SMS Leipzig (1905)
{{Short description|Light cruiser of the German Imperial Navy}}
{{other ships|SMS Leipzig}}
{{Use shortened footnotes|date=October 2022}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}}
{{Good article}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=File:SMS Leipzig.jpeg |Ship image size=300px |Ship caption={{lang|de|Leipzig}} underway before the war }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=German Empire |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|German Empire|naval}} |Ship name={{lang|de|Leipzig}} |Ship namesake= Leipzig |Ship builder=AG Weser, Bremen |Ship laid down=1904 |Ship launched=21 March 1905 |Ship commissioned=20 April 1906 |Ship fate=Sunk at the Battle of the Falkland Islands, 8 December 1914 }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class={{sclass|Bremen|cruiser|0}} light cruiser | Ship displacement= |Ship length=Length overall: {{convert|111.1|m|sp=us}} |Ship beam={{convert|13.3|m|ft|1|abbr=on}} |Ship draft={{convert|5.61|m|ft|1|abbr=on}} |Ship power=
|Ship propulsion=
|Ship speed={{convert|22|kn|lk=in}} |Ship range={{convert|4690|nmi|lk=in|abbr=on}} at {{convert|12|kn|abbr=on}} |Ship complement=*14 officers
| Ship armament=
| Ship armor=
|Ship notes= }} |
SMS {{lang|de|Leipzig}} ("His Majesty's Ship {{lang|de|Leipzig}}"){{efn|name=SMS|}} was the sixth of seven {{sclass|Bremen|cruiser|1}}s of the Imperial German Navy, named after the city of Leipzig. She was begun by AG Weser in Bremen in 1904, launched in March 1905 and commissioned in April 1906. Armed with a main battery of ten {{convert|10.5|cm|abbr=on}} guns and two {{convert|45|cm|abbr=on}} torpedo tubes, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} was capable of a top speed of {{convert|22.5|kn|lk=in}}.
{{lang|de|Leipzig}} spent her career on overseas stations; at the outbreak of World War I in August 1914, she was cruising off the coast of Mexico. After rejoining with the East Asia Squadron, she proceeded to South American waters, where she participated in the Battle of Coronel, where the German squadron overpowered and sank a pair of British armored cruisers. A month later, she again saw action at the Battle of the Falkland Islands, which saw the destruction of the East Asia Squadron. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} was chased down and sunk by the cruisers {{HMS|Glasgow|1909|6}} and {{HMS|Cornwall|1902|6}}; the majority of her crew was killed in the battle, with only 18 survivors.
Design
{{main|Bremen-class cruiser}}
The German 1898 Naval Law called for the replacement of the fleet's older cruising vessels—steam corvettes, unprotected cruisers, and avisos—with modern light cruisers. The first tranche of vessels to fulfill this requirement, the {{sclass|Gazelle|cruiser|4}}, were designed to serve both as fleet scouts and as station ships in Germany's colonial empire. They provided the basis for subsequent designs, beginning with the {{sclass|Bremen|cruiser|4}} that was designed in 1901–1903. The principle improvements consisted of a larger hull that allowed for an additional pair of boilers and a higher top speed.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 2|p=124}}{{sfn|Nottelmann|pp=108–110}}
File:Bremen-class plan and profile drawing.jpg
{{lang|de|Leipzig}} was {{convert|111.1|m|sp=us}} long overall and had a beam of {{convert|13.3|m|abbr=on}} and a draft of {{convert|5.61|m|abbr=on}} forward. She displaced {{convert|3278|t|LT|sp=us|lk=on}} as designed and up to {{cvt|3816|t|LT}} at full 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 274–287 enlisted men.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=102–103}}
Her propulsion system consisted of two triple-expansion steam engines driving a pair of screw propellers. Steam was provided by ten coal-fired Marine-type water-tube boilers, which were vented through three funnels located amidships. Her propulsion system was rated at {{convert|10000|PS|ihp|lk=on}} for a top speed of {{convert|22|kn|lk=in}}. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} carried up to {{cvt|860|t|LT}} of coal, which gave her a range of {{convert|4690|nmi|lk=in}} at {{convert|12|kn}}.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=102–103}}
The ship was armed with a main battery of ten 10.5 cm SK L/40 naval gun in single mounts. Two were placed side by side forward on the forecastle; six were located on the broadside, three on either side; 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 1,500 rounds of ammunition, for 150 shells per gun. For defense against torpedo boats, she carried ten QF 1-pounder pom-poms in individual mounts. 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. She was also fitted to carry fifty naval mines.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=102–103}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|p=211}}
The ship was protected by a curved armored deck that was up to {{convert|80|mm|abbr=on}} thick; it sloped down at the sides to provide a measure of protection against enemy fire. The conning tower had {{convert|100|mm|abbr=on}} thick sides, and the guns were protected by {{cvt|50|mm|0}} thick gun shields.{{sfn|Gröner|p=102}}
Service history
{{lang|de|Leipzig}} was ordered under the contract name "N",{{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 AG Weser shipyard in Bremen on 12 July 1904 and launched on 21 March 1905, after which fitting-out work commenced. Work on the ship was completed, save the installation of her armament, by February 1906, when she underwent builder's trials. The ship then moved to Wilhelmshaven to have her guns installed. She was commissioned into the High Seas Fleet on 20 April 1906 for sea trials that lasted until mid-June. During this period, {{lang|de|Fregattenkapitän}} (FK—Frigate Captain) Franz von Hipper served as the ship's first commanding officer. The ship concluded the initial period of service as the escort for Kaiser Wilhelm II, who was traveling on his annual summer cruise aboard the HAPAG steamer {{SS|Hamburg|1899|2}}. Hipper thereafter left the ship.{{sfn|Gröner|pp=102–104}}{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|pp=211–212}}
=Peacetime career in East Asia=
{{lang|de|Leipzig}} was assigned to the East Asia Squadron, and her crew began preparations for the voyage overseas on 19 August. She sailed from Wilhelmshaven on 8 September and, after passing through the Dutch East Indies, arrived in Hong Kong on 6 January 1907. There, she met the protected cruiser {{SMS|Hansa|1898|2}}, another member of the East Asia Squadron. From 25 January to 10 March, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} lay as a guard ship at Qingdao, the capital of the Jiaozhou Bay Leased Territory. She later steamed up the Yangtze river with the squadron commander aboard, {{lang|de|Vizeadmiral}} (VAdm—Vice Admiral) Carl von Coerper; the gunboat {{SMS|Tiger|1899|2}} and the torpedo boat {{SMS|S90||2}} accompanied {{lang|de|Leipzig}} on the trip. In June, she joined the rest of the cruisers of the squadron for a tour of northern ports in the region. In the first half of 1908, the East Asia Squadron embarked on another lengthy cruise in northern East Asian waters. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} made a shorter voyage in the Yellow Sea in August; that month, {{lang|de|Korvettenkapitän}} (KK—Corvette Captain) Richard Engel took command of the ship. In September and October, she visited Shanghai, China, and made another trip up the Yangtze. On 17 November, she represented Germany at a major naval review held in Kobe, Japan. That month, KK Karl Heuser relieved Engel as the ship's captain.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|pp=211–212}}
File:Contemporary map of Tsingtau and the Shandong Peninsula.png showing the Jiaozhou Bay Leased Territory|alt=The Jiaozhou Bay Leased Territory was located in the natural harbor at Qingdao on the southern coast of the Shandong Peninsula|left]]
{{lang|de|Leipzig}} was dry-docked at Hong Kong for periodic maintenance in January 1909, and while there, she received orders to sail to German Samoa after the work was completed. Unrest against German rule threatened to break out, and the colonial governor, Wilhelm Solf, requested assistance from the East Asia Squadron. From Hong Kong, she proceeded to Manila in the Philippines; there, Coerper came aboard the ship for the voyage to Samoa. The ship arrived in Apia, the capital of German Samoa, on 19 March. By the 28th, she had been joined by the light cruiser {{SMS|Arcona|1902|2}} and the gunboat {{SMS|Jaguar||2}}, along with the steamer Titania, which carried a contingent of 100 local police. The local chief who had led the movement and some of his supporters were taken aboard {{lang|de|Jaguar}} to Saipan, where they were exiled. The ships patrolled off Samoa through April, but by early May, the ships began to disperse. {{lang|de|Arcona}} and Titania departed on 6 May, while {{lang|de|Leipzig}} took Coerper to Suva, Fiji, stopping there from 14 to 17 May. There, he transferred to another vessel to return home. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} then briefly returned to Samoa, though she was replaced by the unprotected cruiser {{SMS|Condor||2}} on 21 May. From there, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} steamed to Pago Pago in American Samoa, made a brief stop in Apia, before departing for Qingdao, arriving there by way of Pohnpei and Manila on 29 June. For the rest of the year, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} cruised with the squadron flagship, the armored cruiser {{SMS|Scharnhorst||2}}, in northern waters.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|p=212}}
In early 1910, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} and {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} met the gunboat {{SMS|Luchs||2}} in Hong Kong, and the three vessels embarked on a voyage south. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} and {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} cruised together, at times with {{lang|de|Luchs}}, to visit Siam and various ports in the South China Sea. During this period, in February, FK Hermann Schröder arrived to take Heuser's place as the ship's commander. The two cruisers then steamed back north to visit Japan in April and May. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} made another voyage up the Yangtze in July, steaming as far as Hankou, where unrest had broken out. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} and the armored cruiser {{SMS|Gneisenau||2}} steamed to Calcutta, India, in early 1911 to meet Crown Prince Wilhelm, who was on a tour of East Asia. The ships arrived there on 31 January, but an outbreak of plague in the area led Wilhelm to cancel the rest of his trip. In March, the new squadron commander, {{lang|de|Konteradmiral}} (Rear Admiral) Günther von Krosigk, came aboard the ship to make a visit to Japan, where he met Emperor Meiji. Over the following months, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} visited a series of ports in Japan and in Siberia. While she was in Vladimir Bay in Russia in mid-August, Schröder learned of heightened tensions with France as a result of the Agadir Crisis; the Russians had severed the telegraph lines, however, so he could not communicate with Germany. The ship received a garbled wireless message that indicated Krosigk was to deploy his squadron to the Indian Ocean, but seeking confirmation, he dispatched {{lang|de|Leipzig}} to Vladivostok, Russia, despite the risk of entering the port of France's ally. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} remained in the port from 15 to 18 August, exchanging telegraphs with Germany; by that time, the crisis had passed, and Krosigk decided to take his squadron south, through the Yellow Sea, before arriving in Qingdao on 15 September.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|pp=211–213}}
On 10 October, the 1911 Revolution broke out against Qing rule in China; since the unrest threatened foreign interests in the country, Krosigk deployed the ships of the squadron to defend German nationals, as did several other navies. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} was sent to reinforce the gunboats {{lang|de|Tiger}} and {{SMS|Vaterland||2}}, while {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} was sent to Nanking and the gunboat {{SMS|Iltis|1898|2}} to Hankou. Command of the international force assembled in China was given to the Japanese Rear Admiral Kawashima Reijirō. The ships sent landing parties ashore to defend foreign holdings, and they evacuated women and children to Shanghai, though Chinese attacks on foreigners did not materialize. {{lang|de|Leipzig}}, which by then had Krosigk aboard, was forced to leave Hankou in November due to falling water levels in the Yangtze, and she joined {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} in Shanghai. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} spent the next several months cruising between Qingdao and the areas of the country beset by revolution. These activities concluded in early August 1912, and on 7 August, she began a trip that included stops in Vladivostok, Russia, and various ports in Japan. While there, she was present for the funeral ceremonies for Meiji. By the end of the year, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} had returned to Shanghai.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|p=213}}
In early 1913, she visited cities along the central Chinese coast. In March, Johann-Siegfried Haun took command of the ship; he was to be her final captain. Her crew observed heavy fighting between imperial and republican forces around Nanking in July and August. The ship returned to Qingdao in September for an overhaul that lasted into October. She thereafter cruised south and visited the Philippines. In May 1914, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} received orders to replace the light cruiser {{SMS|Nürnberg|1906|2}}, which was cruising off the Pacific coast of Mexico to protect German interests during the Mexican Revolution. She arrived off Mazatlán, Mexico, on 7 July, where she met {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} and the cruiser {{SMS|Dresden|1907|2}}; the three German cruisers operated in concert with vessels from other navies to evacuate foreigners in the country. Because telegraph lines had been cut in Mexico, the German vessels did not learn of the July Crisis in Europe until 31 July, by which time World War I had broken out. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} transferred forty civilians to the neutral US armored cruiser {{USS|California|ACR-6|6}} and then made preparations for wartime operations.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|pp=211, 213}}
=World War I=
File:The German East Asia Squadron 1914 1915-en.svg
{{lang|de|Leipzig}} anchored at Magdalena Bay in Mexico to await developments, and on 5 August, Haun learned of the state of war between Germany and the Triple Entente. The established mobilization plan called for the ships of the East Asia Squadron to unite, but {{lang|de|Leipzig}} lacked collier support. She stopped in San Francisco to take on coal, but was unable to fully replenish her bunkers due to the United States' strict adherence to neutrality laws. Haun therefore decided to embark on a commerce raiding campaign against British merchant shipping. The lack of suitable targets led Haun to move south to the Gulf of California on 17 August to take on more coal. A week later, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} sank a British freighter carrying sugar and then proceeded to the Peruvian coast by the 28th. She stopped in Guaymas in neutral Mexico to take on a fresh load of coal on 8 September.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|pp=213–214}}{{sfn|Marley|p=634}}{{sfn|Staff|pp=29–30}} She got underway two days later, headed further south in accordance with instructions from the German naval command, and on 11 September she stopped and sank the British oil tanker {{SS|Elsinore||2}}. She called in the Galápagos Islands to take coal from a German merchant ship and put Elsinore{{'}}s crew ashore.{{sfn|Bisher|p=15}}{{sfn|Fayle||p=229}} Reports of a British squadron in the area forced {{lang|de|Leipzig}} to leave.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|pp=213–214}}{{sfn|Marley|p=634}}{{sfn|Staff|pp=29–30}}
The ship thereafter stopped to allow the crew to clean her badly fouled boiler tubes, before resuming her voyage to Easter Island. There, on 14 October, she joined the rest of the East Asia Squadron, by which time the unit was under the command of VAdm Maximilian von Spee. By that time, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} had accumulated a group of three colliers. On 18 October, the Squadron departed, bound for South America; they stopped in the Juan Fernández Islands while en route, and by 26 October, they were approaching Mas a Fuera. They then steamed to Valparaiso, Chile, where they received intelligence that indicated that the British cruiser {{HMS|Glasgow|1909|6}} was anchored in Coronel. Spee decided to proceed to Coronel to ambush the British ship when it left port. Glasgow was in fact joined by the armored cruisers {{HMS|Good Hope|1901|6}} and {{HMS|Monmouth|1901|6}}.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|p=214}}{{sfn|Staff|pp=30–31}}
==Battle of Coronel==
File:Ostasiengeschwader Graf Spee in Chile.jpg harbor in Chile, with Chilean cruisers in the foreground]]
{{main|Battle of Coronel}}
While patrolling off Coronel, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} stopped a Chilean barque and searched her, but since she was a neutral vessel, and not carrying contraband, the Germans let her go. At 16:00 on 1 November, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} spotted a column of smoke in the distance, followed by a second ship at 16:17, and a third at 16:25. The British spotted {{lang|de|Leipzig}} at approximately the same time, and the two squadrons formed into lines of battle. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} was the third ship in the German line, behind the two armored cruisers. At 18:07, Spee issued the order "Fire distribution from left", meaning that each ship would engage its opposite number; the Germans fired first, at 18:34.{{sfn|Staff|pp=31–33}}
{{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} quickly wrecked their British counterparts, while {{lang|de|Leipzig}} fired at Glasgow without success. At 18:49, Glasgow hit {{lang|de|Leipzig}}, but the shell was a dud and did not explode. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} and {{lang|de|Dresden}} hit Glasgow five times before Spee ordered {{lang|de|Leipzig}} to close with the stricken Good Hope and torpedo it. A rain squall obscured the ship, and by the time {{lang|de|Leipzig}} reached Good Hope{{'}}s position, the latter had sunk. Unaware of the sinking of Good Hope, no rescue operations were mounted by {{lang|de|Leipzig}}{{'}}s crew. By 20:00, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} encountered {{lang|de|Dresden}} in the gathering darkness, and the two initially mistook each other for hostile warships, though they quickly established their identity. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} emerged from the battle essentially unscathed, and with no wounded crewmen.{{sfn|Staff|pp=34–37, 39}}
In the aftermath of the Battle of Coronel, Spee decided to return to Valparaiso to receive further orders; while {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}}, {{lang|de|Gneisenau}}, and {{lang|de|Nürnberg}} went into the harbor, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} and {{lang|de|Dresden}} escorted the colliers to Mas a Fuera. The rest of the East Asia Squadron joined them there on 6 November; the cruisers restocked their coal and other supplies. On 10 November, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} and {{lang|de|Dresden}} were sent to Valparaiso, arriving on the 13th. Five days later, they rejoined the Squadron approximately {{convert|250|nmi}} west of Robinson Crusoe Island; the unified Squadron then proceeded to the Gulf of Penas, arriving on 21 November. There, they coaled and prepared to make the long voyage around Cape Horn. The British, shocked by their defeat at Coronel, had meanwhile dispatched the powerful battlecruisers {{HMS|Invincible|1907|6}} and {{HMS|Inflexible|1907|6}}, under the command of Vice Admiral Doveton Sturdee, to hunt down and destroy Spee's ships. They departed Britain on 11 November and reached the Falkland Islands on 7 December, having been joined on the way by the armored cruisers {{HMS|Carnarvon|1903|2}}, {{HMS|Kent|1901|2}}, and {{HMS|Cornwall|1902|2}} and the light cruisers {{HMS|Bristol|1910|2}} and the battered Glasgow.{{sfn|Staff|pp=58–60}}
==Battle of the Falkland Islands==
{{main|Battle of the Falkland Islands}}
On 26 November, the East Asia Squadron departed the Gulf of Penas, bound for Cape Horn and the Atlantic and reached the Cape on 2 December. While off the Cape, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} took the Canadian sailing ship Drummuir as a prize; the ship was carrying {{convert|2750|MT|abbr=on}} of coal, which was transferred to the colliers {{lang|de|Baden}} and Santa Isabel at Picton Island. On the night of 6 December, Spee held a conference with the ship commanders to discuss his proposed attack on the Falklands; Haun, along with the commanders from {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} and {{lang|de|Dresden}}, opposed the plan and favored bypassing the Falklands to wage commerce war off La Plata. Nevertheless, Spee made the decision to attack the Falklands on the morning of 8 December.{{sfn|Staff|pp=61–62}}
The Germans approached Port Stanley, the capital of the Falklands, early on the morning of 8 December; the British quickly spotted them, and raised steam to go out and meet them. Spee initially thought the smoke clouds to be the British burning their coal stocks to prevent the Germans from seizing them. Upon realizing the presence of the powerful British squadron, he broke off the attack and turned to flee. The British quickly steamed out of the harbor in pursuit. By 12:55, the battlecruisers had caught up to the retreating Germans, and opened fire on {{lang|de|Leipzig}}, the last ship in the German line, though she was not hit. Spee signaled "{{lang|de|Leipzig}} released" at 13:15 and five minutes later instructed the other light cruisers to flee while {{lang|de|Scharnhorst}} and {{lang|de|Gneisenau}} turned on their pursuers, in the hope that he could cover their escape.{{sfn|Staff|pp=62–66}} In response, Sturdee sent his cruisers to chase down {{lang|de|Nürnberg}}, {{lang|de|Dresden}}, and {{lang|de|Leipzig}}.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|p=214}}{{sfn|Halpern|p=99}}
Glasgow pursued {{lang|de|Leipzig}}, and quickly caught up, opening fire by 14:40. After about twenty minutes of firing, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} was hit; she turned to port to open the range, before turning to starboard in order to bring her full broadside into action. In the ensuing action, both ships were hit several times, forcing Glasgow to break off and fall behind the more powerful armored cruisers. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} was battered severely by Cornwall and Glasgow and set on fire; she nevertheless remained in action and continued to fight. In the course of the engagement, {{lang|de|Leipzig}} hit Cornwall eighteen times, causing a significant list to port. She fired three torpedoes at the British ships, but failed to score any hits with them. At 19:20, Haun issued the order to scuttle his wrecked ship; the British approached and opened fire on the stricken cruiser at close range, killing large numbers of the crew. The British also destroyed a cutter filled with survivors, killing all of them. {{lang|de|Leipzig}} finally capsized and sank at 21:05, with Haun still aboard. Only eighteen men were pulled from the freezing water.{{sfn|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5|p=214}}{{sfn|Staff|pp=73–76}}
Notes
= Footnotes =
{{notelist
| notes =
{{efn
| name = SMS
| "SMS" stands for "{{lang|de|Seiner Majestät Schiff}}" ({{langx|de|link=no|His Majesty's Ship}}).
}}
}}
= Citations =
{{Reflist|colwidth=20em}}
References
- {{cite book
|last= Bisher
|first= Jamie
|year= 2016
|title= The Intelligence War in Latin America, 1914–1922
|place= Jefferson, NC
|publisher= McFarland & Company
|isbn= 978-0-7864-3350-6
|ref={{sfnref|Bisher}}
}}
- {{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= Fayle
|first= C Ernest
|year= 1920
|title= Seaborne Trade
|series=History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence
|volume= I: The Cruiser Period
|place= London
|publisher= John Murray
|oclc=1184620170
|ref = {{sfnref|Fayle}}
}}
- {{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=Halpern
|first=Paul G.
|title=A Naval History of World War I
|year=1991
|location=Annapolis
|publisher=Naval Institute Press
|isbn=978-1557503527
|ref={{sfnRef|Halpern}}
}}
- {{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 = 2
| language = German
|location = Ratingen
|publisher = Mundus Verlag
|isbn = 978-3-8364-9743-5
| ref = {{sfnRef|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 2}}
|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 = 5
| language = de
| publisher = Mundus Verlag
| location = Ratingen
| isbn = 978-3-7822-0456-9
| ref = {{sfnRef|Hildebrand, Röhr, & Steinmetz Vol. 5}}
|name-list-style=amp
}}
- {{Cite book
|last=Marley
|first=David F.
|title=Wars of the Americas
|year=1998
|publisher=ABC-CLIO
|isbn=0-87436-837-5
|location=Santa Barbara
|ref={{sfnref|Marley}}
}}
- {{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
|last=Staff
|first=Gary
|title=Battle on the Seven Seas
|year=2011
|location=Barnsley
|publisher=Pen & Sword Maritime
|isbn=978-1-84884-182-6
|ref={{sfnRef|Staff}}
}}
Further reading
- {{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}}
}}
External links
{{Commons category}}
- {{cite web
|url=https://deutsche-schutzgebiete.de/wordpress/projekte/kaiserliche-marine/seiner-majestaet-schiffe/s-m-s-leipzig-1905/
|title=S.M.S. Leipzig (1905), Kleiner Kreuzer der Kaiserlichen Marine, technische Angaben und Geschichte in alten Postkarten.
|trans-title=S.M.S. Leipzig (1905), Small Cruiser of the Imperial Navy, Technical Details and History in Old Postcards
|language=de
|website=www.deutsche-schutzgebiete.de
|access-date=20 December 2023
}}
{{Bremen class cruisers}}
{{December 1914 shipwrecks}}
{{coord|53|55|S|55|12|W|display=title}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Leipzig}}
Category:Bremen-class cruisers
Category:Ships built in Bremen (state)
Category:World War I cruisers of Germany
Category:World War I commerce raiders
Category:World War I shipwrecks in the Atlantic Ocean