was the second and last vessel in the of armored corvettes in the early Imperial Japanese Navy. Kongō was named after the Mount Kongō
, in Nara Prefecture
and the name was subsequently used for the World War II battleship , as well as the s of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.
History
Kongō was designed by Edward James Reed and built at the Arles
shipyard at Hull
, United
Kingdom
. She arrived in
Yokosuka on
26
April 1878 after her shake-down cruise from
England.
With
heightened tensions between Japan and Joseon dynasty
Korea
after the
assassination of several members of the Japanese embassy,
Kongō was assigned to patrols of the Korean coast in the
summer of 1882. It again patrolled of Korea during the
instability following the
Gapsin Coup of
1884.
From
1889-1890, Kongō made several long distance navigational
training voyages, visiting Hawaii
seven times
during this period. From October 1890 to May 1891, together with
its sister ship , Kongō visited Istanbul
. Both
ships were on a good will mission to
Ottoman Empire, carrying the surviving crew
members of the frigate which sank off the coast of
Wakayama.
Kongō saw combat service in the
first Sino-Japanese war, at the
battles of
Lushunkou,
Weihaiwei and
Yalu River.
During the
Russo-Japanese War,
Kongō was based as a guard ship at Chikai
, in southern
Korea, and was subsequently relocated to Port Arthur
after that naval base had fallen to the
Japanese.
After the war,
Kongō was assigned to surveying duties
until
20 July 1909 when
she was stricken from the lists. It was sold for scrap and broken
up in 1910.
References
- Chesneau, Roger and Eugene M. Kolesnik (editors), All The
World's Fighting Ships 1860-1905, Conway Maritime Press, 1979
reprinted 2002, ISBN 0-85177-133-5
- Jentsura, Hansgeorg. Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy,
1869-1945. Naval Institute Press (1976). ISBN 087021893X
External links