American battleships South Dakota and Washington While failing to detect Washington Kirishima engaged South Dakota with some effect Washington opened fire a few minutes later at short range and badly damaged Kirishima knocking out her aft turrets jamming her rudder and hitting the ship below the waterline The flooding proved to be uncontrollable and Kirishima capsized three and a half hours later 94 Returning to Japan after the Battle of Leyte Gulf Kongō was torpedoed and sunk by the American submarine Sealion II on 21 November 1944 72 Haruna was moored at Kure Japan when the naval base was attacked by American carrier aircraft on 24 and 28 July 1945 The ship was only lightly damaged by a single bomb hit on 24 July but was hit a dozen more times on 28 July and sank at her pier She was refloated after the war and scrapped in early 1946 95 Large cruisers or cruiser killers Edit Further information Design 1047 battlecruiser Alaska class cruiser and Design B 65 cruiser See also List of cruisers of the United States Navy Large cruisers CB USS Alaska one of the United States Navy s two large cruisers A late renaissance in popularity of ships between battleships and cruisers in size occurred on the eve of World War II Described by some as battlecruisers but never classified as capital ships they were variously described as super cruisers large cruisers or even unrestricted cruisers The Dutch American and Japanese navies all planned these new classes specifically to counter the heavy cruisers or their counterparts being built by their naval rivals 96 The first such battlecruisers were the Dutch Design 1047 designed to protect their colonies in the East Indies in the face of Japanese aggression Never officially assigned names these ships were designed with German and Italian assistance While they broadly resembled the German Scharnhorst class and had the same main battery they would have been more lightly armoured and only protected against eight inch gunfire Although the design was mostly completed work on the vessels never commenced as the Germans overran the Netherlands in May 1940 The first ship would have been laid down in June of that year 97 The only class of these late battlecruisers actually built were the United States Navy s Alaska class large cruisers Two of them were completed Alaska and Guam a third Hawaii was cancelled while under construction and three others to be named Philippines Puerto Rico and Samoa were cancelled before they were laid down They were classified as large cruisers instead of battlecruisers These ships were named after territories or protectorates Battleships were named after states and cruisers after cities With a main armament of nine 12 inch guns in three triple turrets and a displacement of 27 000 long tons 27 000 t the Alaskas were twice the size of Baltimore class cruisers and had guns some 50 larger in diameter They lacked the thick armoured belt and intricate torpedo defence system of true capital ships However unlike most battlecruisers they were considered a balanced design according to cruiser standards as their protection could withstand fire from their own caliber of gun albeit only in a very narrow range band They were designed to hunt down Japanese heavy cruisers though by the time they entered service most Japanese cruisers had been sunk by American aircraft or submarines 98 Like the contemporary Iowa class fast battleships their speed ultimately made them more useful as carrier escorts and bombardment ships than as the surface combatants they were developed to be 99 The Japanese started designing the B64 class which was similar to the Alaska but with 310 millimetre 12 2 in guns News of the Alaskas led them to upgrade the design creating Design B 65 Armed with 356 mm guns the B65s would have been the best armed of the new breed of battlecruisers but they still would have had only sufficient protection to keep out eight inch shells Much like the Dutch the Japanese got as far as completing the design for the B65s but never laid them down By the time the designs were ready the Japanese Navy recognized that they had little use for the vessels and that their priority for construction should lie with aircraft carriers Like the Alaskas the Japanese did not call these ships battlecruisers referring to them instead as super heavy cruisers 100 Cold War era designs Edit Admiral Lazarev formerly Frunze the second ship of her class In spite of the fact that most navies abandoned the battleship and battlecruiser concepts after World War II Joseph Stalin s fondness for big gun armed warships caused the Soviet Union to plan a large cruiser class in the late 1940s In the Soviet Navy they were termed heavy cruisers tjazholyj krejser 101 The fruits of this program were the Project 82 Stalingrad cruisers of 36 500 tonnes 35 900 long tons standard load nine 305 mm 12 in guns and a speed of 35 knots 65 km h 40 mph Three ships were laid down in 1951 1952 but they were cancelled in April 1953 after Stalin s death Only the central armoured hull section of the first ship Stalingrad was launched in 1954 and then used as a target 102 The Soviet Kirov class is sometimes referred to as a battlecruiser 103 This description arises from their over 24 000 tonne 24 000 long ton displacement which is roughly equal to that of a First World War battleship and more than twice the displacement of contemporary cruisers upon entry into service Kirov was the largest surface combatant to be built since World War II 104 The Kirov class lacks the armour that distinguishes battlecruisers from ordinary cruisers and they are classified as heavy nuclear powered missile cruisers T Yazholiy atomn iy raketn iy Krey Ser by Russia with their primary surface armament consisting of twenty P 700 Granit surface to surface missiles Four members of the class were completed during the 1980s and 1990s but due to budget constraints only the Pyotr Velikiy is operational with the Russian Navy though plans were announced in 2010 to return the other three ships to service As of 2021 Admiral Nakhimov was being refitted but the other two ships are reportedly beyond economical repair 105 106 Operators Edit Russian Navy operates one Kirov class battlecruiser with one more being overhauled Former operators Edit Imperial German Navy five surviving battlecruisers were all scuttled at Scapa Flow in 1919 Royal Australian Navy decommissioned its only battlecruiser HMAS Australia in 1921 Imperial Japanese Navy upgraded its Kongo class battlecruisers into fast battleships in the 1930s ending their operation of battlecruisers Royal Navy last battlecruiser HMS Renown was decommissioned in 1945 following World War II United States Navy two Alaska class battlecruisers were both decommissioned in 1947 Turkish Navy decommissioned its only battlecruiser TCG Yavuz in 1950 See also Edit Battleships portalList of battlecruisers List of battlecruisers of the Second World War List of ships of the Second World War List of sunken battlecruisersNotes EditCitations Edit The German Scharnhorst class battleships and Deutschland class cruisers and the French Dunkerque class battleships are all sometimes referred to as battlecruisers although the owning navies referred to them as battleships German Schlachtschiffe armoured ships German Panzerschiffe and battleships French Batiments de ligne respectively Since neither their operators nor a significant number of naval historians classify them as such they are not discussed in this article 2 3 4 Footnotes Edit a b Breyer p 168 Groner pp 31 60 Gille p 139 Koop amp Schmolke p 4 Chesneau p 259 Bidlingmaier pp 73 74 Sondhaus p 199 Roberts p 13 Sumida p 19 Breyer p 47 Lambert 2002 pp 20 22 Osborne pp 61 62 Gardiner amp Gray p 142 Osborne pp 62 74 Sumida p 351 Table 9 Figures are for First Class Cruisers and exclude armament Sumida pp 42 44 Quoted in Sumida p 44 Roberts p 15 Mackay pp 212 13 Breyer p 48 Roberts pp 16 17 Mackay pp 324 25 Roberts pp 17 18 Sumida p 52 quoted in Sumida p 52 a b Roberts p 19 a b Breyer p 115 Sumida p 55 Roberts pp 24 25 Burr pp 7 8 Breyer pp 114 17 a b c Gardiner amp Gray p 24 Roberts p 18 Mackay pp 325 26 Admiralty Weekly Orders 351 Description and Classification of Cruisers of the Invincible and Later Types ADM 182 2 quoted at The Dreadnought Project The Battle Cruiser in the Royal Navy a b Massie p 494 As quoted in Massie pp 494 95 Friedman p 10 Sondhaus pp 199 202 Roberts p 25 Mackay pp 324 25 Sondhaus pp 201 02 Staff pp 3 4 Roberts p 26 Breyer pp 61 62 Roberts pp 28 29 Brown 1999 p 57 Sondhaus p 203 Roberts p 32 Roberts pp 31 33 Sondhaus pp 202 03 Breyer pp 269 72 Breyer pp 267 272 Evans amp Peattie pp 161 63 Gardiner amp Gray p 233 Roberts pp 37 38 Breyer p 136 Breyer pp 277 78 Breyer p 399 Breyer pp 283 84 Roberts pp 46 47 Roberts pp 50 52 Breyer p 172 Roberts p 51 Roberts pp 55 61 a b Roberts pp 60 61 Groner pp 58 59 Burr pp 21 22 Halpern pp 53 58 Staff pp 18 20 Burr pp 22 23 Staff pp 23 24 43 Staff pp 43 44 Burr pp 24 33 Halpern pp 318 21 Lambert 1998 pp 54 55 Roberts p 116 Halpern p 328 Staff pp 41 42 Halpern pp 319 25 Breyer pp 62 64 70 72 Chesneau p 218 a b Jentschura Jung amp Mickel p 35 Breyer p 353 Breyer p 234 Gardiner amp Gray pp 41 42 Gardiner amp Gray p 235 Gardiner amp Gray p 119 Gardiner amp Gray p 40 Burt p 48 Breyer pp 157 58 172 Breyer pp 339 40 Stille pp 19 20 Chesneau p 406 Konstam pp 33 34 McLaughlin 2004 pp 112 114 Garzke amp Dulin pp 353 54 363 Groner p 68 Garzke amp Dulin pp 135 36 Burt p 243 Chesneau pp 9 173 Whitley 1998 p 127 Shores Cull amp Izawa pp 116 21 123 Osborne pp 127 28 Hackett Bob Kingsepp Sander Ahlberg Lars 2010 IJN Hiei Tabular Record of Movement Combinedfleet com Retrieved 6 June 2013 Hackett Bob Kingsepp Sander Ahlberg Lars 2010 IJN Kirishima Tabular Record of Movement Combinedfleet com Retrieved 6 June 2013 Hackett Bob Kingsepp Sander Ahlberg Lars 2012 IJN Haruna Tabular Record of Movement Combinedfleet com Retrieved 6 June 2013 Chesneau p 388 Garzke amp Dulin p 86 Friedman 1984 p 288 McLaughlin 2006 p 104 Noot pp 243 249 268 Friedman 1984 pp 288 89 296 301 02 Whitley 1995 pp 278 79 Jentschura Jung amp Mickel p 40 Garzke amp Dulin pp 86 87 McLaughlin 2006 p 104 McLaughlin 2006 pp 116 121 22 Gardiner Chumbley amp Budzbon p 328 Russia to Relaunch Soviet era Nuclear Battle Cruiser in 2018 Moscow Times 16 October 2014 Retrieved 13 September 2016 Saunders p 674 Rossiya poluchit vtoroj atomnyj krejser gigant Yandeks Dzen Platforma dlya avtorov izdatelej i brendov in Russian Retrieved 2 April 2020 References EditBidlingmaier Gerhard 1971 KM Admiral Graf Spee Warship Profile 4 Windsor UK Profile Publications pp 73 96 OCLC 20229321 Breyer Siegfried 1973 Battleships and Battle Cruisers 1905 1970 Garden City New York Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 07247 2 Brooks John 2005 Dreadnought Gunnery at the Battle of Jutland The Question of Fire Control London Routledge Frank Cass Publishers ISBN 0 7146 5702 6 Brown David K 2003 The Grand Fleet Warship Design and Development 1906 1922 reprint of the 1999 ed London Caxton Editions ISBN 1 84067 531 4 Brown David K 2003 Warrior to Dreadnought Warship Development 1860 1905 reprint of the 1997 ed London Caxton Editions ISBN 1 84067 529 2 Burr Lawrence 2006 British Battlecruisers 1914 1918 Oxford UK Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84603 008 6 Burt R A 2012 British Battleships 1919 1939 2nd ed Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 052 8 Chesneau Roger ed 1980 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 Greenwich UK Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 85177 146 7 Churchill Winston 1986 The Second World War The Gathering Storm Boston Massachusetts Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 0 395 41055 X Evans David C amp Peattie Mark R 1997 Kaigun Strategy Tactics and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy 1887 1941 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 192 7 Friedman Norman 2008 Naval Firepower Battleship Guns and Gunnery in the Dreadnought Era Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 59114 555 4 Friedman Norman 1984 U S Cruisers An Illustrated Design History Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 718 6 Gardiner Robert ed 2001 1992 The Eclipse of the Big Gun The Warship 1906 45 Conway s History of the Ship Edison New Jersey Chartwell Books ISBN 0 7858 1414 0 OCLC 51940554 Gardiner Robert Chumbley Stephen amp Budzbon Przemyslaw 1995 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1947 1995 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 132 7 Gardiner Robert amp Gray Randal eds 1985 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1906 1921 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 907 3 Garzke William H amp Dulin Robert O 1985 Battleships Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 101 0 Gille Eric 1999 Cent ans de cuirasses francais Nantes Marines ISBN 2 909675 50 5 Groner Erich 1990 German Warships 1815 1945 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 790 9 Halpern Paul G 1995 A Naval History of World War I Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 55750 352 7 Hough Richard 1964 Dreadnought A History of the Modern Battleship New York MacMillan ISBN 978 0 02 554420 8 Jentschura Hansgeorg Jung Dieter amp Mickel Peter 1977 Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1869 1945 Annapolis Maryland United States Naval Institute ISBN 0 87021 893 X Konstam Angus 2003 British Battlecruisers 1939 45 Oxford UK Osprey Books ISBN 978 1 84176 633 1 Koop Gerhard amp Schmolke Klaus Peter 1998 Battleship Scharnhorst London Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 85177 772 4 Lambert Nicholas A January 1998 Our Bloody Ships or Our Bloody System Jutland and the Loss of the Battle Cruisers 1916 Journal of Military History Society for Military History 62 1 29 55 doi 10 2307 120394 ISSN 0899 3718 JSTOR 120394 Lambert Nicholas 2002 Sir John Fisher s Naval Revolution Columbia South Carolina University of South Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 57003 492 3 Massie Robert K 1991 Dreadnought Britain Germany and the Coming of the Great War New York Random House ISBN 0 394 52833 6 Mackay Ruddock F 1973 Fisher of Kilverstone London Oxford University Press ISBN 0198224095 McLaughlin Stephen 2004 Project 69 The Kronshtadt Class Battlecruisers In Preston Anthony ed Warship 2004 London Conway s Maritime Press pp 99 117 ISBN 0 85177 948 4 McLaughlin Stephen 2006 Project 82 The Stalingrad Class In Jordan John ed Warship 2006 London Conway pp 102 123 ISBN 978 1 84486 030 2 Noot Lt Jurrien S 1980 Battlecruiser Design Studies for the Royal Netherlands Navy 1939 40 Warship International Toledo Ohio International Naval Research Organization XVII 3 242 273 ISSN 0043 0374 Osborne Eric F 2004 Cruisers and Battle Cruisers An Illustrated History of Their Impact Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO ISBN 1 85109 369 9 Preston Antony 2002 The World s Worst Warships London Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 85177 754 6 Roberts John 1997 Battlecruisers Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 068 1 Saunders Stephen ed 2013 Jane s Fighting Ships 2013 2014 n p IHS Jane s ISBN 978 0 7106 3048 3 Shores Christopher Cull Brian amp Izawa Yasuho 1992 Bloody Shambles Vol I The Drift to War to the Fall of Singapore London Grub Street ISBN 0 948817 50 X Staff Gary 2006 German Battlecruisers 1914 1918 Oxford UK Osprey Books ISBN 978 1 84603 009 3 OCLC 64555761 Stille Mark 2008 Imperial Japanese Navy Battleship 1941 1945 Oxford UK Osprey Books ISBN 978 1 84603 280 6 Sondhaus Lawrence 2001 Naval Warfare 1815 1914 London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 21478 0 Sumida Jon T 1993 In Defense of Naval Supremacy Financial Limitation Technological Innovation and British Naval Policy 1889 1914 London Routledge ISBN 0 04445 104 0 Vandervat Dan 1988 The Atlantic Campaign New York Harper amp Row ISBN 978 0 06 015967 2 Whitley M J 1998 Battleships of World War Two Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 184 X Whitley M J 1995 Cruisers of World War Two An International Encyclopedia London Cassell ISBN 1 86019 874 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battlecruisers Maritimequest Battleships amp Battlecruisers of the 20th century British and German Battlecruisers of the First World War Navsource Online Retrieved from https en 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