Prinz Adalbert-class cruiser

{{Use shortened footnotes|date=October 2022}}

{{Short description|Class of armored cruisers of the German Imperial Navy}}

{{good article}}

{{Infobox ship begin}}

{{Infobox ship image

|Ship image=File:SMS Prinz Adalbert Bain picture.jpg

|Ship image size=

|Ship caption=SMS {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}}

}}

{{Infobox ship class overview

|Name={{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}}

|Builders=

|Operators={{Navy|German Empire}}

|Class before={{SMS|Prinz Heinrich}}

|Class after={{sclass|Roon|cruiser|4}}

|Built range=1900–1904

|In service range=1903–1916

|In commission range=

|Total ships completed=2

|Total ships lost=2

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

|Hide header=

|Header caption=

|Ship type=Armored cruiser

|Ship displacement=

|Ship length={{cvt|126.5|m|ft}} o/a

|Ship beam={{cvt|19.6|m|ftin}}

|Ship draft={{cvt|7.9|m|ftin}}

|Ship power=

|Ship propulsion=

|Ship speed={{convert|20|kn|lk=in}}

|Ship range={{convert|5080|nmi|lk=in}} at {{convert|12|kn}}

|Ship crew=

  • 35 officers
  • 551 sailors

|Ship armament=

|Ship armor=

}}

The {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} class was a pair of armored cruisers built for the German {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Marine}} (Imperial Navy) under the terms of the First Naval Law. Two ships of the class were built, {{SMS|Prinz Adalbert|1901|2}} and {{SMS|Friedrich Carl|1902|2}}, between 1900 and 1904. Their design was heavily based on Germany's previous armored cruiser, {{SMS|Prinz Heinrich||2}}, with a series of incremental improvements. These included a revised armor layout to improve internal protection, along with an upgraded main battery armament that consisted of four {{convert|21|cm|abbr=on}} guns instead of the two {{convert|24|cm|abbr=on}} carried by {{lang|de|Prinz Heinrich}}. The new ships also received more powerful propulsion systems, making them slightly faster. {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} spent her peacetime career as a gunnery training ship while {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} initially served as the flagship of the High Seas Fleet's reconnaissance forces. By 1909, she had been replaced by more modern cruisers and joined {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} as a training vessel.

Following the outbreak of World War I in July 1914, both vessels were mobilized; {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} was assigned to the cruiser division in the Baltic Sea and was quickly sunk by Russian naval mines off Memel in November, though most of her crew was safely evacuated. {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} initially served in the North Sea, supporting the Raid on Yarmouth in November 1914 before transferring to the Baltic to replace her lost sister. {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} had little better luck, being torpedoed by British submarines twice in 1915, the first, in July, caused serious damage and necessitated lengthy repairs. The second, in October, caused an internal magazine explosion that destroyed the ship and killed almost her entire crew. The sinking killed 672, the greatest single loss of life for the German fleet in the Baltic during the war; there were only 3 survivors of her sinking.

Design

The First Naval Law in Germany, passed in 1898, envisioned a force of twelve armored cruisers intended for overseas service in the German colonies.{{efn|Armored cruisers were vessels that generally possessed side armor intended to serve on foreign stations, as a fast wing of a fleet of battleships, or to attack or protect merchant shipping. Side armor differentiated them from large protected cruisers that only incorporated an armor deck for defense against enemy fire.{{sfn|Dodson 2018|p=7}}}} However, the {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Marine}} required cruisers for operations with the fleet as well, and attempted to design ships that could fulfill both roles,{{sfn|Campbell & Sieche|p=142}} primarily due to budget constraints. The first product of the 1898 Naval Law, {{SMS|Prinz Heinrich||2}}, was an alteration of the design of an earlier vessel, {{SMS|Fürst Bismarck|1896|2}}, equipped with fewer guns and thinner but more comprehensive armor in a trade-off for higher speed and lower cost. According to the law, one large cruiser was to be built per year, so work began immediately on a follow-on vessel to fulfill the requirement.{{sfn|Herwig|pp=27–28}}{{sfn|Dodson 2016|pp=56, 58}}

File:German cruiser Prinz Heinrich - Page's Magazine 1902.png

The subsequent design—that of the {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} class—was prepared in 1899–1900,{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}} and was an improvement on {{lang|de|Prinz Heinrich}}. The basic hull size and shape remained largely identical, but modifications were made to the armament and armor layout. Four quick-firing {{convert|21|cm|abbr=on}} guns in twin turrets were substituted for the pair of slower {{convert|24|cm|abbr=on}} guns mounted singly on the older vessel, as the design staff had by that time begun to question the wisdom of limiting the heavy gun battery to just two guns. The 21 cm caliber would remain the standard for all subsequent armored cruiser designs. The ships' secondary battery was kept largely the same as that of {{lang|de|Prinz Heinrich}}, apart from the addition of another pair of {{convert|8.8|cm|abbr=on}} guns.{{sfn|Dodson 2016|p=58}}

Armor thickness remained similar in strength to that of {{lang|de|Prinz Heinrich}}, though it was made more comprehensive, the primary improvement being to the upper belt, which was connected to the main battery barbettes by oblique armored bulkheads. The deck thickness was also increased, and a new propulsion system that was about 10 percent more powerful than {{lang|de|Prinz Heinrich}}{{'}}s increased the ships' top speed by {{convert|0.5|kn}} compared to the earlier vessel.{{sfn|Dodson 2016|p=58}}

The design suffered from a number of defects, some of which were common to German armored cruiser designs, but others were repeated in other navies across different ship types. As with Prinz Heinrich (and the follow-on {{sclass|Roon|cruiser|4}}), the Prinz Adalbert class was inadequately protected. The guns of their secondary battery that were mounted in casemates were situated too low in the hull, and as a result they were frequently washed out in heavy seas (and therefore unusable). This was a common problem in many navies of the time, and not unique to armored cruisers. According to the naval historian David Lyon, "when compared to their British contemporaries they do not show up particularly well, in fact, with the possible exception of the last pair, {{SMS|Scharnhorst||2}} and {{SMS|Gneisenau||2}}, it is probably true to say that the armored cruisers were Germany's worst designed and least battleworthy ships in service in 1905."{{sfn|Lyon|pp=249, 255}}

=General characteristics=

File:SMS Friedrich Carl 1904 - Original (cropped).jpg

The ships of the {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} class were {{convert|124.9|m|sp=us}} long at the waterline and {{convert|126.5|m|abbr=on}} overall, and had a beam of {{convert|19.6|m|abbr=on}}. The ships were designed to displace {{convert|9087|MT|sp=us}}, but at full load displaced up to {{convert|9875|MT|abbr=on}}; they had a draft of {{convert|7.43|m|abbr=on}} forward and {{convert|7.9|m|abbr=on}} aft. The ships' hulls were constructed from transverse and longitudinal steel frames, over which the steel hull plates were riveted. The vessels contained fourteen watertight compartments and a double bottom that extended for 60 percent of the length of the hull. Their superstructure consisted of a primary conning tower forward with a bridge structure and a larger structure further aft that had a small, secondary conning tower atop it.{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}} The designers reverted to the use of two heavy military masts that had been discarded in {{lang|de|Prinz Heinrich}}{{'}}s design.{{sfn|Dodson 2016|p=58}}

The Germans regarded the vessels as good sea boats, with gentle motion when the ships' lower fuel bunkers were full. The ships were responsive to commands from the helm, and steering was controlled with a single rudder. They lost up to 60 percent speed with the rudder hard over, but suffered only minimal speed loss in heavy seas. They had a transverse metacentric height of {{convert|0.734|m|abbr=on}}. The ships had a standard crew of 35 officers and 551 enlisted men, though when serving as a squadron flagship this could be augmented by another 9 officers and 44 enlisted men. The ships were equipped with several boats, including a pair of picket boats, a launch, a pinnace, two cutters, two yawls, and two dinghies.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=50–51}}

{{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} and {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} were powered by three vertical 3-cylinder triple expansion engines; the center shaft drove a three-bladed screw {{convert|4.5|m|abbr=on}} in diameter, while the two outboard shafts powered four-bladed screws {{convert|4.8|m|abbr=on}} in diameter. The engines were supplied with steam by fourteen coal-fired Dürr water-tube boilers produced by {{lang|de|Düsseldorf-Ratinger Röhrenkesselfabrik}}, which were ducted into three funnels.{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}} Compared to those on earlier German cruisers, the propeller shafts were shortened and better faired into the hull lines to reduce the amount of drag they induced, and they were made self-supporting; these changes were incorporated into all future cruisers and battleships built by the {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Marine}}.{{sfn|Dodson 2016|p=58}}

The propulsion system was rated at {{convert|16200|PS|ihp|lk=on}} for Prinz Adalbert and {{convert|17000|PS|ihp|abbr=on|-1}} for Friedrich Carl and top speeds of {{convert|20|kn}} and {{convert|20.5|kn}}, respectively. Both ships reached higher horsepower figures on trials, though their speeds were not significantly improved. The ships were designed to carry {{convert|750|MT|abbr=on}} of coal, though storage could be increased to {{cvt|1630|MT|LT}}. This enabled a maximum range of up to {{convert|5080|nmi|lk=in}} at a cruising speed of {{convert|12|kn}}. Electrical power was supplied by four generators with a total output of {{convert|246|kW}} at 110 volts.{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}}

=Armament=

File:SMS Prinz Adalbert linedrawing.png

{{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} and {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} were armed with a main battery of four 21 cm SK L/40 in two twin turrets,{{efn|In Imperial German Navy gun nomenclature, "SK" ({{lang|de|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 calibers, meaning that the gun is 40 times as long as it is in bore diameter.{{sfn|Grießmer|p=177}}}} one on either end of the main superstructure. The four guns were supplied with a total of 340 rounds of ammunition, or 85 shells per gun. The turrets could depress to −5° and elevate to 30°, which provided a maximum range of {{convert|16300|m|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}} The 21 cm gun fired a {{convert|238|lb|adj=on}} shell at a muzzle velocity of {{convert|780|m|ft|abbr=on}} per second.{{sfn|Campbell & Sieche|p=140}} The ships' secondary armament consisted of ten 15 cm SK L/40 naval gun, all placed in the sides of the hulls. Three guns were mounted in casemates amidships on either side, with a pair of gun turrets above them. These guns were provided with a total of 1,400 shells, or 140 per gun.{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}} These guns fired an {{convert|40|kg|adj=on}} projectile at a muzzle velocity of {{convert|800|m|ft|abbr=on}} per second. The guns could elevate to 30°, allowing a maximum range of {{convert|13700|m|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Campbell & Sieche|p=140}}

The ships also carried twelve 8.8 cm SK L/35 guns for close in defense; these were arranged in groups of four in shielded pivot mounts. Four guns were mounted around the forward conning tower, four were located around the rear two funnels amidships, with the last four guns placed on top of the rear superstructure.{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}} These guns fired a {{convert|7|kg|abbr=on}} shell at a muzzle velocity of {{convert|770|m|abbr=on}} per second. They could elevate to 25° and could engage targets out to {{convert|9090|m|abbr=on}}.{{sfn|Campbell & Sieche|p=140}} The vessels' armament system was rounded out by four {{cvt|45|cm|1}} submerged torpedo tubes. They were mounted in the bow, stern, and on each broadside, and supplied with eleven torpedoes.{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}}

=Armor=

The steel armor used on the two ships was produced by the Krupp firm. The main belt armor consisted of a layer of teak that was {{cvt|50|mm|0}} thick, covered by {{convert|100|mm|abbr=on}} thick steel plating in the central section, which covered the ships' machinery spaces and ammunition magazines. The belt was reduced to {{convert|80|mm|abbr=on}} on either ends of the central portion; the bow and stern were unprotected. The armored deck ranged in thickness from {{convert|40|mm|abbr=on}} to 80 mm. Sloped armor, which ranged in thickness from 50 to 80 mm, connected the deck to the armored belt. The ships' casemate guns, which were placed above the main belt, were protected by 100 mm thick armor plating, as were the 15 cm turret guns. The two 21 cm guns had 150 mm thick sides and 30 mm roofs. The forward conning tower was protected by {{convert|150|mm|abbr=on}} sides and had a {{convert|30|mm|abbr=on}} thick roof. The rear conning tower was much less thoroughly protected, with only {{convert|20|mm|abbr=on}} worth of armor protection.{{sfn|Gröner|p=50}}

Ships

class="wikitable plainrowheaders"

|+ Construction data

! scope="col" | Name

! scope="col" | Namesake

! scope="col" | Builder

! scope="col" | Laid down

! scope="col" | Launched

! scope="col" | Commissioned

scope="row" | {{SMS|Prinz Adalbert|1901|2}}

| {{SMS|Prinz Adalbert|1876|6}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|p=34}}

| {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Werft}}, Kiel{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|p=35}}

| April 1900{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|p=35}}

| 22 June 1901{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|p=35}}

| 12 January 1904{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|p=35}}

scope="row" | {{SMS|Friedrich Carl|1902|2}}

| {{SMS|Friedrich Carl|1867|6}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3|p=115}}

| Blohm & Voss, Hamburg{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3|p=115}}

| August 1901{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3|p=115}}

| 21 June 1902{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3|p=115}}

| 12 December 1903{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3|p=115}}

Service history

{{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} went into service as a gunnery training vessel for the fleet after her commissioning, while {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} served with the reconnaissance squadron of the Active Battle Fleet, initially as its flagship. {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} also went on foreign cruises during this period, including to escort Kaiser Wilhelm II's yacht {{lang|de|Hohenzollern}} on foreign visits. One of these included the Kaiser's visit to Morocco in 1905 that led to the First Moroccan Crisis. In 1909, with more modern cruisers entering service with the fleet, {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} joined her sister ship as a training vessel, being used as a torpedo training ship. Throughout their prewar careers, the ships participated in extensive fleet training.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|pp=35–36}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3|pp=115–118}}

=World War I=

File:The people's war book; history, cyclopaedia and chronology of the great world war (1919) (14782093375).jpg

The two ships were re-mobilized after the outbreak of World War I in August 1914. {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} was initially assigned to the IV Scouting Group, and alternated between the North and Baltic Seas for various operations, including cruising with the fleet during the Raid on Yarmouth in early November.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|p=37}} {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} was sent to the Cruiser Division of the Baltic Sea commanded by {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} (Rear Admiral) Ehler Behring, where she served as his flagship.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3|p=115}} The division was based in Neufahrwasser in Danzig. Behring was ordered to attack the Russian port of Libau, which was believed to be acting as a staging area for British submarines. On 17 November, while steaming to Libau, {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}} struck a pair of Russian naval mines off Memel. The ship's crew managed to keep the cruiser afloat long enough to allow nearby vessels to take off the entire crew before she sank; only seven men were killed in the attack. The remainder of the operation proceeded as planned, however, and several blockships were sunk in the harbor entrance.{{sfn|Gröner|p=51}}{{sfn|Corbett|p=286}}

After the sinking of {{lang|de|Friedrich Carl}}, {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} was transferred to the Cruiser Division and Behring shifted his flag to the vessel.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|p=37}}{{sfn|Corbett|p=286}} The ship conducted several operations against Russian forces in the southern Baltic in the first half of 1915, including bombardments of Libau and supporting minelayers around the Gulf of Riga. She ran aground off Steinort in January but was able to free herself. After repairs were completed, she returned to active duty in March.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 7|p=38}} In May, she supported the German Army attack that captured Libau. On 1 July, the ship sortied to reinforce a German minelaying operation that had come under attack by a Russian cruiser flotilla in the central Baltic. While en route with the armored cruiser {{lang|de|Prinz Heinrich}}, {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} was torpedoed by the British submarine {{HMS|E9||2}}.{{sfn|Halpern|pp=191–193, 195}} The damage was severe, though the cruiser was able to return to Kiel for repairs. Ten men were killed in the attack.{{sfn|Polmar & Noot|p=42}}

{{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert's}} repairs were completed by September. She took part in a sortie into the Gulf of Finland toward the end of the month that resulted in no action. On 23 October, {{lang|de|Prinz Adalbert}} was steaming some 20 miles west of Libau in company with a pair of destroyers when she was intercepted by the submarine {{HMS|E8||2}}.{{sfn|Halpern|p=203}} E8 fired a single torpedo at a range of approximately {{convert|1300|yd}}, which struck the ship and detonated the ammunition magazine.{{sfn|Newbolt|p=95}} The explosion destroyed the ship, which sank immediately with the loss of 672 crew. There were only three survivors. The sinking was the greatest single loss of life for the German Baltic forces for the duration of the war.{{sfn|Gröner|p=51}}{{sfn|Halpern|p=203}}

Notes

=Footnotes=

{{notelist}}

=Citations=

{{reflist|20em}}

References

{{Commons category}}

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| publisher = Conway Maritime Press

| location = London

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| trans-title=The German Warships: Biographies − A Reflection of Naval History from 1815 to the Present

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|name-list-style=amp

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| trans-title=The German Warships: Biographies − A Reflection of Naval History from 1815 to the Present

| volume = 7

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|title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905

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|ref={{sfnRef|Polmar & Noot}}

|name-list-style=amp

}}

{{Prinz Adalbert class armored cruiser}}

{{WWI German ships}}

Category:Cruiser classes

Category:World War I cruisers of Germany