:SMS Deutschland (1904)
{{Use shortened footnotes|date=October 2022}}
{{Short description|Battleship of the German Imperial Navy}}
{{other ships|SMS Deutschland}}
{{featured article}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image | Ship image = File:Bundesarchiv DVM 10 Bild-23-61-08, Linienschiff "SMS Deutschland".jpg | Ship caption = SMS {{lang|de|Deutschland}} in the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal in 1912 }} {{Infobox ship career | Hide header = | Ship country = German Empire | Ship flag = {{shipboxflag|German Empire|naval}} | Ship name = {{lang|de|Deutschland}} | Ship namesake = Germany ({{lang|de|Deutschland}} in German) | Ship ordered = | Ship builder = {{lang|de|Germaniawerft}}, Kiel | Ship laid down = 20 June 1903 | Ship launched = 19 November 1904 | Ship acquired = | Ship commissioned = 3 August 1906 | Ship decommissioned = 10 September 1917 | Ship in service = | Ship out of service = | Ship struck = 25 January 1920 | Ship fate = Sold for scrap in 1920 }} {{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header = | Header caption = | Ship class = {{sclass|Deutschland|battleship}} | Ship displacement = |
| Ship length = {{convert|127.6|m|ftin|abbr=on}}
| Ship beam = {{convert|22.2|m|ftin|abbr=on}}
| Ship draft = {{convert|8.21|m|ftin|abbr=on}}
| Ship propulsion =
- 3 × triple-expansion steam engines
- 3 × screw propellers
| Ship power =
- {{convert|11,768|kW|ihp|order=flip|abbr=on}}
- 12 × Scotch marine boilers
| Ship speed = {{convert|18|kn|lk=in}}
| Ship range = {{convert|4,850|nmi|abbr=on|lk=in}} at {{convert|10|kn}}
| Ship complement =
- 35 officers
- 708 enlisted men
| Ship armament =
- 4 × 28 cm SK L/40 gun
- 14 × 17 cm SK L/40 gun
- 22 × 8.8 cm SK L/35 naval gun
- 6 × {{convert|45|cm|in|abbr=on|1}} torpedo tubes
| Ship armor =
- Belt armor: {{convert|140|to|225|mm|abbr=on}}
- Gun turrets: {{convert|280|mm|abbr=on}}
- Deck: {{convert|40|mm|abbr=on}}
| Ship notes =
}}
|}
SMS {{lang|de|Deutschland}} (His Majesty's Ship Germany){{efn|"SMS" stands for "{{lang|de|'Seiner Majestät Schiff}}", or "His Majesty's Ship" in German.}} was the first of five {{sclass|Deutschland|battleship|0}} pre-dreadnought battleships built for the German {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Marine}} (Imperial Navy). The ship was armed with a main battery of four 28 cm SK L/40 gun in two twin turrets. She was built at the Germaniawerft shipyard in Kiel, where she was laid down in June 1903 and launched in November 1904. She was commissioned on 3 August 1906, a few months ahead of {{HMS|Dreadnought|1906|6}}. The latter, armed with ten large-caliber guns, was the first of a revolutionary new standard of "all-big-gun" battleships that rendered {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the rest of her class obsolete.
{{lang|de|Deutschland}} served as the flagship of the High Seas Fleet until 1913, when she was transferred to II Battle Squadron. With the outbreak of World War I in July 1914, she and her sister ships were tasked with defending the mouth of the Elbe and the German Bight from possible British incursions. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the other ships of II Battle Squadron participated in most of the large-scale fleet operations in the first two years of the war, culminating in the Battle of Jutland on 31 May – 1 June 1916. Late on the first day of the battle, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the other pre-dreadnoughts briefly engaged several British battlecruisers before retreating.
After the battle, in which pre-dreadnoughts proved too vulnerable against more modern battleships, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and her three surviving sisters were assigned to coastal defense duties. By 1917, they had been withdrawn from combat service completely, disarmed, and tasked with auxiliary roles. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} was used as a barracks ship in Wilhelmshaven until the end of the war. She was struck from the naval register on 25 January 1920, sold to ship breakers that year, and broken up for scrap by 1922.
Design
{{main|Deutschland-class battleship}}
File:Deutschland class line-drawing.png
The passage of the Second Naval Law in 1900 under the direction of {{lang|de|Vizeadmiral}} (VAdm—Vice Admiral) Alfred von Tirpitz secured funding for the construction of twenty new battleships over the next seventeen years. The first group, the five {{sclass|Braunschweig|battleship|1}}s, were laid down in the early 1900s, and shortly thereafter design work began on a follow-on design, which became the {{sclass|Deutschland|battleship|4}}. The {{lang|de|Deutschland}}-class ships were broadly similar to the {{lang|de|Braunschweig}}s, featuring incremental improvements in armor protection. They also abandoned the gun turrets for the secondary battery guns, moving them back to traditional casemates to save weight.{{sfn|Staff|p=5}}{{sfn|Hore|p=69}} The British battleship {{HMS|Dreadnought|1906|6}}—armed with ten 12-inch (30.5 cm) guns—was commissioned in December 1906.{{sfn|Campbell & Sieche|pp=21–22}} Dreadnought{{'}}s revolutionary design rendered every capital ship of the German navy obsolete, including the {{lang|de|Deutschland}} class.{{sfn|Herwig|p=57}}
{{lang|de|Deutschland}} was {{convert|127.6|m|ftin|abbr=on}} long overall, with a beam of {{convert|22.2|m|ftin|abbr=on}}, and a draft of {{convert|8.21|m|ftin|abbr=on}}. She displaced {{convert|13,191|t|LT|0|sp=us|lk=on}} at normal loading, and up to {{convert|14218|t|LT|0|sp=us}} at full loading. The ship was equipped with two heavy military masts. Her crew numbered 35 officers and 708 enlisted men.{{sfn|Gröner|p=20}} Powered by three triple expansion steam engines that each drove a screw propeller, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} was capable of a top speed of {{convert|18|kn}} from {{convert|11,768|kW|ihp|order=flip|lk=in}}. Twelve coal-fired Scotch marine boilers provided steam for the engines; three funnels vented smoke from burning coal in the boilers. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} had a fuel capacity of up to {{convert|1540|MT|sp=us}} of coal. At a cruising speed of {{convert|10|kn|lk=in}}, she could steam for {{convert|4,850|nmi|sp=us}}.{{sfn|Gröner|p=20}}
{{lang|de|Deutschland}}{{'}}s primary armament consisted of four 28 cm SK L/40 gun guns in two twin turrets.{{efn|In Imperial German Navy gun nomenclature, "SK" (Schnelladekanone) denotes that the gun is quick loading, while the L/40 denotes the length of the gun. In this case, the L/40 gun is 40 caliber, meaning that the gun is 40 times as long as it is in diameter.{{sfn|Grießmer|p=177}}}} Her offensive armament was rounded out with a secondary battery of fourteen 17 cm SK L/40 gun guns mounted individually in casemates. A battery of twenty-two 8.8 cm SK L/35 naval gun guns in single mounts provided defense against torpedo boats. As was customary for capital ships of the period, she was also equipped with six {{convert|45|cm|in|abbr=on|1}} torpedo tubes, which were in the submerged part of the hull.{{sfn|Staff|p=6}} Krupp cemented armor protected the ship. Her armored belt was {{convert|140|to|225|mm|sp=us}} thick. Heavy armor in the citadel amidships protected her magazines and machinery spaces, while thinner plating covered the ends of the hull. Her main-deck armor was {{convert|40|mm|abbr=on}} thick. The main battery turrets had {{convert|280|mm|abbr=on}} of armor plating.{{sfn|Gröner|p=20}}
Service history
= Construction through 1908 =
File:SMS Deutschland with steam up.jpg
{{lang|de|Deutschland}} was the second naval vessel to bear that name—after the 1874 armored frigate {{SMS|Deutschland|1874|2}}. The modern ship was intended to fight in the German battle line with other battleships of the Imperial German Navy.{{sfn|Herwig|p=45}} She was laid down on 20 July 1903 at the {{lang|de|Germaniawerft}} dockyard in Kiel,{{sfn|Staff|p=5}} and launched on 19 November 1904. Her trials lasted from 3 August 1906 until the end of September. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} replaced the battleship {{SMS|Kaiser Wilhelm II||2}} as the flagship of the Active Battle Fleet on 26 September, when Admiral Prince Heinrich hoisted his flag aboard. Her first commander was {{lang|de|Kapitän zur See}} (KzS—Captain at Sea) Wilhelm Becker, though he served aboard the ship for just a month and was replaced by KzS {{ill|Günther von Krosigk|de}} in September. She was tactically assigned to II Battle Squadron, displacing the older battleship {{SMS|Weissenburg||2}},{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=235–236}} though as the fleet flagship she was not subordinate to the squadron commander.{{sfn|Staff|p=7}} Prince Heinrich was new to the command, and he set about to train the fleet, with an emphasis on accurate gunfire and maneuvering as a unit.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=237}}
She took part in training exercises in the North Sea, in December 1906, before returning to Kiel. On 16 February 1907, the fleet was renamed the High Seas Fleet.{{sfn|Staff|p=7}} Fleet maneuvers in the North Sea followed, in early 1907, with a cruise to Skagen, Denmark, followed by mock attacks on the main naval base at Kiel.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=237}} Further exercises followed in May–June. In June, a cruise to Norway followed the fleet training. After returning from Norway, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} went to Swinemünde in early August, where Czar Nicholas II of Russia met the German fleet in his yacht {{ship|Russian yacht|Standart||2}}. Afterward, the fleet assembled for the annual autumn fleet maneuvers, held with the bulk of the fleet every August and September. This year, the maneuvers were delayed to allow for a large fleet review, including 112 warships, for Kaiser Wilhelm II in the Schillig roadstead. In the autumn maneuvers that followed, the fleet conducted exercises in the North Sea and then joint maneuvers with IX Army Corps around Apenrade. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} returned to Kiel on 14 September, after the conclusion of the maneuvers. In November, she took part in unit training in the Kattegat,{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=237–238}} before she was taken into dry-dock for an annual refit.{{sfn|Staff|p=8}}
In February 1908, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} participated in fleet maneuvers in the Baltic Sea. With Wilhelm II aboard, she was present for the launch of the first German dreadnought battleship, {{SMS|Nassau||2}}, on 7 March, and afterward carried the Kaiser to visit the island of Helgoland in the German Bight, accompanied by the light cruiser {{SMS|Berlin||2}}. In May–June, fleet training was conducted off Helgoland; Crown Prince Wilhelm, the Kaiser's son, observed the exercises aboard {{lang|de|Deutschland}}. In July 1908, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the rest of the fleet sailed into the Atlantic Ocean to conduct a major training cruise. Prince Heinrich had pressed for such a cruise the previous year, arguing that it would prepare the fleet for overseas operations and would break up the monotony of training in German waters, though tensions with Britain over the developing Anglo-German naval arms race were high. The fleet departed Kiel on 17 July, passed through the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal to the North Sea, and continued to the Atlantic. During the cruise, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} stopped at Funchal, Portugal and Santa Cruz de Tenerife in the Canary Islands. The fleet returned to Germany on 13 August. The autumn maneuvers followed from 27 August to 12 September. Later that year, the fleet toured coastal German cities as part of an effort to increase public support for naval expenditures.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=238}}
= 1909–1914 =
The next year—1909—followed much the same pattern. KzS Ehler Behring replaced Krosigk in April. In June, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} won the Kaiser's {{lang|de|Schießpreis}} (Shooting Prize) for excellent shooting in II Squadron. Another cruise into the Atlantic was conducted from 7 July to 1 August, during which {{lang|de|Deutschland}} stopped in Bilbao, Spain. While on the way back to Germany, the High Seas Fleet was received by the British Royal Navy in Spithead.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=235, 238}} After another round of exercises, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} went in for a periodic overhaul. During the refit, she was given additional pedestal-mounted searchlights and became the first ship in the German navy to be equipped with an X-ray machine.{{sfn|Staff|p=8}} In late 1909, Prince Heinrich was replaced by Admiral Henning von Holtzendorff, who kept {{lang|de|Deutschland}} as his flagship. Holtzendorff's tenure as fleet commander was marked by strategic experimentation, owing to the increased threat the latest underwater weapons posed and the fact that the new {{sclass|Nassau|battleship|1}}s were too wide to pass through the Kaiser Wilhelm Canal. Accordingly, the fleet was transferred from Kiel to Wilhelmshaven on 1 April 1910.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=240–241}}
In May 1910, the fleet conducted training maneuvers in the Kattegat. These were in accordance with Holtzendorff's strategy, which envisioned drawing the Royal Navy into the narrow waters there. The annual summer cruise was to Norway, and was followed by fleet training, during which another fleet review was held in Danzig on 29 August. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} again won the {{lang|de|Schießpreis}} that year.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=240}} In November, {{lang|de|Deutschland}}, accompanied by the aviso {{SMS|Hela||2}} and the dispatch boat {{SMS|Sleipner||2}}, hosted Wilhelm II during the celebration of the opening of the Naval Academy Mürwik in Flensburg. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} had too deep a draft to enter Gelting Bay outside the Flensburg Firth, so Wilhelm II transferred to {{lang|de|Sleipner}}. A training cruise into the Baltic followed at the end of the year.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=240–241}} In early March 1911, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} again carried Wilhelm II to Helgoland; this trip was followed by fleet exercises in the Skagerrak and Kattegat that month. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the rest of the fleet received British and American naval squadrons at Kiel in June and July. The year's autumn maneuvers were confined to the Baltic and the Kattegat, and {{lang|de|Deutschland}} won the {{lang|de|Schießpreis}} a third time. Another fleet review was held during the exercises for a visiting Austro-Hungarian delegation that included Archduke Franz Ferdinand and Admiral Rudolf Montecuccoli. Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg, the Chancellor of Germany, also attended the review, aboard {{lang|de|Deutschland}}. On 1 October, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} was relieved of her tactical assignment to II Squadron, as the {{lang|de|Reichstag}} (Imperial Diet) authorized the fleet to keep a 17th battleship in commission—I and II Squadrons comprising eight battleships each, so the fleet could now keep two full squadrons in addition to the flagship.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=241–242}}{{sfn|Herwig|p=45}}
In mid-1912, due to the Agadir Crisis, the summer cruise was confined to the Baltic, to avoid exposing the fleet during the period of heightened tension with Britain and France. In September, following the autumn maneuvers, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} suffered a grounding while in the Baltic. The resulting damage necessitated dry-docking, and repairs were completed by November, allowing the ship to take part in the winter cruise in the Baltic.{{sfn|Staff|p=8}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=242}} In October, during the repair period, KzS Hugo Meurer took command of the ship.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=235}} On 30 January 1913, Holtzendorff was relieved as the fleet commander, owing in large part due to Wilhelm II's displeasure with his strategic vision. VAdm Friedrich von Ingenohl took Holtzendorff's place that day; but only one day later, on the 31st, he lowered his flag aboard {{lang|de|Deutschland}} to transfer to the new dreadnought {{SMS|Friedrich der Grosse|1911|2}}, which replaced {{lang|de|Deutschland}} as flagship. The golden bow ornament that denoted the flagship was removed, and {{lang|de|Deutschland}} returned to the ranks of II Battle Squadron. The year's training proceeded in much the same pattern as in previous years. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} briefly resumed flagship duties in late 1913, as {{lang|de|Friedrich der Grosse}} was in dry-dock for periodic maintenance.{{sfn|Staff|p=10}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|pp=243–244}}
= World War I =
On 14 July 1914, the annual summer cruise to Norway began. The threat of war during the July Crisis caused Kaiser Wilhelm II to end the cruise early, after only two weeks; and by the end of July the fleet was back in port.{{sfn|Staff|p=11}} {{lang|de|Deutschland}} reached Kiel on the 29th, and moved to Wilhelmshaven on 1 August. With the outbreak of war, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the rest of II Squadron was tasked with coastal defense at the mouth of the Elbe. This duty was interrupted from 2 to 23 October, when the ship returned to Wilhelmshaven, and from 27 October to 4 November, for an overhaul in Kiel. On 10 November, she took part in a sweep into the Baltic toward Bornholm, which concluded uneventfully two days later. By 17 November, the ship was again stationed off the coast near the Elbe.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=244}} While her sisters covered the raid on the English coast on 15–16 December, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} remained on picket duty at the mouth of the Elbe.{{sfn|Staff|p=10}}
{{lang|de|Deutschland}} returned to Wilhelmshaven on 21 January, where, two days later, Ingenohl temporarily made the ship his flagship while {{lang|de|Friedrich der Grosse}} was transferred to the Baltic for training exercises. During this period, the Battle of Dogger Bank took place, where the German armored cruiser {{SMS|Blücher||2}} was sunk and the battleships of the High Seas Fleet failed to intervene. Ingenohl, who had returned to {{lang|de|Friedrich der Grosse}} on 1 February, was relieved of command and replaced by VAdm Hugo von Pohl. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} returned to her coastal patrol duties off the Elbe. On 21 February 1915, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} went into dock in Kiel, where work lasted until 12 March. Afterward, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} returned to the Elbe for guard duty, and on 14 March she became the II Squadron flagship under {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} (KAdm—Rear Admiral) Felix Funke, though he was replaced by KAdm {{ill|Franz Mauve|de}} on 12 August. On 21 September, the ship went to the Baltic for training, which was completed by 11 October, after which she went into the dockyard in Kiel again for maintenance.{{sfn|Staff|p=10}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=244}}
Coastal defense duty continued into early 1916. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} was transferred to the AG Vulcan dry-dock in Hamburg for further maintenance that took place from 27 February to 1 April 1916. On 24–25 April 1916, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and her four sisters joined the dreadnoughts of the High Seas Fleet—which was now commanded by VAdm Reinhard Scheer—to support the battlecruisers of I Scouting Group on a raid of the English coast.{{sfn|Staff|p=10}} En route to the target, the battlecruiser {{SMS|Seydlitz||2}} was damaged by a mine; she was detached to return home while the operation proceeded. The battlecruisers conducted a short bombardment of the ports of Yarmouth and Lowestoft. Visibility was poor, and the operation was called off before the British fleet could intervene.{{sfn|Tarrant|pp=52–54}} On 4 May, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} took part in a sortie against British ships off Horns Reef, without result.{{sfn|Staff|p=10}} Squadron exercises in the Baltic followed from 11 to 22 May.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=244}}
== Battle of Jutland ==
{{main|Battle of Jutland}}
File:Map of the Battle of Jutland, 1916.svg
Scheer immediately planned another foray into the North Sea, but the damage to {{lang|de|Seydlitz}} delayed the operation until the end of May.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=58}} II Battle Squadron—possessing the weakest battleships involved in the battle, and under-strength owing to the absence of {{SMS|Pommern||2}}, guarding the mouth of the Elbe, and {{SMS|Lothringen||2}}, worn out and removed from active service—was positioned at the rear of the German line.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=286}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=245}} Shortly before 16:00 the battlecruisers of I Scouting Group encountered the British 1st Battlecruiser Squadron under the command of David Beatty. The opposing ships began an artillery duel that resulted the destruction of {{HMS|Indefatigable|1909|6}}, shortly after 17:00,{{sfn|Tarrant|pp=94–95}} and {{HMS|Queen Mary}}, less than half an hour later.{{sfn|Tarrant|pp=100–101}} By this time, the German battlecruisers were steaming south to draw the British ships toward the main body of the High Seas Fleet. Upon realizing that the German fleet was coming into range, Beatty turned his ships back toward the Grand Fleet. Scheer ordered the fleet to pursue the retreating battleships of the British 5th Battle Squadron at top speed. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the other pre-dreadnoughts were significantly slower than the dreadnoughts, and quickly fell behind.{{sfn|London|p=73}} By 19:30, the Grand Fleet had arrived on the scene and confronted Scheer with significant numerical superiority.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=150}} The German fleet's maneuverability was severely hampered by the presence of the pre-dreadnoughts; if Scheer ordered an immediate turn towards Germany, he would have to sacrifice the slower ships to make good his escape.{{sfn|Tarrant|pp=150–152}}
Scheer reversed the course of the fleet via a {{lang|de|Gefechtskehrtwendung}} (battle about turn), a maneuver that required every unit in the German line to turn 180° simultaneously.{{sfn|Tarrant|pp=152–153}} Having fallen behind, the ships of II Battle Squadron could not conform to the new course following the turn.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=154}} {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the other five ships of the squadron were therefore on the disengaged side of the German line. Mauve considered moving his ships to the rear of the line, astern of the III Battle Squadron dreadnoughts, but decided against it when he realized the movement would interfere with the maneuvering of Admiral Franz von Hipper's battlecruisers. Instead, he attempted to place his ships at the head of the line.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=155}} Later in the day, the hard-pressed battlecruisers of I Scouting Group were being pursued by their British counterparts. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and the other so-called "five-minute ships"{{efn|The ships were called "five-minute ships" because that was the length of time they were expected to survive if confronted by a dreadnought.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=62}}}} came to their aid by steaming between the opposing battlecruiser squadrons.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=195}} Poor visibility made the subsequent engagement brief. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} fired only one round from her 28 cm guns during this period.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=195}} Mauve decided it would be inadvisable to continue the fight against the much more powerful battlecruisers, and so ordered an 8-point turn to starboard.{{sfn|Tarrant|pp=195–196}}
Late on the 31st, the fleet organized for the night march back to Germany; {{lang|de|Deutschland}}, {{lang|de|Pommern}}, and {{lang|de|Hannover}} fell in behind {{SMS|König||2}} and the other dreadnoughts of III Battle Squadron towards the rear of the line.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=241}} British destroyers conducted a series of attacks against the fleet, some of which targeted {{lang|de|Deutschland}}. In the melee, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and {{lang|de|König}} turned away from the attacking destroyers, but could not make out targets clearly enough to engage them effectively,{{sfn|Tarrant|p=242}} {{lang|de|Deutschland}} firing only a few 8.8 cm shells in the mist without effect.{{sfn|Campbell|p=299}} Soon after, {{lang|de|Pommern}} exploded after she was struck by at least one torpedo. Fragments of the ship rained down around {{lang|de|Deutschland}}.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=243}} Regardless, the High Seas Fleet punched through the British destroyer forces and reached Horns Reef by 4:00 on 1 June.{{sfn|Tarrant|pp=246–247}} The German fleet reached Wilhelmshaven a few hours later, where the undamaged dreadnoughts of the {{lang|de|Nassau}} and {{sclass|Helgoland|battleship|4}}es took up defensive positions while the damaged ships and the survivors of II Squadron retreated within the harbor.{{sfn|Tarrant|p=263}} In the course of the battle, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} had expended only a single 28 cm shell and five 8.8 cm rounds. She had not been damaged in the engagement.{{sfn|Campbell|pp=348, 359}}
== Final operations ==
After Jutland, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} and her three surviving sisters returned to picket duty at the mouth of the Elbe. They were also occasionally transferred for guard duty in the Baltic.{{sfn|Staff|p=10}} The experience at Jutland demonstrated that pre-dreadnoughts had no place in a naval battle with dreadnoughts, and they were thus left behind when the High Seas Fleet sortied again on 18 August.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=245}} In July, KzS Rudolf Bartels replaced Meurer as the ship's captain; he held the position for just a month, before he was in turn replaced by {{lang|de|Deutschland}}{{'}}s final commander, KzS Reinhold Schmidt.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=235}} In late 1916, the ships of II Squadron were removed from the High Seas Fleet. From 22 December 1916 to 16 January 1917, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} lay idle in the Bay of Kiel. On 24 January, the ship was taken to Hamburg where she went into the dry-dock for maintenance; this work lasted until 4 April.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=245}} During this period in the shipyard, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} had her forwardmost pair of 8.8 cm guns in the aft superstructure removed and two 8.8 cm guns in anti-aircraft mountings were installed.{{sfn|Dodson|p=54}}
{{lang|de|Deutschland}} sailed out of the Altenbruch roads at the mouth of the Elbe on 28 July and then to the Baltic for continued guard duty. During this period, she briefly served as the flagship of the coastal defense command in the western Baltic, though on 10 September the cruiser {{SMS|Stettin||2}} replaced her.{{sfn|Staff|p=10}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=245}} On 15 August, II Battle Squadron was disbanded. Two weeks later, on 31 August, {{lang|de|Deutschland}} arrived in Kiel. She was decommissioned on 10 September. {{lang|de|Deutschland}} then had her guns removed before she was transferred to Wilhelmshaven to serve as a barracks ship.{{sfn|Staff|p=10}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz|p=245}} Many of her guns were converted for use ashore, either as coastal artillery, field guns, or railway guns.{{sfn|Friedman|p=143}} On 25 January 1920 the ship was struck from the naval register and sold for scrapping, which was completed by 1922. The ship's bow ornament is on display at the Eckernförde underwater weapons school, and her bell is in the mausoleum of Prince Heinrich at the Hemmelmark estate.{{sfn|Gröner|p=22}}
Footnotes
=Notes=
{{notes
| notes =
}}
=Citations=
{{reflist|20em}}
References
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| last = Campbell
| first = John
| year = 1998
| title = Jutland: An Analysis of the Fighting
| publisher = Conway Maritime Press
| location = London
| isbn = 978-1-55821-759-1
| ref = {{sfnRef|Campbell}}
}}
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- {{cite book
| last = Grießmer
| first = Axel
| year = 1999
| language = de
| title = Die Linienschiffe der Kaiserlichen Marine: 1906–1918; Konstruktionen zwischen Rüstungskonkurrenz und Flottengesetz
| trans-title = The Battleships of the Imperial Navy: 1906–1918; Constructions between Arms Competition and Fleet Laws
| publisher = Bernard & Graefe Verlag
| location = Bonn
| isbn = 978-3-7637-5985-9
| ref ={{sfnRef|Grießmer}}
}}
- {{cite book
| last = Gröner
| first = Erich
| author-link=Erich Gröner
| year = 1990
| title = German Warships: 1815–1945
| volume = I: Major Surface Vessels
| publisher = Naval Institute Press
| location = Annapolis
| isbn = 978-0-87021-790-6
| ref = {{sfnRef|Gröner}}
}}
- {{cite book
| last = Herwig
| first = Holger
| year = 1998
| orig-year = 1980
| title = "Luxury" Fleet: The Imperial German Navy 1888–1918
| publisher = Humanity Books
| location = Amherst
| isbn = 978-1-57392-286-9
| ref = {{sfnRef|Herwig}}
}}
- {{cite book
|last1=Hildebrand
|first1=Hans H.
|last2=Röhr
|first2=Albert
|last3=Steinmetz
|first3=Hans-Otto
| title = Die Deutschen Kriegsschiffe: Biographien – ein Spiegel der Marinegeschichte von 1815 bis zur Gegenwart
| trans-title=The German Warships: Biographies − A Reflection of Naval History from 1815 to the Present
| volume = 2
|year=1993
|location=Ratingen
|publisher=Mundus Verlag
| isbn = 978-3-7822-0287-9
|language=de
|name-list-style=amp
|ref={{sfnRef|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz}}
}}
- {{cite book
| last = Hore
| first = Peter
| year = 2006
| title = The Ironclads
| publisher = Southwater Publishing
| location = London
| isbn = 978-1-84476-299-6
| ref = {{sfnRef|Hore}}
| url-access = registration
| url = https://archive.org/details/ironcladsillustr0000hore
}}
- {{cite book
| last = London
| first = Charles
| year = 2000
| title = Jutland 1916: Clash of the Dreadnoughts
| publisher = Osprey Publishing
| location = Oxford
| isbn = 978-1-85532-992-8
| ref = {{sfnRef|London}}
}}
- {{cite book
| last = Staff
| first = Gary
| year = 2010
| title = German Battleships: 1914–1918
| volume = 1: Deutschland, Nassau and Helgoland Classes
| publisher = Osprey Books
| location = Oxford
| isbn = 978-1-84603-467-1
| ref = {{sfnRef|Staff}}
}}
- {{cite book
| last = Tarrant
| first = V. E.
| year = 2001
| orig-year = 1995
| title = Jutland: The German Perspective
| publisher = Cassell Military Paperbacks
| location = London
| isbn = 978-0-304-35848-9
| ref = {{sfnRef|Tarrant}}
}}
Further reading
{{Commons category}}
- {{cite book
| last1 = Dodson
| first1 = Aidan
| last2 = Cant
| first2 = Serena
| title = Spoils of War: The Fate of Enemy Fleets after the Two World Wars
| year = 2020
| publisher = Seaforth Publishing
| location = Barnsley
| isbn = 978-1-5267-4198-1
}}
- {{cite book
| last1 = Koop
| first1 = Gerhard
| last2 = Schmolke
| first2 = Klaus-Peter
| year = 2001
| title = Die Panzer- und Linienschiffe der Brandenburg-, Kaiser Friedrich III-, Wittlesbach-, Braunschweig- und Deutschland-Klasse
| trans-title=The Armored and Battleships of the Brandenburg, Kaiser Friedrich III, Wittelsbach, Braunschweig, and Deutschland Classes
| language=de
| publisher = Bernard & Graefe Verlag
| location = Bonn
| isbn = 978-3-7637-6211-8
|name-list-style=amp
}}
{{Deutschland class battleship}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Deutschland}}