Battlecruisers were large
warships in the first half of the 20th century that
were first introduced by the
Royal Navy.
The battlecruiser was developed as the successor to the
armoured cruisers, but their evolution was
more closely linked to that of the
dreadnought battleships.
The first such ship, the Invincible
, was originally designated a "dreadnought
cruiser".
Battlecruisers shared the very large main armament of battleships,
and were generally as large and costly as battleships of the same
generation. They traded off
armour or
firepower for higher speed, which was made possible by their
powerful engines and slender hulls. The earliest battlecruisers
carried significantly less armour than the equivalent battleship,
meaning they were not intended to stand up against the guns they
themselves carried. Thus ships of this type could inflict much more
punishment than they could absorb.
The relationship between the battlecruiser to the battleship was
never entirely clear cut. The invention of the battlecruiser in the
Royal Navy was driven by
Admiral Jackie Fisher, who
envisaged them as a revolutionary new type of armoured cruiser
which could replace the battleship as Britain's principal weapon at
sea. Fisher's idea centred on battlecruisers operating for imperial
defence, vectored in by a global information grid and central
plotting in the Admiralty to destroy weaker vessels that would prey
on merchant shipping in international waters, while engaging more
powerful warships with accurate gunnery at greater ranges.
However, the battleship continued to dominate naval warfare through
the
First World War, and the
battlecruiser was principally used to provide a fast and
hard-hitting addition to a battleship fleet.
Battlecruisers formed
part of the navies of Britain, Germany and Japan in World War I and took part in
many naval battles between Britain and Germany, including the
Battle of
Jutland
. By the end of the war, there were very few
differences between the design of a battlecruiser and that of a
fast battleship.
Britain, Japan and the
United
States
all designed battlecruisers after the end of World
War I which were as heavily armed as a battleship, though faster
and not so heavily armored. The
Washington Naval Treaty, which
limited
capital ship construction from
1922 onwards, treated battleships and battlecruisers identically.
The new generation of battlecruisers planned was scrapped under the
terms of the treaty.
From the 1930s, only the Royal Navy continued to use
'battlecruiser' as a classification for warships. Nevertheless, the
fast, light capital ships developed by Germany and France of the
Scharnhorst and
Dunkerque
classes were and are often referred to as battlecruisers. These
ships were armoured as well as many battleships but carried a
lighter calibre of armament.
World War II saw battlecruisers in
action again. However, no battlecruisers were begun during the war;
battleship construction was cut back to provide resources for extra
aircraft and aircraft carriers. Since the start of World War II, no
battlecruisers have been built. However, a number of ships have
been described thereafter as battlecruisers, such as the .
First battlecruisers
The battlecruiser was a dramatic evolution of the
armoured cruiser and 'second-class
battleship' designs of the 1890s, principally due
to the British
Admiral Jackie Fisher.
At the turn of the century, the modern armoured cruiser was a fast
and powerful vessel which was capable of threatening trade routes
worldwide, or of working closely with a battleship fleet. The Royal
Navy, and Fisher in particular, was concerned with the damage
armoured cruisers (particularly those of the French Navy) might
inflict on British trade worldwide in the event of war. Fisher
envisaged British armoured cruisers becoming faster and more
heavily armed to deal with this threat. He was also very fond of
the "second-class battleship"
HMS
Renown, a lighter, faster battleship. As early as
1901, there is confusion in Fisher's writing about whether he saw
the battleship or the cruiser as the model for future
developments.
In the period 1902–1904 the mainstream of British naval thinking
was clearly in favour of heavily armoured battleships, rather than
the fast ships which Fisher favoured. However, a shift away from
the mixed-calibre armament of the 1890s
pre-dreadnought to an "all-big-gun" design
was already being considered. Preliminary designs circulated for
battleships with all 12-inch or all 10-inch guns and armoured
cruisers with all 9.2-inch guns.
In summer 1904, after Fisher's appointment as
First Sea Lord, the decision was taken to use
12-inch guns for the next generation of battleships, because of
their superior performance at long range. The armament of the next
armoured cruiser was much more controversial. The size and cost of
the next generation of armoured cruisers meant that it was very
desirable that they should be able to play a role in a battleship
action, and this meant 12-inch guns. This was the same logic which
had led the Japanese to arm their latest cruisers with two 12-inch
guns as their main armament. However, it is also quite possible
that Fisher pushed for the cruiser to have the same armament as the
battleship because he held out hope that the cruiser design would
be the replacement for the battleship. The decision to give the
next generation of armoured cruisers an 'all-big-gun' armament was
the crucial moment in the development of the battlecruiser. If the
ships had been armed with only 10-inch or 9.2-inch guns, they would
merely have been better armoured cruisers.
The radical changes to shipbuilding policy which Fisher was making
across the board meant that he appointed a Committee on Designs in
December 1904. While the stated purpose of the Committee was to
investigate and report on the requirements of future ships, the key
decisions had already been taken by Fisher and his associates.. The
terms of reference for the Committee were for a battleship capable
of 21 knots with 12-inch guns and no intermediate calibres, capable
of operating from existing docks; and a cruiser capable of 25.5
knots, also with 12-inch guns and no intermediate armament,
armoured like
HMS
Minotaur, the most recent armoured cruiser, and also
capable of working from the existing docks. The battleship became
the revolutionary battleship
HMS
Dreadnought, and the cruiser became the three ships of
the
Invincible
class.
The three
Invincibles were Inflexible, Invincible
and Indomitable. Their
construction was begun in 1906 and completed in 1908, delayed
perhaps to allow their designs to learn from any problems with
Dreadnought. The ships fulfilled the design requirement
quite closely. The
Invincibles had a displacement similar
to that of the
Dreadnought but twice the power to give a
speed of . They had eight
Mk X
guns, compared to ten on
Dreadnought. There was armour
6 or 7 inches (150 to 180 mm) thick along the side of the
hull and over the gunhouses, whereas
Dreadnought's armour
was 11 inches (280 to 300 mm) at its thickest. The class
had a very marked increase in speed, displacement and firepower
compared to the most recent armoured cruisers, but no more
armour.
The
Invincibles were to have the same role as the armoured
cruisers they succeeded, but the new ships were expected to be more
effective all-round. Specifically their roles were:
- Heavy Reconnaissance. Because of their power, the
Invincibles could sweep away the screen of enemy cruisers
to close with and observe an enemy battlefleet, before using their
superior speed to retire.
- Close support for the battlefleet. They could be stationed at
the ends of the battle line to stop enemy cruisers harassing the
battleships, and to harass the enemy's battleships if they were
busy fighting battleships. Also, the Invincibles could
operate as the fast wing of the battlefleet and try to outmanouevre
the enemy.
- Pursuit. If an enemy fleet ran, then the Invincibles
would use their speed to pursue, and their guns to damage or slow
enemy ships.
- Commerce protection. The new ships would hunt down enemy
cruisers and commerce raiders.
Confusion about how to refer to these new battleship-size armoured
cruisers set in almost immediately. Even in late 1905, before work
was begun on the
Invincibles, a Royal Navy memorandum
refers to "large armoured ships" meaning both battleships and large
cruisers. In October 1906, the Admiralty began to classify all
post-Dreadnought battleships and armoured cruisers as "
capital ships", while Fisher used the term
"dreadnought" to refer either to his new battleships or the
battleships and armoured cruisers together. At the same time, the
Invincible class themselves were referred to as
"cruiser-battleship", "dreadnought cruiser"; the term
"battlecruiser" was first used by Fisher in 1908. Finally, on 24
November 1911, Admiralty Weekly Order No. 351 laid down the
decision that "All cruisers of the
Invincible and later
type are, for the future, to be described and classified as
battlecruisers in order to distinguish them from armoured cruisers
of the older type."
Battlecruisers in the Dreadnought arms race
In the period from the launching of the
Invincibles to
just after the outbreak of the First World War, the battlecruiser
played a junior role in the developing dreadnought arms race. The
battlecruiser was never wholeheartedly adopted as the key weapon in
British imperial defence, as Fisher had presumably desired.
Britain's strategic circumstances had changed markedly between the
conception of the battlecruiser and the commissioning of the first
ships. While the prospective enemy for Britain had previously been
a Franco-Russian alliance with many armoured cruisers, it was now
clearly Germany. Diplomatically, Britain had entered the
Entente cordiale in 1904 and the
Anglo-Russian Entente. Furthermore
neither France nor Russia posed a particular naval threat; the
Russian navy had largely been sunk or captured in the
Russo-Japanese War of 1904-5, while the
French were in no hurry to adopt the new
dreadnought battleship technology. Britain also
boasted very cordial relations with two of the significant new
naval powers; Japan (bolstered by the
Anglo-Japanese Alliance, signed in
1902 and renewed in 1905), and the USA.
These changed strategic circumstances, and the great success of the
Dreadnought, ensured that she rather than the
Invincible became the new model capital ship.
Nevertheless, battlecruiser construction played a major part in the
renewed naval arms-race sparked by the
Dreadnought.
For the first few years after their completion, the
Invincibles entirely fulfilled Fisher's vision of being
able to sink any ship fast enough to catch them, and run from any
ship capable of sinking them. An
Invincible would also in
many circumstances, be able to take on an enemy
pre-dreadnought battleship. The
Invincibles were so far ahead of any enemy armoured
cruiser that it was difficult to justify building more or bigger
cruisers. This lead was extended by the surprise both
Dreadnought and
Invincible produced, which
prompted most other navies to delay their building programmes while
radically revising their designs.
This was particularly true for cruisers,
because the details of the Invincible class were kept
secret for longer; this meant that the next German armoured
cruiser, Blücher
was armed with only 8.2-inch guns, and was obsolete
before she was even launched.
The Royal Navy's early superiority in capital ships led to the
rejection of a design of 1905-6 which would essentially have fused
the battlecruiser and battleship concepts. The 'X4' design combined
the full armour and armament of
Dreadnought with the
25-knot speed of
Invincible. However, the additional cost
could not be justified given the existing British lead and the new
Liberal government's need for economy; the slower and cheaper
Bellerophon, a
relatively close copy of
Dreadnought, was adopted
instead.
However, by 1911 Germany had built battlecruisers of her own, and
the superiority of the British ships could no longer be assured.
Von der Tann, begun in
1908 and completed in 1910, carried eight 11.1-inch guns but with
11.1-inch (280 mm) armour was far better protected than the
Invincibles. The two
Moltkes were quite
similar but carried ten 11.1-inch guns of an improved design. The
German Navy did not share Fisher's view of what a battlecruiser
should be; however, it was entitled to build armoured cruisers
under the terms of the Navy Laws, and used this authority to match
or better the British battlecruisers.
The next British battlecruisers were three of the
Indefatigable
class. These ships were slightly improved
Invincibles,
which corrected some flaws in the earlier ships but were built to
fundamentally the same specification. The British were hampered on
this occasion by the secrecy surrounding German battlecruiser
construction and particularly about the heavy armour of
Von der
Tann. Political pressure to reduce costs also played a role in
the selection of the
Indefatigable design, and this class
is widely seen as a mistake.
The next generation of British battlecruisers were markedly more
powerful. By 1909-10 the political climate had changed; the desire
for cost-cutting was now outweighed by a sense of national crisis
about rivalry with Germany. A brief political crisis and a naval
panic resulted in the approval of a total of eight capital ships in
1909-10. Fisher pressed for all of them to be battlecruisers, but
was unable to force his way, and had to settle for six battleships
as well as two battlecruisers of the
Lion class. These carried
eight
13.5-inch guns;
the standard armament of the British "super-dreadnought"
battleships of the same period was ten 13.5-inch. Speed increased,
to 27 knots.
Lion also carried better armour than previous
British battleships, with 9 inches on the armour belt and
barbettes; nevertheless, protection was not as good as in German
designs. The two
Lions were followed by the very similar
Queen Mary
In contrast to the British focus on increasing speed and firepower,
Germany further improved the armour and staying power of their next
battlecruiser.
Seydlitz,
designed in 1909 and finished in 1913, was a modified
Moltke; speed increased by one knot to 26.5 knots, while
armour was up to 12 inches thick, equivalent for the
Helgoland class
battleships of just one or two years earlier.
Seydlitz was
Germany's last battlecruiser to be completed before World War
I.
The next step in the battlecruiser design came from Japan. The
Imperial Japanese Navy had
been planning the
Kongō class ships
from 1909. The Japanese navy was determined that, since the
Japanese economy could support relatively few ships, each ship
would be more powerful than its likely competitors. Initially the
class was planned with the
Invincibles as the benchmark.
However, on learning of the British plans for
Lion, and
the likelihood that new
U.S. Navy battleships would be armed with 14-inch guns,
the Japanese decided to radically revise their plans and go one
better. A new plan was drawn up, carrying eight 14-inch guns, and
capable of 27.5 knots, thus marginally having the edge over the
British
Lions in speed and firepower. The heavy guns were
also better-positioned, being
superfiring
both fore and aft with no turret amidships. The armour scheme was
also marginally improved over the
Lions with 9 inches
of armour on the turrets and 8 inches on the barbettes. The
first ship in the class was built in Britain, and a further three
constructed in Japan.
The next British battlecruiser,
Tiger, was broadly on the model of
Lion but also influenced by the design of the Japanese
ships. She retained the eight 13.5-inch guns of her predecessors,
though these were positioned for better fields of fire. She was
faster (making 29 knots on trials), and carried a heavier secondary
armament.
Tiger was also more heavily armoured on the
whole; while the maximum thickness of armour was the same at
9 inches, the height of the main armour belt was
increased.
1912 saw work begin on three more German battlecruisers of the
Derfflinger
class, the first German battlecruisers to mount 12-inch guns.
These ships, like the
Tiger and the
Kongō, had
their guns arranged in superfiring turrets for greater efficiency.
Their armour and speed was similar to the previous
Seydlitz class.
In 1913,
the Russian Empire also began the construction of the four-ship
Borodino
class, which were designed for service in the Baltic Sea
. These ships were designed to carry twelve
14-inch guns, with armour up to 12 inches thick, and a speed
of 26.6 knots. The heavy armour and relatively slow speed of these
ships makes them more similar to German designs than to British
ships; however, construction of the
Borodinos was halted
by the First World War and all were scrapped during the
Russian Revolution.
By 1914, only Britain, Germany and Japan had battlecruisers, with
Russia building some. On several occasions, it had already been
possible to point to moments where the concepts of battlecruiser
and battleship might be seen in the same vessel. This was true of
the 1906 'X4' design, and the Russian
Borodinos. However,
it was even more true of the most recent British battleship design.
The
Queen
Elizabeth class was designed to make 25 knots, as much as
the first battlecruisers had achieved, while carrying eight 15-inch
guns and armour up to 15 inches thick.. The
Queen
Elizabeths were the first true
fast
battleships, and could have brought the end of the development
of the battlecruiser as an independent line. It was principally due
to the influence of Jacky Fisher that the battlecruiser
continued.
World War I
The First World War saw British and German battlecruisers used in
several theatres.
Battlecruisers formed part of the dreadnought
fleets which faced each other down in the North Sea, taking part in
several raids and skirmishes as well as the Battle of
Jutland
. Battlecruisers also played an important
role at the start of the War as the British fleet hunted down
German commerce raiders, for instance at the
Battle of the Falkland
Islands, and also took part in the Mediterranean
campaign.
Construction
For most of the combatants, capital ship construction was very
limited during the War. Germany finished the
Derfflinger
class and began work on the
Mackensen class. The
Mackensens were a development of the
Derfflinger
class, with 14-inch guns and a broadly similar armour scheme,
deigned for 27 knots.
In Britain, Jackie Fisher returned to the office of First Sea Lord
in October 1914. His enthusiasm for big, fast ships was unabated,
and he set design staff to producing a design for a battlecruiser
with 15-inch guns. Because Fisher expected the next German
battlecruiser to steam at 28 knots, he required the new British
design to be capable of 32 knots. He planned to convert two
Royal Sovereign class
battleships, which were at an early stage of construction and
on which work had been suspended because it was felt that the war
would be over before the ships were finished. Fisher finally
received approval for this project on 28 December 1914 and they
became the
Renown
class. With six
15-inch
guns but only 6-inch armour they were a further step forward
from
Tiger in firepower and speed but were even less
well-protected.
At the same time, Fisher resorted to subterfuge to obtain another
three fast, lightly armoured ships which could make use of the
several spare 15-inch gun turrets left over from battleship
construction. These ships were essentially light battlecruisers,
and Fisher can occasionally be found referring to them as such, but
were officially classified as "large light cruisers". This unusual
designation was required because construction of new capital ships
had been placed on hold, while there were no limits on light
cruiser construction. They became the
Courageous class,
and there was a bizarre imbalance between their main armament of
15-inch (or 18-inch in 'Furious') guns and their armour, which at
3 inches thickness was on the scale of a light cruiser. The
design was generally regarded as a bizarre failure (nicknamed in
the Fleet
Spurious,
Uproarious and
Outrageous), though the later conversion of the ships to
aircraft carriers was very successful. Fisher also speculated about
a new mammoth but lightly built battlecruiser which would carry
20-inch guns, which he termed
HMS
Incomparable; however, this never got beyond the concept
stage.
It is often held that the
Renown and
Courageous
classes were designed for Fisher's plan to land troops (possibly
Russian) on the German Baltic coast. Specifically, they were
designed with a shallow draught, which might be important in the
shallow Baltic. Howevever, this is not clear-cut evidence that the
ships were designed for the Baltic: it was considered that earlier
ships had too much draught and not enough
freeboard under operational conditions. Roberts
argues that the focus on the Baltic was probably unimportant at the
time the ships were designed, but was inflated later, after the
disastrous
Dardanelles
Campaign.
The final British battlecruiser design of the war was the
Admiral class, which
was born from a requirement for an improved version of the
Queen Elizabeth battleship. The project began at the end
of 1915, after Fisher's final departure from the Admiralty. While
initially envisaged as a battleship, senior sea officers felt that
Britain had enough battleships, but that new battlecruisers might
be required to combat German ships being built (the British
overestimated German progress on the
Mackensen class as
well as their likely capabilities). A battlecruiser design with
eight 15-inch guns, 8 inches of armour and capable of 32 knots
was decided on.
However, the experience of battlecruisers at
the Battle of
Jutland
meant that the design was radically revised and
transformed again into a fast battleship concept with armour up to
12 inches thick but still capable of 31.5 knots. The
first ship in the class,
Hood, went ahead according to this
design. The plans for her three sisters, on which little work had
been done, were revised once more later in 1916 and in 1917 to
improve protection..
The
Admiral class would have been the only British ships
capable of taking on the German
Mackensen type; however,
German shipbuilding was drastically slowed by the war, and while
two
Mackensens were launched, none were ever completed.
Work on the three additional
Admirals was suspended in
March 1917 to enable more escorts and merchant ships to be built to
deal with the new threat from U-boats to trade. They were finally
cancelled in February 1919.
Operations
The German battlecruiser
Goeben
was perhaps the ship which made the most impact early in the War.
Stationed
in the Mediterranean, she and her escorting cruiser evaded British and French ships on
the outbreak of war, and steamed to Constantinople
with two British battlecruisers in hot
pursuit. Goeben was handed over to the Turkish
Navy, and this was instrumental in bringing Turkey into the war on
the German side.
Goeben herself, renamed
Yavuz Sultan
Selim, saw engagements against the Russian Navy in the Black
Sea and against the British in the Aegean.
The original battlecruiser concept proved successful in December
1914 at the Battle of the Falkland Islands.
The British
battlecruisers Inflexible and Invincible
did precisely the job they were intended for when
they chased down and annihilated a German
cruiser
squadron, centered on the armoured cruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, along with three light
cruisers, commanded by Admiral Maximilian Graf Von Spee in the South
Atlantic Ocean. Prior to the battle the Australian
battlecruiser
HMAS
Australia had unsuccessfully searched for the German ships
in the Pacific.
Battle of Heligoland Bight
A force of British light cruisers and destroyers entered the
Heligoland Bight to attack German shipping in August 1914, the
first month of
World War I. When they
met opposition from German cruisers,
Admiral Beatty took his
squadron of four battlecruisers into the Bight and turned the
battle, ultimately sinking three German light cruisers and killing
a German commander, Rear Admiral
Leberecht Maass.
Battle of the Falklands
Battle of Dogger Bank
During the Battle of Dogger Bank, the after turret of the German
flagship
Seydlitz was pierced by a British 13.5 inch
shell from HMS
Lion which detonated in the working
chamber. The charges being hoisted upwards were detonated, and the
explosion flashed up into the turret and down into the magazine,
setting fire to charges in the process of being handled. The gun
crew tried to escape into the next turret, allowing the flash to
spread, destroying both turrets internally.
Seydlitz was
saved from near-certain destruction only by emergency flooding of
her after magazines. This near-disaster was due to the way that
ammunition handling was arranged and was common to both German and
British battleships and battlecruisers, but the lighter protection
on the latter made them more vulnerable to the turret or barbette
being pierced.
The "working chamber" had been introduced in
HMS
Formidable
(1898) and was intended to prevent such a dangerous
flash, but instead made such an event more likely. The
Germans learned from investigating the damaged
Seydlitz
and instituted improved measures to ensure ammunition handling was
flash tight. The British remained unaware of the weakness, to their
great misfortune at the Battle of Jutland.
Apart from the
cordite handling, the battle
was mostly inconclusive, though both
Lion and
Seydlitz were severely damaged. The British flagship
Lion's lost speed causing her to fall behind the rest of
the battleline and Admiral Beatty was unable to effectively command
for the remainder of the engagement. A British signalling error
allowed the German battlecruisers to withdraw, as most of Beatty's
squadron mistakenly concentrated on the crippled armoured cruiser
Blücher, sinking her with great loss of life.
Blücher herself was obsolete, out of all the ships in the
battle, and so she had proved to be a liability to the rest of the
German squadron, which was otherwise an all battlecruiser
squadron.
Battle of Jutland

Queen Mary blows up during the
Battle of Jutland
At the Battle of Jutland 18 months later, both British and German
battlecruisers were employed as fleet units. The British
battlecruisers became engaged with both their German counterparts,
the battlecruisers, and then German battleships before the arrival
of the battleships of the
British
Grand Fleet.
The result was a disaster for the Royal
Navy's battlecruiser squadrons: Invincible
, Queen Mary
and Indefatigable
exploded with the loss of all but a handful of their crews.
This was due to the vulnerability of the working chamber which the
Germans had discovered after the near-loss of
Seydlitz at
Dogger Bank and had taken preventative measures against. The
British ships not only had lighter armour but also lacked flash
tight ammunition handling arrangements, due in part to lack of
awareness and experience, and also as it would improve their rate
of fire to compensate for poor accuracy. Each was lost to a single
salvo penetrating the turret and detonating in the working chamber.
Beatty's flagship
Lion herself was almost lost in a
similar manner, save for the heroic actions of
Major Harvey.
The better armoured and flash-tight German battlecruisers fared
better, in part due to poor performance of British fuzes (their
shells exploded on impact with the ships armour instead of
penetrating the armour before exploding thus causing more damage).
Lützow for instance only
had 117 killed despite receiving more than thirty hits, though she
had sufficient flooding that she was scuttled. The other German
battlecruisers,
Moltke,
Von der Tann,
Seydlitz,
Derfflinger were all heavily
damaged and required extensive repairs after the battle,
Seydlitz barely making it home, for they had been in the
very centre of enemy fire for much of the battle. No British or
German battleship was sunk during the battle with the exception of
the old German
pre-dreadnought
Pommern, the victim of
torpedoes from British destroyers.
Post-war developments
In the years immediately after World War I, Britain, Japan and the
USA all began design work on a new generation of ever more powerful
battleships and battlecruisers. The new burst of shipbuilding which
each nation's navy desired was politically controversial and
potentially economically crippling. This nascent arms race was
prevented by the
Washington
Naval Treaty of 1922, where the major naval powers agreed to
limits on capital ship numbers. The German navy was not represented
at the talks; under the terms of the
Treaty of Versailles, Germany was not
allowed any modern capital ships at all.
Through the 1920s and early 1930s only Britain and Japan retained
battlecruisers, often modified and rebuilt from their original
World War I designs. The line between the battlecruiser and the
modern
fast battleship became
blurred; indeed, the Japanese
Kongō class were
formally redesignated as battleships.
1918–1923
HMS Hood, launched in 1918,
was the last First World War battlecruiser to be completed.
Hood was modified during construction to feature belt
armour that was thought to be capable of resisting her own weapons
- the classic measure of a "balanced" battleship - and her armour
weaknesses were recognized and tackled to some extent during
refits.
Hood was the largest ship in the Royal Navy when
completed; thanks to her great displacement, she seemed to combine
the firepower and armour of a battleship with the speed of a
battlecruiser, causing some to refer to her as a
fast battleship.
The navies of Japan and the USA, seeing a threat from
Hood, laid down battlecruisers to rival her. The
Imperial Japanese Navy began four
Amagi class battlecruisers. These vessels would have been
of unprecedented size and power, being as fast and well armoured as
HMS Hood whilst carrying a main battery of ten 16" guns -
the most powerful armament ever proposed for a battlecruiser. The
United States Navy responded with the
Lexington class
battlecruisers, which if completed as planned would have been
exceptionally fast and well armed, but would have carried armour
little better than that of the very first battlecruisers. The final
stage in the post-war battlecruiser race came with the British
response to the
Amagi and
Lexington types: four
48,000 ton
G3 battlecruisers,
vessels of comparable size, power and speed to the Second World War
Iowa class battleships.
The Washington Naval Treaty meant that none of these designs came
to fruition. Those ships which had been started were either broken
up on the slipway or converted into aircraft carriers.
In Japan,
Amagi and
Akagi were taken in
hand for conversion into
aircraft
carriers. In 1923 the
Amagi was damaged beyond repair
by an earthquake and was broken up on the slips, the hull of one of
the proposed
Tosa class battleships,
Kaga, being
converted in her stead.
In Britain, Fisher's "large light cruisers" were converted to
carriers.
Furious had already been
converted to an aircraft carrier during the war and Glorious and Courageous
, which had no place in the post-Treaty navy, were
similarly converted.
The
United States Navy also re-tasked
two battlecruiser hulls as aircraft carriers in the wake of the
Washington Treaty: USS Lexington
and Saratoga
were both designed as battlecruisers (the hull
designations were originally CC-1 and CC-3) but converted part-way
through construction, although this was only considered marginally
preferable to scrapping the hulls outright (the remaining four:
Constellation, Ranger, Constitution and
United States were indeed scrapped).
1924-35
_profile_drawing.png/350px-HMS_Repulse_(1919)_profile_drawing.png)
Repulse as she was in 1919
_profile_drawing.png/350px-HMS_Renown_(1939)_profile_drawing.png)
Renown, as reconstructed, in
1939
In total, nine battlecruisers survived the Washington Naval Treaty.
Most of these ships were significantly updated before
World War II, although the Royal Navy sold
HMS Tiger for scrap in 1932 on the grounds that she was
worn out, and in addition, the Turks did not have the means to
upgrade the
Sultan Yavuz Selim (ex
Goeben of the
Imperial German Navy).
The other two Royal Navy
World War I
battlecruisers retained, the
HMS
Renown and the
Repulse were modernized
significantly in a series of refits between 1920 and 1939. Like
several other elderly British capital ships, the
Renown
underwent a total reconstruction between 1937 and 1939 to make her
suitable for acting as a fast heavy escort warship for aircraft
carriers. Similar rebuildings planned for the
Repulse and
the
Hood were cancelled by the events of
World War II.
Unable to
pursue new construction, the Imperial Japanese Navy also chose to
improve its existing battlecruisers of the Kongō class
(the Hiei, the Haruna, the Kirishima, and the
Kongō
) by increasing the elevation of their guns to 40
degrees, adding anti-torpedo bulges and additional armour, and
building on a "pagoda" mast. The 3,800 tons of additional
armour slowed their speeds, but between 1933 and 1940, replacement
of heavy equipment and an increase in the length of the hull by
26 ft (8.0 m) allowed them to reach up to once again. They
were reclassified as "fast battleships" and their high speed made
them suitable as aircraft carrier escorts, although their armour
and guns still fell short compared to surviving World War I–era
battleships in the American or the British navies.
Re-armament
As war became more likely nations began to rebuild their forces. At
first lip-service was paid to the
Treaty of Versailles and the
Washington Naval Treaty, but as war
became more likely the designs became more ambitious. Most nations
preferred to build fast battleships but Germany, Italy, France and
Russia all designed new battlecruisers. Even so, most of these
vessels were considerably better protected than their First World
War counterparts and several were arguably genuine
fast battleships. Ultimately the Italians
chose to upgrade their old battleships rather than build new
battlecruisers, whereas the Russians laid down the 35,000 ton
Kronshtadt
Class, but were unable to launch them before the Germans invaded in
1941 and captured one of the hulls. The other Soviet ship was
launched and scrapped after the war. Only Germany and France
actually completed any vessels.
German designs
The
German pocket battleships
(German:Panzerschiffe - armoured ship: Deutschland, Admiral Scheer,
and Admiral Graf Spee
), built to meet the 10,000 ton displacement limit of the Treaty of Versailles, were another
attempt at a cruiser-battleship concept. The pocket
battleships, despite their name which implied a scaled-down
battleship, were relatively small vessels with only six
28.0 cm (11-inch) guns — essentially very large and powerfully
armed
heavy cruisers. However, by
international treaty, the maximum-size armament for a heavy cruiser
was 8.0 inches in bore. A cannon with an 11-inch bore has a
much-greater hitting-power and range.
Superficially, their distinctive battleship-like masts (especially
in the
Scheer and the
Graf Spee) and larger
scaled armament, compared to contemporary cruisers, earned them the
name "pocket battleships" by friend and foe alike. They attained
fairly high speeds of 26 knots (52 km/h), and reasonable
protection, while allegedly staying close to the displacement limit
by using welded rather than riveted construction, by carrying just
two main
turret, and by replacing the
normal
steam turbine power with a pair
of massive nine-cylinder
diesel
engines driving each propeller shaft (a reversion from turbine
to reciprocating engines). After the loss of the
Graf
Spee, the remaining two ships were reclassified as so-called
"
heavy cruisers", having heavier guns
and thicker armour than standard heavy cruisers, but at the cost of
speed (they in fact had basic cruiser armour, except for their
heavy turrets). When the "pocket battleships" were commissioned,
they were hypothetically outclassed by British
World War I-era true battlecruisers in speed,
weaponry, and protection, but the
Kriegsmarine supposedly hoped for a temporary
advantage. The pocket battleships also had the advantage of
superior cruising range, and being smaller, were harder to
hit.
Two more German heavy ships were built later in the 1930s, the
Scharnhorst and
the
Gneisenau, which
were considerably more powerful than pocket battleships - with nine
heavy guns rather than just six, and they were classified as true
capital ships. At 38,900 tons fully
loaded, they were somewhat larger than the French
Dunkerque class. The two ships of the
Gneisenau
class were fast and well armoured, though their armament was
relatively light-weight when compared with a
battleship, consisting of three triple
280 mm (11-inch) gun turrets. At the time, guns that were
305 mm (12 inches) or larger could only be produced at
the rate of one per year regarding treaty restrictions, and because
the Germans did not want to alarm the Allies, this led to the ships
being equipped with 28.0 cm guns. Their barbettes,
nonetheless, were designed to accept twin 380 mm
(15 inch) turrets (six guns total) when enough became
available.
However, circumstances and the fates of the
two ships - the Battle of North Cape
where the Scharnhorst was badly damaged by
shellfire and sunk by torpedo, and the Gneisenau, heavily
damaged by bombs and her repair sacrificed to higher priorities -
meant that this plan was abandoned. The Royal Navy
categorized them as battlecruisers since they followed the Imperial
German Navy design lineage of trading off gun-size for protection
and speed. The German Navy nonetheless categorised them as
battleships.
The follow-up to the Gneisenau
class was not a battlecruiser, but rather the Bismarck
and the Tirpitz
, each of which had an additional turret and was
armed with eight 38.0 cm guns installed at the onset, making
them fully fast
battleships.
French designs
As a response to the German pocket battleships the French decided
to build the
Dunkerque class in the
1930s. They were labelled "fast battleships", being considered
scaled down but still balanced versions of that type of ship, and
were armed with 330 mm (13 inch) guns arranged in two
quadruple turrets located forward. Considered to be true
capital ships, they were considerably larger,
faster and more powerfully armed than the German pocket battleships
they were designed to hunt. This last design illustrated inter-war
technological developments. The ultimate limit on ship speed was
drag from the water displaced (which increases as a cube of speed)
rather than weight, so heavier armour slowed
World War II battleships by only a couple of
knots (4 km/h) over their more lightly armoured brethren.
Heavy guns mounted on fast and well armoured
fast
battleships invalidated the concept of the battlecruiser as a
ship class in its own right.
World War II
Commerce raiding
In the
early years of the war the German ships each had a measure of
success hunting merchant ships in the Atlantic
. The pocket
battleships were deployed alone and sank a number of vessels,
causing disruption to the trade routes which supplied the UK
.
They were
pursued by the Royal Navy and on one
occasion, at the Battle of the River Plate
in 1939, the hunter became the hunted.
Admiral Graf Spee had been at sea at the start of World
War II and engaged in a successful commerce raiding spree. Off the
coast of South America,
Admiral Graf Spee encountered the
British heavy cruiser
Exeter and light cruisers
Achilles and
Ajax.
Admiral Graf Spee
inflicted heavy damage on
Exeter but in turn suffered
considerable topside damage from the light cruisers.
The pocket
battleship's armour mostly held, but she sustained several critical
hits which would have made the ship unseaworthy for returning to
Germany, and she was forced to retire to neutral Uruguay
. Unable to stay in port any longer without
internment, and led to believe by the nature of British radio
transmissions that aircraft carriers and gunned battlecruisers were
too close to evade, her captain elected to scuttle his ship, and
then accepted responsibility for its destruction by committing
suicide.
Allied battlecruisers such as
Renown,
Repulse,
Dunkerque and
Strasbourg were
employed on operations to hunt down the commerce raiding German
battlecruisers, but they rarely got close to their targets,
Renown enjoying a brief clash against the German 11-inch
battlecruisers, scoring three non-critical hits on
Gneisenau but being unable to keep up in bad weather.
The one
stand-up fight was when the Bismarck
was sent out as a raider and was intercepted by
HMS Hood and the battleship
Prince of Wales
in May 1941. However, the elderly British battlecruiser
was no match for the brand new German battleship and the
Bismarck's 15 inch shells caused a magazine explosion
in Hood reminiscent of the Battle of Jutland
. Only three men survived.
Gneisenau
and
Scharnhorst hunted
together and were initially successful at commerce raiding, sinking
the British
armed merchant
cruiser Rawalpindi in
1939. Following repairs from damage during the
Norwegian campaign, the two
battlecruisers set out commerce raiding once again in 1941 and sank
22 merchant ships.
They returned to Brest
in northern
France
but found
this port was vulnerable to Royal Air
Force attacks and were obliged to return to Germany
.
They did
so in the Channel Dash, a daring and
successful run up the English Channel
. However, they were both damaged by mines
and although
Scharnhorst was repaired,
Gneisenau
was damaged again in
RAF bombing
raids and was eventually disarmed and sunk as a blockship.
Scharnhorst was employed once more to attack commerce and
attempted to raid the
Arctic convoys in December
1943.
However, she was surprised by the battleship
HMS Duke of York with
the cruisers Jamaica,
Norfolk and Belfast
at the Battle of North Cape
and sunk on 26 December 1943. gunfire from
Duke of York crippled her turrets and engine room, then
the attendant British cruisers and destroyers closed in and
finished her off with torpedoes.
The use of battlecruisers as commerce raiders was curtailed
following an attack by the
Admiral
Scheer on a convoy guarded by the
HMS Jervis Bay, an
armed merchant cruiser. It persuaded
the British
Admiralty that convoys had to
be guarded by battleships or battlecruisers.
The older R-class
battleships and the un-upgraded Queen Elizabeths (Malaya and Barham
) were used for this task, for which they were quite
adequate despite their age, and subsequently the smaller German
ships were forced away from their quarry. Additionally, the
air gap over the North Atlantic closed,
Huff-Duff (radio triangulation equipment)
improved, airborne
centimetric radar was introduced
and convoys received
escort
carrier protection. The results of some of these developments
were illustrated by the successful defence of convoys at the
Battle of the Barents Sea
and the
Battle of the North
Cape.
Norwegian campaign
The
Royal Navy and the
Kriegsmarine both deployed battlecruisers
during the Norwegian campaign in April 1940. The
Gneisenau and the
Scharnhorst were
engaged by
HMS Renown in
appalling weather and although they had stronger armour than their
counterpart, the British ship could hit them harder and at a longer
range due to the German ships having difficulty with their radars.
They disengaged after
Gneisenau sustained damage. One of
Renown's 15-inch shells passed through Gneisenau's
director tower without exploding, severing electrical and
communication cables as it went. The debris caused by the passing
shell killed one officer and five enlisted men, and destroyed the
optical rangefinder for the forward 150 mm turrets. Main
battery fire control had to be shifted aft due to the loss of
electrical power to the director tower. The second shell from
Renown struck the aft turret of
Gneisenau,
knocking it out of action.
Later in the campaign they returned and sank the light aircraft
carrier
HMS Glorious (a
converted battlecruiser herself) and her destroyer escort. One of
the destroyers (
HMS
Acasta) succeeded in damaging the
Scharnhorst
with a torpedo, and later a submarine did the same to
Gneisenau, forcing both ships to spend several months in
repair.
The pocket
battleship Lützow was
similarly damaged by HMS Spearfish
during the campaign.
Mediterranean
The French battlecruisers had fled to North Africa following the
fall of France. In July 1940
Force H under Admiral
James Somerville was ordered to
force their surrender or destroy them.
The Dunkerque was damaged
by shells from HMS Hood at
Mers-el-Kebir
but escaped to join the Strasbourg at Toulon
. Both
ships were scuttled on 27 November 1942, although
Strasbourg was raised and used by the Italian navy before
being sunk again in an air attack on 18 August 1944.
Pacific War
The first
battlecruiser to see action in the Pacific War was Repulse when she was sunk near
Singapore
on December 10, 1941 whilst in company with
HMS Prince of
Wales. She had received a refit to give extra
anti-aircraft protection and extra armour between the wars. Unlike
her sister
Renown,
Repulse did not receive a full
rebuild as planned, which would have added
anti-torpedo blisters. During the
Sea Battle off
Malaya, her speed and agility enabled her to hold her own and
dodge nineteen torpedoes. However, without aerial cover she
eventually succumbed to the continuous waves of Japanese bombers,
and without enhanced underwater protection she went down quickly
after a few torpedo hits.
The Japanese
Kongō class battlecruisers were significantly
upgraded and re-rated as "fast battleships", and they were used
extensively as carrier escorts for most of their wartime career due
to their high speed. However their
World War
I-era armament was weaker and their upgraded armour scheme was
still not up to contemporary dreadnought standards.
During the Naval Battle
of Guadalcanal
on 12 November the
Hiei was sent out
to bombard US positions. She suffered extensive topside
damage from gunfire of US cruisers and destroyers, with her engine
room being penetrated at close range by an 8-inch shell from
San Francisco.
The next day, Hiei was attacked by
waves of aircraft from Guadalcanal’s American held airfield
(Henderson
Field
), which eventually made salvage impossible, and so
she was left to sink north of Savo Island
. A few days later on 15 November 1942,
Kirishima
engaged the U.S. battleships
South Dakota and
Washington, and was scuttled
following mortal damage from nine 16-inch hits inflicted by the
Washington, which disabled her turrets and holed her below
the waterline. In contrast
South Dakota survived 42 hits
(including only one 14-inch hit, but many 8-in. heavy cruiser
shells), all to her superstructure, and was back in operation four
months later.
The Kongō
survived the Battle of Leyte Gulf
, but she was sunk on 21 November 1944 in the
Formosa
Strait
by three torpedoes from the
U.S. Navy
submarine USS Sealion .
The Haruna was involved in
bombardment operations at Guadalcanal
, the Battle
of the Philippine Sea, and the Battle of Leyte Gulf
. She was attacked by American carrier
aircraft of
Task Force 38 and
USAAF B-24 Liberator
bombers while at
Kure IJN naval base
on 28 July 1945 and sank at her moorings.
Large Cruisers or "Cruiser Killers"
On the eve of
World War II, there was a
late renaissance in popularity of ships between battleships and
cruisers. While some considered them battlecruisers, they were
never classified as
capital ships, and
they were variously described as "super-cruisers," "large cruisers"
or even "unrestricted cruisers." They were optimised as
cruiser-killers, fleet scouts and commerce raiders. The Dutch,
Japanese, Soviets and Americans all planned new classes
specifically to counter the large heavy cruisers being built by
their naval rivals - especially the Japanese
Mogami class cruisers. The Germans
also designed a class of lightly protected battlecruisers.
The first such battlecruisers were the Dutch
Design 1047.
Never officially
assigned names, the Dutch wanted them to protect their colonies in
the East
Indies
in the face of Japanese aggression. Designed
with the assistance of the Germans and Italians, they broadly
resembled the German
Scharnhorst class and had the same
main battery, but would have been considerably lighter and only
protected against gunfire. Although the design was completed, work
on the vessels never commenced as the Germans overran the
Netherlands in May 1940, while the first ship would have been laid
down in June of that year.

Drawing of the
Alaska
class
The Germans planned to build three battlecruisers of the
O Class as part of the expansion of
the
Kriegsmarine (
Plan Z). With six 15 inch (38 cm) guns,
high speed, excellent range but very thin armour, they were
intended as commerce raiders. Only one of these was ordered shortly
before World War II broke out and no work was ever done on it. No
names were assigned, and they were known as
O,
P,
and
Q. The new class was not universally welcomed in the
Kriegsmarine, their abnormally light protection gaining the class
the derogatory nickname
Ohne Panzer Quatsch (without
armour nonsense) within certain circles of the Navy.
The only class of these late battlecruisers to be laid down were
the United States Navy's three
Alaska class "large cruisers",
Alaska,
Guam and
Hawaii - of which only
Alaska and
Guam were completed. The
Alaskas were classified as "large cruisers" instead of
battlecruisers, and their status as non-capital ships is evidenced
by the fact that they were named for territories or protectorates
(as opposed to battleships, which were named after states, or
cruisers, which were commonly named after cities). But with a main
armament of nine twelve-inch (305 mm) guns in three triple
turrets and a displacement of 27,000 tons, the
Alaskas
were twice the size of the preceding
Baltimore class cruisers
and had guns some 50% larger in diameter. However, they lacked the
thick armoured belt and torpedo defense system of true
capital ships and, unlike most battlecruisers,
they were considered a balanced design (according to cruiser
standards) as their protection could withstand fire from their own
caliber of gun, albeit only in a very narrow range band. They were
designed to hunt down Japanese
heavy
cruisers, though by the time they entered service most Japanese
cruisers had been sunk by American aircraft or submarines. Like the
contemporary
Iowa-class fast battleships,
their speed ultimately made them more useful as carrier escorts and
bombardment ships than as the sea combatants they were developed to
be.
Hawaii was 84% complete when hostilities ceased, and
was laid up for years while various plans were debated to convert
her large hull into a missile ship or a command vessel; she would
eventually be scrapped incomplete. Three additional hulls, to be
named
Philippines,
Puerto Rico and
Samoa, were cancelled outright.
The Japanese started designing the B64 class, which were similar to
the
Alaska but with guns. News of the
Alaskas led
them to upgrade the design, creating the B65. Armed with guns, the
B65's would have been the best armed of the new breed of
battlecruisers, but they still would have had only sufficient
protection to keep out 8-inch shells. Much like the Dutch
battlecruisers, the Japanese got as far as completing the design
for the B65s, but never laid them down. By the time the designs
were ready the Japanese Navy recognised that they had little use
for the vessels and that their priority for construction should lie
with aircraft carriers. Like the
Alaskas, the Japanese did
not call these ships battlecruisers, referring to them instead as
supersized
heavy cruisers.
Cold War designs
In spite
of the fact that World War II had
demonstrated battleships and battlecruisers to be generally
obsolete, Joseph Stalin's fondness for
big gun armed warships caused the Soviet Union
to plan several large cruiser classes in the late
1940s and early 1950s that would be a response for the
Alaska class vessels. In the Soviet Union
, they were called "heavy cruisers" (thyazholyi
kreyser).
The fruits of this program were the
project 82 cruisers, with
36,500 tons standard load (42,300 tons full load), 9 guns
305 mm and a speed of . Three ships were laid in 1951–52, but
after Stalin's death they were canceled in April 1953. Apart from
high costs, the main reason was that gun-armed ships became
obsolete with an advent of guided missiles. Only a central armoured
hull section of the first cruiser
Stalingrad was launched
in 1954 and then used as a target for rockets.

Admiral Lazarev, formerly the
Frunze, the second ship of her class of
battlecruiser
The Soviet
Kirov
class of
Tyazholyy Atomnyy Raketny Kreyser (Heavy
Nuclear-powered Missile Cruiser), displacing approximately 26,000
tons, is classified as a battlecruiser in the 1996–7 edition of
Jane's Fighting
Ships, even though in actuality they are very large
missile cruisers. Their classification as battlecruisers arises
from their displacement, which is roughly equal to that of a
World War I battleship, and the fact that they possess more
firepower than nearly every other surface ship.
However, the
Kirov-class lacks the heavy armour that distinguishes
battlecruisers from regular cruisers and they are classified as
"heavy missile cruisers" in Russia
.
There
were four members of the class completed, Kirov, Frunze
, Kalinin, and Yuri
Andropov
. As the ships were named after Communist
personalities, after the fall of the USSR they were given
traditional names of the Imperial Russian Navy, respectively
Admiral Ushakov,
Admiral Lazarev,
Admiral
Nakhimov, and
Petr Velikiy. Due to budget constraints
two members of this class have been decommissioned, although
Petr Velikiy and
Admiral Nakhimov are in active
service and funds are being gathered for possible repair of
Admiral Lazarev.
Nakhimov was returned to service
early, at the beginning of 2006, possibly due to increasing
tensions in the
Middle East and
potential Russian naval involvement therein.
Problems with the idea
In practice, battlecruisers rarely saw the type of independent
action for which they were designed. The increase in gunnery
technology was so swift in the years following 1905, that there was
a blurring of the distinction between the battleship and
battlecruiser. At Jutland the guns on
Beatty's flagship,
HMS Lion were 13.5-inch, which was
larger than most
German and many
British battleships.
The idea that battlecruisers did not have to be armored to resist
other battlecruisers' fire was wishful thinking. On paper, they
might be able to scout for the fleet without fear of enemy
cruisers, but it was extremely short-sighted to think they wouldn't
encounter other battlecruisers scouting for the enemy, and they
were not armored for that task. The armour on a battlecruiser
remained that of (or slightly more than) a normal cruiser and was
not capable of resisting fire from other battlecruisers. British
battlecruisers blew up under fire from other battlecruisers, not
from battleships. (Hiei was later crippled by 8" cruiser fire,
despite her modernization.) During Jutland, both British and German
battlecruisers scored hits on each other. The British ships came
off poorly, while the German ships fared better, due to better
internal protection and poor performance of the British shells, but
battlecruisers on both sides were sunk or heavily damaged.
Some have often cited the weaker armour on British battlecruisers,
compared to their German counterparts, as responsible for their
loss. The
Lion's
closest contemporary was perhaps the
Seydlitz. Both were similar in
displacement and speed. German battlecruisers did sacrifice gun
calibre for thicker armour but they were not significant such that
they made the difference in battle, since both
Lion and
Seydlitz had their magazine armour penetrated at some
point during their careers.
Rather, it was the cordite handling
procedures; the near destruction of the Seydlitz at the
Battle of
Dogger Bank
had convinced the Germans that they had to take
more precautions. After this battle, some of the British
battlecruiser force ships began to store too many cordite charges
outside the magazine, while leaving open the flash-protection
doors, in the pursuit of a tactical doctrine popular in the BCF
after Dogger Bank involving rapidity of fire. This practice of
taking "rate of fire" ideas to excess was not practiced in the
Grand Fleet.
During
World War II large-scale close
range fleet actions did not occur. Battlecruisers were paired with
battleships in roles such as raiding (German), convoy escort, or as
part of task forces. In operations where battlecruisers did fight
battleships, such as
Hood and
Bismarck,
Scharnhorst and
Duke of York,
Kirishima
and
Washington, the battlecruiser was destroyed by
gunfire. Like battleships, they were vulnerable to torpedoes, as
many
World War I designs lacked the
torpedo protection system developed for
World War II capital
ships, and during
World War II
Repulse and Kongo demonstrated this weakness.
See also
Notes
References
- Bonney, George The Battle of Jutland 1916 Sutton
Publishing, 2006. ISBN 978-0750941785
- Breyer, Siegfried Battleships and Battlecruisers of the
World 1905–1970 trans Alfred Kurti. Macdonal and Jane's,
London, 1973. ISBN 0-356-04191-3.
- Brooks, John, Dreadnought Gunnery and the Battle of
Jutland, The Question of Fire Control,Routledge, Abingdon,
2005.
- Burr, Lawrence British Battlecruisers 1914–1918 (New
Vanguard) Osprey Publishing, 2006. ISBN 978-1846030086
- Hough, Richard Dreadnought: A History of the Modern
Battleship MacMillan Publishing Company, 1975. ISBN
978-0025544208
- Ireland, Bernard, and Tony Gibbons Jane's Battleships of
the 20th Century New York: HarperCollins, 1996. ISBN
0-00-470997-7 Also covers battlecruisers
- Lambert, Nicholas. "Sir John Fisher's Naval Revolution"
(Studies in Maritime History). New Edition. (University of South
Carolina Press, 2002). ISBN 978-1570034923. An important account;
use with Sumida, below.
- Massie, Robert K, Dreadnought, Jonathan Cape, London,
1992.
- Mackay, Ruddock F. Fisher of Kilverstone. Oxford
University Press, London, 1973.
- Miller, David. The Illustrated Directory of Warships: from
1860 to the Present Day. London: Salamander, 2001 ISBN
0-86288-677-5
- Roberts, John Battlecruisers, Chatham Publishing,
London, 1997.
- Staff, Gary German Battlecruisers 1914-18 (New
Vanguard) Osprey Publishing, 2006. ISBN 978-1846030093
- Sondhaus, Lawrence Naval Warfare 1815–1914. Routledge,
London, 2001. ISBN 0-415-21478-5
- Sumida, Jon T. "In Defense of Naval Supremacy: Financial
Limitation, Technological Innovation and British Naval Policy,
1889–1914." (Routledge, 1993).
- Van Der Vat, Dan The ship that changed the world: The
Escape of the Goeben to the Dardanelles in 1914 Adler &
Adler, 1986.
External links