SMS Amazone

{{Short description|Light cruiser of the German Imperial Navy}}

{{for|the earlier sailing corvette|SMS Amazone (1843)}}

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

{{Good article}}

{{Infobox ship begin}}

{{Infobox ship image

|Ship image=File:SMS Amazone at anchor.jpg

|Ship image size=300px

|Ship caption=SMS {{lang|de|Amazon}}

}}

{{Infobox ship career

|Hide header=

|Ship country=German Empire

|Ship flag={{shipboxflag|German Empire|naval}} {{shipboxflag|Weimar Republic|naval}}

|Ship name={{lang|de|Amazone}}

|Ship laid down=December 1899

|Ship launched=6 October 1900

|Ship commissioned=15 November 1901

|Ship struck=31 March 1931

|Ship fate=Scrapped, 1954

}}

{{Infobox ship characteristics

|Hide header=

|Header caption=

|Ship class={{sclass|Gazelle|cruiser|0}} light cruiser

|Ship displacement=

|Ship length={{convert|104.8|m|ftin|abbr=on}} loa

|Ship beam={{convert|12.2|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}

|Ship draft={{convert|5.12|m|ftin|abbr=on}}

|Ship power=

|Ship propulsion=

|Ship speed={{convert|21.5|kn|lk=in}}

|Ship range={{convert|3560|nmi|abbr=on|lk=in}} at {{convert|10|kn}}

|Ship complement=

  • 14 officers
  • 243 enlisted men

|Ship armament=

|Ship armor=

}}

SMS {{lang|de|Amazone}} was the sixth member of the ten-ship {{sclass|Gazelle|cruiser|4}} of light cruisers that were built for the German {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Marine}} (Imperial Navy) in the late 1890s and early 1900s. The {{lang|de|Gazelle}} class was the culmination of earlier unprotected cruiser and aviso designs, combining the best aspects of both types in what became the progenitor of all future light cruisers of the Imperial fleet. Built to be able to serve with the main German fleet and as a colonial cruiser, she was armed with a battery of ten 10.5 cm SK L/40 naval gun and a top speed of {{convert|21.5|kn}}.

After commissioning in late 1901, {{lang|de|Amazone}} spent the first four years of her career in the reconnaissance forces of the German fleet. There, she earned a reputation for being the most accident-prone vessel of the fleet, being involved in numerous collisions and other accidents. During this period, she conducted training exercises with the rest of the fleet and made several trips abroad. As more modern cruisers began to enter service in 1905, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was placed in reserve until the start of World War I in 1914. During the war, she operated in the Baltic Sea in the Detached Division, taking part in numerous operations in the central and northern Baltic to support the German Army. By the end of 1914, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was no longer able to keep up with the other cruisers in the Baltic, so she was transferred to the Coastal Defense Division. She saw no action during this period, apart from a pair of failed British submarine attacks. Reduced to a torpedo testing and target ship by early 1916, she was disarmed and converted into a barracks ship in early 1917, seeing no further activity during the war.

Among the few major warships that Germany was permitted to retain under the Treaty of Versailles, {{lang|de|Amazone}} served after the war in the {{lang|de|Reichsmarine}} (Navy of the Realm) after being modernized and rearmed in 1921–1923. She took part in training exercises and cruises abroad through the rest of the 1920s, frequently to ports in Scandinavia, but also as far as the Mediterranean Sea. Decommissioned in 1930, she was again reduced to a barracks hulk, serving in that capacity through World War II and into the postwar years. Left unused beginning in 1951, she was ultimately broken up in 1954, the last-surviving member of the {{lang|de|Gazelle}} class.

Design

{{main|Gazelle-class cruiser}}

Following the construction of the unprotected cruisers of the {{sclass|Bussard|cruiser|4}} and the aviso {{SMS|Hela||2}} for the German {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Marine}} (Imperial Navy), the Construction Department of the {{lang|de|Reichsmarineamt}} (Imperial Navy Office) prepared a design for a new small cruiser that combined the best attributes of both types of vessels. The designers had to design a small cruiser with armor protection that had an optimal combination of speed, armament, and stability necessary for fleet operations, along with the endurance to operate on foreign stations in the German colonial empire. The resulting {{lang|de|Gazelle}} design provided the basis for all of the light cruisers built by the German fleet to the last official designs prepared in 1914.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3|pp=183–184}}{{sfn|Nottelmann|pp=103–110}}

File:Gazelle-class cruiser plan, profile, and cross section.jpg

{{lang|de|Amazone}} was {{convert|104.8|m|ftin|sp=us}} long overall and had a beam of {{cvt|12.2|m|0}} and a draft of {{cvt|5.12|m|ftin}} forward. She displaced {{cvt|2659|t|LT|lk=on}} normally and up to {{convert|3082|t|LT|abbr=on}} at full combat load. The ship had a minimal superstructure, which consisted of a small conning tower and bridge structure. Her hull had a raised forecastle and quarterdeck, along with a pronounced ram bow. She was fitted with two pole masts. She had a crew of 14 officers and 243 enlisted men.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=99–101}}

Her propulsion system consisted of two triple-expansion steam engines driving a pair of screw propellers. The engines were powered by ten coal-fired Marine-type water-tube boilers that were vented through a pair of funnels. They were designed to give {{convert|8000|PS|ihp|lk=on}}, for a top speed of {{convert|21.5|kn|lk=in}}. {{lang|de|Amazone}} carried {{cvt|560|t}} of coal, which gave her a range of {{convert|3560|nmi|lk=in}} at {{convert|10|kn}}.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=99–101}}

The ship was armed with ten 10.5 cm SK L/40 naval gun in single pivot mounts. Two were placed side by side forward on the forecastle; six were located on the broadside in sponsons; and two were placed side by side aft. The guns could engage targets out to {{convert|12200|m|yd|abbr=on}}. They were supplied with 1,000 rounds of ammunition, for 100 shells per gun. She was also equipped with two {{convert|45|cm|abbr=on|1}} torpedo tubes with five torpedoes. They were submerged in the hull on the broadside.{{sfn|Gröner|p=101}}

The ship was protected by an armored deck that was {{convert|20|to|25|mm|abbr=on}} thick. The deck sloped downward at the sides of the ship to provide a measure of protection against incoming fire. The conning tower had {{convert|80|mm|abbr=on}} thick sides, and the guns were protected by {{cvt|50|mm|0}} thick gun shields.{{sfn|Gröner|p=99}}

Service history

=Construction – 1902 =

File:Gazelle-class cruiser NH 47870.jpg

{{lang|de|Amazone}} was ordered under the contract name "F",{{efn|German warships were ordered under provisional names. Additions to the fleet were given a single letter; ships intended to replace older or lost vessels were ordered as "{{lang|de|Ersatz}} (name of the ship to be replaced)".{{sfn|Dodson|pp=8–9}}}} and was laid down at the Germaniawerft shipyard in Kiel in December 1899 and was launched on 6 October 1900. At her launching ceremony, {{lang|de|Vizeadmiral}} (Vice Admiral) Alfred von Tirpitz gave a speech and Princess Hilda of Nassau christened the ship. After fitting-out work was completed, she underwent builder's sea trials before being was commissioned on 15 November 1901 for acceptance trials conducted by the navy. Her first commander was {{lang|de|Korvettenkapitän}} (KK—Corvette Captain) Ludwig Bruch. After her commissioning, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was employed in the reconnaissance forces of the German fleet, joining the fleet screen on 21 December.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=99–101}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=228–229}}

The ship took part in squadron training in the Baltic Sea in March 1902, followed by a voyage around the British Isles that began on 24 April. While passing near the Sevenstones Lightship on 24 May, the battleship {{SMS|Kaiser Wilhelm II||2}} accidentally rammed {{lang|de|Amazone}}, striking her aft of her forward mast, causing extensive flooding that filled several compartments with water. {{lang|de|Amazone}} nevertheless remained afloat and able to steam under her own power, and she arrived at the {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Werft}} (Imperial Shipyard) in Kiel three days later. This was the first in a series of accidents that made {{lang|de|Amazone}}, according to the historians Hans Hildebrand, Albert Röhr, and Hans-Otto Steinmetz, the most accident-prone vessel of the Imperial fleet. The ship was under repair until the end of July.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|p=229}}

After completing repairs, {{lang|de|Amazone}} joined the battleships of I Squadron for maneuvers in the Kattegat and the North Sea. In August, she took part in the annual maneuvers held with the combined fleet; these were also conducted in the North Sea, between 17 August and 11 September. During the exercises, she operated with I Scouting Group, and she was detached to Hamburg from 5 to 6 September. {{lang|de|Amazone}} had the auxiliary hospital ship {{lang|de|Hansa}} tied alongside for training, which caused damage to {{lang|de|Amazone}}{{'}}s hull, necessitating further repairs at the {{lang|de|Kaiserliche Werft}} in Kiel that began on 21 September. Bruch left the ship at that time, and KK Gerhard Gerdes took command of the ship in October. The naval command initially planned to send {{lang|de|Amazone}} to join the German squadron participating in the naval blockade of Venezuela of 1902–1903, but she was instead kept in European waters, being sent with I Squadron for its winter cruise to Bergen, Norway in December.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=228–229}}

=1903–1905=

File:SMS Amazone.jpg

On 1 March 1903, the Reconnaissance Unit was created under the command of {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} (Rear Admiral) Ludwig Borckenhagen, and {{lang|de|Amazone}} was assigned to the organization. The ships joined I Squadron for a training cruise into the Atlantic on 7 May, travelling as far as Spain. During the voyage, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was detached to Brest, France on 2 June to pick up mail for the fleet. While approaching the harbor, she ran aground on an uncharted rock outside the breakwater. The French had failed to send out a pilot boat to guide {{lang|de|Amazone}} into the harbor, but they assisted with refloating the vessel at high tide. {{lang|de|Amazone}} then returned to Kiel, where upon inspection, she was found to have been undamaged in the accident. Nevertheless, a court martial was held aboard the hulk {{SMS|Kronprinz|1867|2}} to investigate the accident. Gerdes and the navigation officer were sentenced to being confined to their quarters for a few days, but he nevertheless remained in command of the vessel. From 4 to 30 July, {{lang|de|Amazone}} took part in squadron exercises in the North Sea. The annual fleet maneuvers followed from 15 August to 12 September, and the training year ended with a winter cruise from 23 November to 5 December.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|p=229}}

The ships of the Reconnaissance Unit began the year 1904 with training exercises in the Skagerrak, followed by further maneuvers in the central Baltic. In April, KK Leberecht Maass replaced Gerdes. {{lang|de|Amazone}} served as the flotilla leader for I Torpedo-boat Flotilla for exercises on 6 April off the Baltic coast of Schleswig-Holstein before the ships moved to the North Sea for additional maneuvers that lasted until 20 May, after which KK Rudolf Berger replaced Maass. After returning to the Reconnaissance Unit, she took part in a cruise to Britain and the Netherlands from 23 July to 12 August. After anchoring in the Kieler Förde on 12 August, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was struck by the Russian barque {{lang|ru|Anna}}, though she was not seriously damaged in the accident. It nevertheless contributed to the ship's reputation for being prone to accidents. She then joined the fleet for its annual maneuvers that were conducted between 29 August and 15 September.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=228, 230}}

Squadron training with the Reconnaissance Unit took place in January 1905. During exercises with the torpedo boat training flotilla on 3 March, {{lang|de|Amazone}} collided with the torpedo boat {{SMS|D6||2}}. She towed D6 back to Kiel and then went into dry dock for repairs that lasted for three weeks. On 4 April, {{lang|de|Amazone}} resumed her previous year's activities as a flotilla leader, and Maass came back aboard for the next month. She operated with I Torpedo-boat Flotilla during maneuvers held off Sassnitz until 21 May. Now-{{lang|de|Fregattenkapitän}} (FK—Frigate Captain) Berger once again relieved Maass after the ship returned to the Reconnaissance Unit. Late in the month, she joined her squadron-mates for exercises in the North Sea. These activities continued through July, along with visits to Norwegian ports. The fleet maneuvers followed in August and were held in the North and Baltic Seas. After their conclusion, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was replaced in the Reconnaissance Unit by the light cruiser {{SMS|Berlin||2}} and she was decommissioned in Kiel on 28 September, being placed in reserve, where she remained for the next nine years.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=228, 230}}

=World War I=

==1914==

Following the outbreak of World War I in July 1914, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was recommissioned on 2 August under the command of KK Johannes Horn; she briefly served as the flagship of KAdm Robert Mischke, the commander of the Coastal Defense Division of the Baltic Sea, from 6 to 8 August. The unit included six other light cruisers, the old protected cruiser {{SMS|Freya|1897|2}}, and the gunboat {{SMS|Panther|1901|2}}, among other vessels. Through the month, she patrolled the western and central Baltic as far north as Gotland, and the coast of Russia. She was ordered to destroy a Russian radio tower near Libau, but by the time she arrived, the Russians had already dismantled it and removed it. During this period, the airship M IV landed on {{lang|de|Amazone}}{{'}}s deck, as part of an experiment to determine if a warship could tow an airship to the eastern Baltic for operations there. The tests revealed that {{lang|de|Amazone}} could only steam at very low speed to avoid damaging M IV; even wave action from the wakes of a group of passing torpedo boats while {{lang|de|Amazone}} was anchored forced the airship captain to sever the tow lines.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=228, 230–231}}

Initial experience in the war led the German naval command to divide Mischke's responsibilities, leaving him with defensive operations in the western Baltic, while separating offensive operations to a new Detached Division under KAdm Ehler Behring. {{lang|de|Amazone}} was assigned to the unit and her first operation was to escort the U-boat {{ship|SM|U-3|Germany|2}} to Dagerort. She next embarked on a sweep into the central Baltic with the light cruisers {{SMS|Augsburg||2}} and {{SMS|Magdeburg||2}} on 26 August. {{lang|de|Amazone}} took up an advanced position ahead of Behring's other cruisers, and during the operation, {{lang|de|Magdeburg}} ran aground off the lighthouse at Odensholm on the Estonian coast. Upon receiving a report of the incident, {{lang|de|Amazone}} turned back to come to {{lang|de|Magdeburg}}{{'}}s aid, but by the time she arrived, Russian cruisers had already appeared and {{lang|de|Magdeburg}}{{'}}s crew had detonated scuttling charges. {{lang|de|Amazone}} embarked part of her crew and carried them to Danzig. On 30 August, {{lang|de|Amazone}} conducted another patrol in the area off Gotland that resulted in no contact with Russian forces.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=230–231}}

Another operation took place on 7 September, during a sortie led by the large armored cruiser {{SMS|Blücher||2}}. {{lang|de|Amazone}} was sent to screen the vessel by cruising off Gotska Sandön to prevent the formation from being outflanked. The battleships of IV Battle Squadron and {{lang|de|Amazone}} then conducted a demonstration off Windau the next day. {{lang|de|Amazone}} then returned to Danzig before being sent to assist in the defense of Memel from 12 to 16 September. U3 and the torpedo boat {{SMS|S126||2}} also took part in the operation. {{lang|de|Amazone}} sent a landing party ashore, but they took part in no fighting. The Germans planned a major amphibious assault on Windau later that month; the IV Squadron battleships were to lead the operation, while those of V Battle Squadron were to carry German Army units. {{lang|de|Amazone}} escorted minesweepers as they cleared the route on 24 September and during this work, she shelled a Russian lighthouse. The attack was called off after reports incorrectly indicated that British cruisers and submarines were preparing to break into the Baltic through the Danish straits, necessitating a redeployment of German warships to the western Baltic.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|p=231}}

{{lang|de|Amazone}} conducted another sweep to Windau on 9–10 October, during which she had to take the U-boat {{ship|SM|U-25||2}} under tow after the submarine's engine broke down. The next operation, to shell Libau and block the harbor entrance with blockships, began on 17 November. Behring's flagship, the armored cruiser {{SMS|Friedrich Carl|1902|2}}, struck a pair of naval mines and sank, but {{lang|de|Amazone}} and the light cruiser {{SMS|Lübeck||2}}, along with their accompanying torpedo boats, entered Libau and bombarded the port. From 18 November to 15 December, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was tasked with patrolling Danzig Bay, with occasional stints in the Aarøsund. On 15 December, {{lang|de|Amazone}} joined Behring's new flagship, the armored cruiser {{SMS|Prinz Adalbert|1901|2}}, and the light cruisers {{SMS|Thetis||2}}, {{lang|de|Augsburg}}, and {{lang|de|Lübeck}} for a reconnaissance sweep toward Åland at the northern end of the Baltic. On the way north, {{lang|de|Amazone}} proved to be unable to keep pace with the other cruisers, so she was detached off Gotska Sandön to return to port. From 26 to 30 December, she escorted the V Squadron battleships on a sortie to Gotland.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|p=231}}

==1915–1918==

In April 1915, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was transferred back to the Coastal Defense Division. She underwent an overhaul after arriving in the western Baltic and thereafter embarked on patrols in the region. She frequently operated with her sister ships {{SMS|Medusa||2}} and {{SMS|Undine||2}} between Sassnitz and Trelleborg, in the Aarøsund, and around the island of Langeland. On 8 May, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was patrolling off Cape Arkona when she was attacked by the British submarine {{HMS|E1}}. The submarine fired a torpedo from a range of {{convert|1100|m|yd|abbr=on}}, but it missed {{lang|de|Amazone}}. On 9 September, another British submarine, {{HMS|E18}}, unsuccessfully attacked {{lang|de|Amazone}} during the Battle of the Gulf of Riga. On 11 February 1916, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was sent to Libau, which had by that time been captured by German forces, to defend the port as a replacement for the cruiser {{SMS|München||2}}, remaining there until 24 February.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|p=231}}{{sfn|Polmar & Noot|pp=39, 43}}

In March 1916, {{lang|de|Amazone}} was released from the Coastal Defense Division and assigned to the U-boat Inspectorate for use as a target ship. She filled this role for the rest of her time in commission during the war. At the same time, her torpedo armament was expanded, though the number and type of torpedo tubes added are unknown. After sea trials in early April, her crew was reduced and between July and September, all of her 10.5 cm guns were removed, leaving her with a gun armament of just six {{cvt|8.8|cm}} weapons. The ship was decommissioned on 14 March 1917, after which she was disarmed completely and reduced to a barracks ship for the Torpedo Inspectorate. According to Hildebrand, Röhr, and Steinmetz, surviving records do not indicate whether she was based in Kiel or Wilhelmshaven, with I Torpedo Division or II Torpedo Division, respectively,{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=231–232}} but the naval historian Erich Gröner states that she was stationed in Kiel during this period. She served in this capacity through the end of the war in November 1918.{{sfn|Gröner|p=101}}

=Later career=

File:German heavy cruiser Admiral Hipper at Blohm & Voss shipyards in 1939.jpg {{ship|German cruiser|Admiral Hipper||2}} at the Blohm & Voss shipyard in Hamburg in 1939]]

The Treaty of Versailles that ended the war permitted Germany to retain six light cruisers, and {{lang|de|Amazone}} was among those kept in service of the newly reorganized {{lang|de|Reichsmarine}}. She was modernized and rearmed at the {{lang|de|Reichsmarine Werft}} in Wilhelmshaven between 1921 and 1923. Her ram bow was replaced with a clipper bow, and she received a new battery of ten 10.5 cm SK L/45 guns in U-boat mountings and two {{convert|50|cm|abbr=on}} torpedo tubes in deck launchers. She was recommissioned on 1 December 1923 under the command of {{lang|de|Kapitän zur See}} (KzS—Captain at Sea) Walter Gladisch to replace her sister {{SMS|Arcona|1902|2}} She joined the light forces of the {{lang|de|Marinestation der Nordsee}} (North Sea Naval Station), operating with the light cruiser {{SMS|Hamburg||2}} and II. Torpedo-boat Flotilla. She spent the year 1924 conducting training exercises and visits abroad, including a summer training cruise with the fleet to Bodø, Norway.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=100–101}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=228, 231}}

In March 1925, KzS Eduard Eichel relieved Gladisch. {{lang|de|Amazone}} repeated the same pattern of training with the fleet and visits to foreign ports that year, including a cruise to Rotterdam, Netherlands and fleet exercises in the Eidangerfjord in Norway from 25 June to 1 July. She went on a longer cruise to the Mediterranean Sea in May and June 1926, in addition to her normal training duties, and in September, FK Alfred Saalwächter took command of the ship. In 1927, she embarked on a major cruise into the Atlantic with the rest of the fleet, which lasted from 28 March to 16 June; in September, FK Albrecht Meißner took command of the vessel. During a visit to Norway in mid-1928 in company with the battleship {{SMS|Schlesien||2}}, she stopped in Molde and Merok. Fleet maneuvers were thereafter held off Skagen, Denmark. {{lang|de|Amazone}} largely remained in German waters in 1929 and saw little activity of note, apart from a trip to Gothenburg, Sweden in August.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|pp=228, 231}}

The {{lang|de|Reichsmarine}} conducted a reorganization of the fleet on 1 January 1930, dividing the ships into tactical units. {{lang|de|Amazone}} was initially assigned to the Reconnaissance Forces Command, under now-KAdm Gladisch, but it was quickly determined that she had little value as a warship by this point, some thirty years after her launch. She was accordingly decommissioned in Wilhelmshaven on 15 January and thereafter used as a barracks ship. She was then struck from the naval register on 31 March 1931 and assigned to the Submarine Acceptance Commission in Kiel. In addition to serving as a barracks, she was later used as an auxiliary for the Warship Construction Test Office. During World War II, she was towed to Bremen, and after the conflict she was used as an accommodation hulk for refugees who had fled from formerly-German occupied territories in eastern Europe. She lay idle and unused from 1951 to 1954, and plans to convert her into a floating youth center came to nothing. The old cruiser was ultimately broken up for scrap in 1954 in Hamburg; she was the last member of the {{lang|de|Gazelle}} class to be scrapped.{{sfn|Gröner|p=102}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1|p=231}}

Notes

=Footnotes=

{{notes}}

=Citations=

{{reflist|20em}}

References

  • {{cite book

| last = Dodson

| first = Aidan

| author-link = Aidan Dodson

| year = 2016

| title = The Kaiser's Battlefleet: German Capital Ships 1871–1918

| publisher = Seaforth Publishing

| location = Barnsley

| isbn = 978-1-84832-229-5

| ref = {{sfnRef|Dodson}}

}}

  • {{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

| last1 = Hildebrand

| first1 = Hans H.

| last2 = Röhr

| first2 = Albert

| last3 = Steinmetz

| first3 = Hans-Otto

| year = 1993

| 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 = 1

| publisher = Mundus Verlag

| location = Ratingen

| isbn = 978-3-7822-0496-5

| language = de

| ref = {{sfnRef|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 1}}

|name-list-style=amp

}}

  • {{cite book

| last1 = Hildebrand

| first1 = Hans H.

| last2 = Röhr

| first2 = Albert

| last3 = Steinmetz

| first3 = Hans-Otto

| year = 1993

| 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 = 3

| language = de

|location = Ratingen

|publisher = Mundus Verlag

|isbn = 978-3-7822-0211-4

| ref = {{sfnRef|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 3}}

|name-list-style=amp

}}

  • {{cite book

|last=Nottelmann

|first=Dirk

|editor-last=Jordan

|editor-first=John

|publisher=Osprey

|location=Oxford

|year=2020

|title=Warship 2020

|isbn=978-1-4728-4071-4

|chapter=The Development of the Small Cruiser in the Imperial German Navy

|pages=102–118

|ref={{sfnref|Nottelmann}}

}}

  • {{cite book

|last1=Polmar

|first1=Norman

|last2=Noot

|first2=Jurrien

|title=Submarines of the Russian and Soviet Navies, 1718–1990

|year=1991

|location=Annapolis

|publisher=Naval Institute Press

|isbn=978-0-87021-570-4

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

|name-list-style=amp

}}

Further reading

{{Commons category}}

  • {{cite book

| last1 = Dodson

| first1 = Aidan

| author-link1 = Aidan Dodson

| last2 = Nottelmann

| first2 = Dirk

| year = 2021

| title = The Kaiser's Cruisers 1871–1918

| publisher = Naval Institute Press

| location = Annapolis

| isbn = 978-1-68247-745-8

| ref = {{sfnRef|Dodson & Nottelmann}}

}}

{{Gazelle class light cruiser}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2017}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Amazone}}

Category:Gazelle-class cruisers

Category:Ships built in Kiel

Category:1900 ships

Category:World War I cruisers of Germany

Category:Cruisers of the Reichsmarine

Category:Auxiliary ships of the Kriegsmarine