Drache-class ironclad
{{Short description|Ironclad warship class of the Austro-Hungarian Navy}}
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{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=SMS Drache NH 87016.jpg |Ship caption=Drache at anchor after her 1867 refit }} {{Infobox ship class overview | Builders = Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino, Trieste | Operators = 20px Austria–Hungary | Class before = None | Class after = {{sclass|Kaiser Max|ironclad|4 | 1862}}
| Built range = 1861–1862 | In commission range = 1862–1883 | Total ships completed = 2 | Total ships scrapped = 2 }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption=(as built) |Ship type= Ironclad armored frigate |Ship displacement=
|Ship length= {{convert|70.1|m|abbr=on|0}} |Ship beam= {{convert|13.94|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship draft= {{convert|6.8|m|ftin|abbr=on}} |Ship propulsion=1 Shaft, 1 Steam engine |Ship speed= {{convert|10.5|kn|lk=in}} |Ship sail plan= Barque-rigged |Ship complement=346 |Ship power=*{{convert|2060|ihp|lk=in|abbr=on}}
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|Ship armor=Waterline belt: {{convert|115|mm|in|abbr=on|1}} |Ship notes= }} |
The Drache-class ironclads were a pair of wooden-hulled armored frigates built for the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the 1860s, the first ironclads built for Austria-Hungary. Ordered in response to a pair of Italian ironclads in 1860, {{SMS|Drache|1861|2}} and {{SMS|Salamander|1861|2}} were laid down in early 1861, launched later that year, and completed in 1862. They participated in the Austrian victory over the Italians in the Battle of Lissa, where Drache destroyed the coastal defense ship {{ship|Italian coastal defense ship|Palestro||2}}, one of two Italian ships sunk in the action. Both ships were withdrawn from front-line service in 1875. Drache{{'}}s hull was in poor condition, so she was discarded and eventually broken up in 1883, and Salamander became a harbor guard ship. She was hulked in 1883 and converted into floating storage for naval mines before being scrapped in 1895–1896.
Design
The launch of the French {{ship|French ironclad|Gloire||2}}, the world's first ironclad warship, started a naval arms race between the major European powers. The Austrian Navy began a major ironclad construction program under the direction of Archduke Ferdinand Max, the Marinekommandant (naval commander) and brother of Kaiser Franz Josef I, the emperor of Austria. This program was in response to a similar naval expansion in the recently united Kingdom of Italy across the Adriatic Sea, and marked the beginning of Austria's participation in the Austro-Italian ironclad arms race.Sondhaus p. 209 {{SMS|Drache|1861|2}} and {{SMS|Salamander|1861|2}} were ordered in response to the two {{sclass|Formidabile|ironclad}}s that Italy had bought from France in 1860.Pawlik, p. 6Sondhaus, pp. 6–7Silverstone, p. 17 The design work was done by the Austrian Director of Naval Construction, Josef von Romako, who would go on to design all of the Austrian ironclads through to {{SMS|Tegetthoff|1878|2}} in the late 1870s.Gardiner, pp. 267–270 The ships were rated as third-class armored frigates.
=Characteristics=
The ships of the Drache class were {{convert|62.78|m|sp=us|0}} long between perpendiculars and had an overall length of {{convert|70.1|m|sp=us|0}}. Their beam measured {{convert|13.94|m|ftin|sp=us}} and they had a draft of {{convert|6.3|to|6.8|m|ftin|sp=us}}. They displaced {{convert|2824|LT|t}} at normal load, and {{convert|3110|LT|t}} at deep load. Their hulls were of wooden construction with iron armor plates riveted over top. The ships had a complement of 346 officers and crewmen.Gardiner, p. 267
The ships had a horizontal 2-cylinder steam engine that drove their single propeller using steam provided by four coal-fired boilers that exhausted through one funnel. The engine produced a total of {{convert|1842|to|2060|ihp|lk=in}} which gave the ships a speed of {{convert|10.5|to|11|kn|lk=in}}. For long-distance travel, the Draches were fitted with three masts and barque rigged. Between 1869 and 1872, both ships had their rigging increased with a larger sail area.
The frigates were broadside ironclads, and were armed with ten 48-pounder smoothbore guns and eighteen 24-pounder rifled, muzzle-loading (RML) guns. These guns were mounted in gun ports along the length of the hull. In 1867, these guns were removed, and ten Armstrong RML 7 inch gun guns and two bronze RML {{convert|2|in|adj=on|0}} guns were installed in their place. They were equipped with ram bows. The Drache-class ironclads had a waterline belt of wrought iron that was {{convert|115|mm|1|sp=us}} thick.
Ships
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Ship
!Laid downSilverstone, pp. 26, 31 |
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{{SMS|Drache|1861|6}}
|rowspan=2|Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino, Trieste |align=center|18 February 1861 |align=center|9 September 1861 |align=center|November 1862 |
{{SMS|Salamander|1861|6}}
|align=center|February 1861 |align=center|22 August 1861 |align=center|May 1862 |
Service
File:SMS Salamander NH 87453.jpg
Two years after the ships entered service, Austria joined Prussia in the Second Schleswig War against Denmark. Drache and Salamander were kept in the Adriatic to defend against a possible Danish attack, which failed to materialize.Greene & Massignani, p. 210 In 1866, Austria's erstwhile ally Prussia signed an alliance with Italy directed against Austria, beginning the Seven Weeks' War. The Austrian fleet was commanded by Rear Admiral Wilhelm von Tegetthoff, who attacked the Italian fleet as it attempted to capture the island of Lissa in the central Adriatic. In the ensuring Battle of Lissa, both ships were heavily engaged, with Drache inflicting fatal damage to the coastal defense ship {{ship|Italian coastal defense ship|Palestro||2}}, setting her on fire and ultimately destroying her. Drache did not escape unscathed, however, as she was hit by Italian shells numerous times; she lost her main mast, was temporarily set on fire, and her commander was killed.Wilson, pp. 235–243 Salamander engaged the leading ships of the Italian line, though neither side inflicted serious damage on the other.Hale, p. 245 Nevertheless, the loss of Palestro and the ironclad {{ship|Italian ironclad|Re d'Italia||2}} led the demoralized Italian fleet to disengage and retreat to their base at Ancona.Wilson, p. 241
Both ships were modernized twice after the war, receiving new guns in 1867,Sondhaus, p. 10 and again at the end of the decade when their rigging was increased. They saw little use thereafter, however. Badly rotted by 1875, Drache was stricken from the naval register on 13 June that year and eventually broken up for scrap in 1883. Salamander lingered on in service as a guard ship from 1875Dislère, p. 11 until 18 March 1883, when she too was stricken from the register and converted into a mine storage hulk. She served in this capacity until 1895 when she was sold for scrap and dismantled over the following year.Silverstone, p. 31
Footnotes
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References
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- {{cite book|last=Dislère|first=Paul|title=Die Panzerschiffe der neuesten Zeit|url=https://archive.org/details/diepanzerschiff00dislgoog|location=Pola|publisher=Druck und Commissionsverlag von Carl Gerold's Sohn|year=1877|oclc=25770827}}
- {{cite book |editor-last=Gardiner|editor-first=Robert|title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905|year=1979|location=London|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|isbn=0-85177-133-5| url-access = registration| url = https://archive.org/details/conwaysallworlds0000unse_l2e2}}
- {{Cite book |last1=Greene|first1=Jack|last2=Massignani|first2=Alessandro|title=Ironclads at War: The Origin and Development of the Armored Warship, 1854–1891|year=1998|location=Pennsylvania|publisher=Da Capo Press|name-list-style=amp|isbn=0-938289-58-6}}
- {{Cite book|last=Hale|first=John Richard|title=Famous Sea Fights From Salamis to Tsu-shima|year=1911|location=Boston|publisher=Little, Brown, & Company|oclc=747738440}}
- {{cite book|last=Pawlik|first=Georg|title=Des Kaisers Schwimmende Festungen: die Kasemattschiffe Österreich-Ungarns|trans-title=The Kaiser's Floating Fortresses: The Casemate Ships of Austria-Hungary|year=2003|publisher=Neuer Wissenschaftlicher Verlag|location=Vienna|isbn=978-3-7083-0045-0}}
- {{cite book|last=Silverstone|first=Paul H.|title=Directory of the World's Capital Ships|year=1984|publisher=Hippocrene Books|location=New York|isbn=0-88254-979-0}}
- {{Cite book| last=Sondhaus| first=Lawrence| title=The Naval Policy of Austria-Hungary, 1867–1918| year=1994| location=West Lafayette| publisher=Purdue University Press| isbn=978-1-55753-034-9}}
- {{cite book|last=Wilson|first=Herbert Wrigley |author-link=Herbert Wrigley Wilson|title=Ironclads in Action: A Sketch of Naval Warfare from 1855 to 1895|url=https://archive.org/details/ironcladsinacti00wilsgoog|year=1896|publisher=S. Low, Marston and Company|location=London|oclc=1111061}}
{{Drache class ironclads}}
{{Austro-Hungarian ironclads}}