.svg/200px-Flag_of_German_Empire_(jack_1903).svg)
Kaiserliche Marine Jack
1903–1919.

Kaiserliche Marine War Ensign
(
Reichskriegsflagge) 1903–1919.
The
Kaiserliche Marine or Imperial
Navy was the German Navy
created by the formation of the German Empire
. It existed between 1871 and 1919, growing
out of the
Prussian Navy and
Norddeutsche Bundesmarine.
Kaiser
Wilhelm II greatly expanded
the Navy, causing a naval arms race between the German Empire
and the British
Empire. The Navy grew to become one of the greatest
maritime forces in the world during its existence, second only to
that of the
Royal Navy.
The navy was largely
destroyed at Scapa Flow in 1919 by its own
officers
after the loss of the land war on the Western Front of World War I.
Ships of the Kaiserliche Marine were designated
SMS, for
Seiner Majestät Schiff (His Majesty's Ship).
Achievements

Dreadnoughts of the High Seas
Fleet
The Kaiserliche Marine achieved some important operational feats.
It inflicted the first major naval defeat on the
Royal Navy in over 100 years at the
Battle of Coronel.
It also emerged from
the fleet action of the Battle of Jutland
having destroyed more ships than it lost, although
the strategic value of both these
encounters was minimal.
It was the first navy to successfully operate
submarines on a large scale at war (375 submarines
had been commissioned by the end), and also operated
zeppelins.
It was never able to match the numbers of the
Royal Navy, but it did have better shells and propellant for much
of World War I, meaning that it never
lost a ship to a catastrophic magazine explosion from an
above-water attack (the old pre-dreadnought Pommern sank rapidly at Jutland
after a
magazine explosion caused by underwater attack).
1871 to 1888, Kaiser Wilhelm I

Coronation of Wilhelm I as emperor of
Germany
The
unification of Germany
under Prussian leadership was the defining point for the creation
of the Kaiserliche Marine in 1871. The newly created emperor,
Wilhelm I, as king of
Prussia, was head of state of the strongest state forming part of
the new empire. The Navy remained the same as that operated by the
empire's predecessor organisation in the unification of Germany,
the North German Federation, which itself in 1867 inherited the
navy of the Kingdom of Prussia. Article 53 of the new constitution
recognised the existence of the navy as an independent
organisation, but until 1888 it was commanded by army officersand
initially adopted the same regulations as the Prussian army.
Supreme command was vested in the emperor, but its first appointed
chief was General der Infanterie
Albrecht von Stosch.
Kiel
at the
Baltic
Sea
and Wilhelmshaven
at the North
Sea
served as primary naval bases. The Ministry
of Marine became the imperial admiralty on 1 February 1872, while
Stosch became formally an admiral in 1875. Initially the main task
of the new Imperial Navy was coastal protection, with France and
Russia as the most likely enemies. The navy's task was preventing
any invading army from landing, and protecting coastal towns from
possible bombardment.
In March 1872 a
Naval academy was
created at Kiel for training officers, followed in May by the
creation of the 'Machine Engineer Corps', and in February 1873 a
'Medical Corps'. In July 1879 a separate 'Torpedo Engineer Corps'
was created dealing with torpedoes and mines.
In May 1872 a ten year building program was instituted to modernise
the fleet. This called for 8 armoured frigates, 6 armoured
corvettes, 20 light corvettes, 7 monitors, 2 floating batteries, 6
avisos, 18 gunboats and 28 torpedo boats, at an estimated cost of
220 million
Goldmarks (GM). The
building plan had to be approved by the
Reichstag which controlled
allocation of funds, although one-quarter of the money came from
French war reparations.
In 1883 Stosch was replaced by another general,
Count Leo von Caprivi. At this point the
navy had 7 armoured frigates and four armoured corvettes, 400
officers and 5,000 ratings. The objectives of coastal defence
remained largely unchanged, but there was a new emphasis on
development of the torpedo, which offered the possibility of
relatively small ships successfully attacking much larger ones. In
October 1887 the first torpedo division was created at
Wilhelmshaven and the second torpedo division based at Kiel. In
1887 Caprivi requested the construction of ten armoured frigates.
Greater importance was placed at this time on development of the
army, which was expected to be more important in any war.
However,
the Kiel
Canal
was commenced in June 1887, which connected the
North Sea with the Baltic through the Jutland peninsula, allowing
German ships to travel between the two seas avoiding waters
controlled by other countries. This shortened the journey
for commercial ships, but specifically united the two areas
principally of concern to the German navy, at a cost of 150 million
GM.
Later, the protection of German maritime trade routes became
important. This soon involved the setting up of some overseas
supply stations, and in the 1880s the Imperial Navy played a part
in helping to secure the establishment of
German colonies and protectorates in
Africa, Asia and Oceania.
1888 to 1897, Kaiser Wilhelm II
In June 1888
Wilhelm II became Emperor
after the death of his father
Frederick III, who ruled for
only 99 days. He started his reign with the intention of doing for
the navy what his grandfather Wilhelm I had done for the army. The
creation of a maritime empire to rival the
British and
French empires became an ambition to
mark Germany as a truly global
great
power. Wilhelm became Grand Admiral of the German navy, but
also was bestowed titles from all over Europe, becoming admiral in
the British, Russian, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian and Greek navies.
On one occasion he wore the uniform of a British admiral to receive
the visiting British ambassador. At this time the navy had 534
officers and 15,480 men.
The concept of expanding naval power, inevitably at the cost of not
expanding other forces, was opposed by the three successive heads
of the German armed forces,
Waldersee,
Schlieffen and
Moltke between 1888 and 1914.
It would also have been more widely opposed, had the Kaiser's
intentions been widely known. Instead, he proceeded with a plan to
expand the navy slowly, justifying enlargement step by step.
In July 1888 Wilhelm II appointed Vice-Admiral
Alexander von Monts as head of the
admiralty. Monts oversaw the design of the
Brandenburg class
battleship, four of which were constructed by 1894 at a cost of 16
million GM each and displacement of 10,000 tons.
In 1889 Wilhelm II reorganised top level control of the navy by
creating a
Navy
Cabinet equivalent to the
German Imperial Military
Cabinet which had previously functioned in the same capacity
for both the army and navy. The Head of the navy cabinet was
responsible for promotions, appointments, administration and
issuing orders to naval forces. Captain
Gustav von Senden-Bibran was
appointed as its first head and remained so until 1906, when he was
replaced by the long-serving Admiral
Georg Alexander von Müller.
The existing Imperial admiralty was abolished and its
responsibilities divided between two organisations. A new position
(equivalent to the supreme commander of the army) was created,
chief of the high command of the admiralty (
Oberkommando der Marine), being
responsible for ship deployments, strategy and tactics. Vice
admiral
Max von der Goltz was
appointed in 1889 and remained in post until 1895. Construction and
maintenance of ships and obtaining supplies was the responsibility
of the State Secretary of the Imperial Navy Office (
Reichsmarineamt), responsible to the
chancellor and advising the Reichstag on naval matters. The first
appointee was Rear Admiral
Karl
Eduard Heusner, followed shortly by Rear Admiral
Friedrich von Hollmann from 1890 to
1897. Each of these three heads of department reported separately
to Wilhelm II.

German sailor c.1890
In 1895 funding was agreed for five battleships of the
Kaiser Friedrich
III class, completed by 1902. The ships were innovative
for their time, introducing a complex system of watertight
compartments and storing coal along the sides of the ship to help
absorb explosions. However, the ships went against the trend for
increasingly larger main guns, having smaller diameter guns than
the
Brandenburg design, but with a quick-loading design
and more powerful secondary armaments. Costs rose to 21 million GM
each, as had size to 11,500 tons.
In 1892 Germany had launched the protected cruiser
Kaiserin Augusta, the first
navy ship to have triple propellers. She was succeeded by five
Victoria
Louise class protected
cruisers, the last 'protected', as distinct from 'armoured'
cruiser class constructed by Germany. The ships, completed between
1898 and 1900, had deck armour but not side armour and were
intended for overseas duties. Shortages of funding meant it was not
possible to create several designs of cruisers specialised for long
range work, or more heavily armoured for fleet work. Work commenced
on an armoured cruiser design,
Fürst Bismarck
started in 1896 and commissioned in 1900.
1897-1906 Tirpitz and the Navy Bills
On 18 June 1897 Rear-Admiral
Alfred
von Tirpitz was appointed State Secretary of the Navy, where he
remained for nineteen years. Tirpitz advocated the cause of an
expanded navy necessary for Germany to defend her territories
abroad. He had great success in persuading parliament to pass
successive
Navy bills authorising
expansions of the fleet. German foreign policy as espoused by
Otto von Bismarck had been to
deflect the interest of great powers abroad while Germany
consolidated her integration and military strength. Now Germany was
to compete with the rest. Tirpitz started with a publicity campaign
aimed at popularising the navy. He created popular magazines about
the navy, arranged for
Alfred Thayer
Mahan's
The Influence of Sea Power upon History, which
argued the importance of naval forces, to be translated into German
and serialised in newspapers, arranged rallies in support and
invited politicians and industrialists to naval reviews. Various
pressure groups were formed to lobby politicians and spread
publicity. One such organisation, the
navy league or
Flottenverein,
was organized by principals in the steel industry (
Alfred Krupp), ship yards and banks, gaining
more than one million members. Political parties were offered
concessions, such as taxes on imported grain, in exchange for their
support for naval bills.
On 10 April 1898 the first Navy Bill was passed by the Reichstag.
It authorised the maintenance of a fleet of 19 battleships, 8
armoured cruisers, 12 large cruisers and 30 light cruisers to be
constructed by 1 April 1904. Existing ships were counted in the
total, but the bill provided for ships to be replaced every 25
years on an indefinite basis. Five million GM annually was
allocated to run the navy, with a total budget of 408 million GM
for shipbuilding. This would bring the German fleet to a strength
where it could contemplate challenging France or Russia, but would
remain clearly inferior to the world's largest fleet, the
Royal Navy.
Following the
Boxer rebellion in
China and the
Boer War, a second navy bill
was passed on 14 June 1900. This approximately doubled the
allocated number of ships to 38 battleships, 20 armoured cruisers,
38 light cruisers. Significantly, the bill set no overall cost
limit for the building program. Expenditure for the navy was too
great to be met from taxation: the Reichstag had limited powers to
extend taxation without entering into negotiations with the
constituent German states, and this was considered politically
unviable. Instead, the bill was financed by massive loans. Tirpitz,
in 1899 was already exploring the possibilities for extending the
battleship total to 45, a target which rose to 48 by 1909.
_auf_der_SMS_)
180px-Bundesarchiv_Bild_134-B2651,_Kaiser_Wilhelm_II._(m.)_auf_der_SMS_"Geier".jpg"
style='width:180px' alt="" />
Kaiser Wilhelm onboard light cruiser SMS 'Geier in 1894
Tirpitz’s ultimate goal was a fleet superior to that of Britain.
As British
public opinion was turned against Germany, "[Admiral Sir John] Fisher, twice – in 1904 and
1908 – proposed using Britain’s current naval superiority to
'Copenhagen
' the German fleet, that is, to launch preemptive
strikes against the Kiel and Wilhelmshaven naval bases as the Royal
Navy had done against the Danish navy in 1801 and 1807."
Tirpitz argued that if the fleet could achieve two-thirds the
number of capital ships possessed by Britain then it stood a chance
of winning in a conflict. Britain had to maintain a fleet
throughout the world and consider other naval powers, whereas the
German fleet could be concentrated in German waters. Attempts were
made to play down the perceived threat to Britain, but once the
German fleet reached the position of equalling the other
second-rank navies, it became impossible to avoid mention of the
one great fleet it was intended to challenge. Tirpitz hoped that
other second-rank powers might ally with Germany, attracted by its
navy. The policy of commencing what amounted to a naval
arms race did not properly consider how Britain
might respond. British policy stated in the Naval Defence Act of
1889 was to maintain a navy superior to Britain's two largest
rivals combined. The British Admiralty estimated that the German
navy would be the world's second largest by 1906.
Major reforms of the British fleet were undertaken, particularly by
Admiral
Jackie Fisher as
First Sea Lord from 1904 to 1909. 154 older
ships, including 17 battleships, were scrapped to make way for
newer vessels. Reforms in training and gunnery were introduced to
make good perceived deficiencies, which in part Tirpitz had counted
upon to provide his ships with a margin of superiority. More
capital ships were stationed in British home waters.
A treaty with Japan in 1902 meant
that ships could be withdrawn from East Asia, while the
Entente with France in
1904 meant that Britain could concentrate on guarding Channel
waters,
including the French coast, while France would protect British
interests in the Mediterranean
. In 1906 it was considered that Britain's
only likely naval enemy was Germany.
Five battleships of the
Wittelsbach class,
were constructed from 1899 to 1904 at a cost of 22 million GM per
ship. Five ships of the
Braunschweig class
were built between 1901 and 1906 for the slightly greater 24
million GM each. Technological improvements meant that rapid fire
guns could be made larger, so the
Braunschweig class had a
main armament of 28 cm guns. Due to torpedo improvements in
range and accuracy, emphasis was placed on a secondary armament of
smaller guns to defend against them. The five
Deutschland class
battleships constructed between 1903 and 1908 had similar armament
as the
Braunschweig class, but heavier armour, for the
slightly greater sum of 24.5 million GM each.
Development of armoured cruisers also continued.
Fürst
Bismarck s design was improved upon in the subsequent
Prinz Heinrich, completed in
1902. Two ships of the
Prinz Adalbert class
armored cruiser were commissioned in 1904, followed by two
similar
Roon class armored
cruiser commissioned in 1905 and 1906, at costs around 17
million GM each.
Scharnhorst and
Gneisenau followed, between 1904 and
1908, and cost an estimated for 20.3 million GM. Main armament was
eight 21 cm guns, but with six 15 cm and eighteen
9 cm guns for smaller targets. Eight
Bremen class
light cruisers were constructed between 1902 and 1907, developed
from the earlier
Gazelle class. The ships had ten
10.5 cm guns and were named after German towns. SMS
Lübeck was the first German cruiser to be fitted with
turbine engines, which were also trialled in torpedo boat
S-125. Turbines were faster, quieter, lighter, more
reliable and more fuel efficient at high speeds. The first British
experimental design (the destroyer HMS
Velox) had been
constructed in 1901 and as a result Tirpitz had set up a special
commission to develop turbines. No reliable German design was
available by 1903, so British Parsons turbines were
purchased.
Command reorganisation
In 1899, the High command of the Navy was replaced by an admiralty
staff
Admiralstab
responsible for planning, the training of officers and naval
intelligence. In time of war it was to assume overall command, but
in peace acted only advisorily. Direct control of various elements
of the fleet was subordinated to officers commanding those
elements, accountable to the Kaiser.
The reorganisations suited the Kaiser who wanted to maintain direct
control of his ships. A disadvantage was that it split apart the
integrated military command structure which before had balanced the
importance of the navy within overall defence considerations. It
suited
Alfred von Tirpitz,
because it removed the influence of the admiralty staff from naval
planning, but left him the possibility, in wartime, to reorganise
command around himself. Wilhelm II, however, never agreed to
relinquish direct control of his fleet.
1906-1908, The Dreadnought and innovation: First
Novelle

HMS Dreadnought: Standardised main
armament
On 3 December 1906 the Royal Navy received a new battleship,
HMS Dreadnought. She
became famous as the first of a new concept in battleship design,
using all big gun, single calibre armament. She used turbine
propulsion for greater speed and less space required by the
machinery, and guns arranged so that three times as many could be
brought to bear when firing ahead, and twice as many when firing
broadside. The design was not a uniquely British concept as similar
ships where being built around the world, nor was it uniquely
intended as a counter to German naval expansion, but the effect was
to immediately require Germany to reconsider its naval building
program. The battleship design was complemented by the introduction
of a variant with lighter armour and greater speed, which became
the battlecruiser.
The revolution in design, together with improvements in personnel
and training severely brought into question the German assumption
that a fleet of two-thirds the size of the Royal Navy would at
least stand a chance in an engagement. By 1906 Germany was already
spending 60% of revenue upon the army. Either an enormous sum now
had to be found to develop the navy further, or naval expansion had
to be abandoned. The decision to continue was taken by Tirpitz in
September 1905 and agreed by Chancellor
Bernhard von Bülow and the Kaiser,
while
Dreadnought was still at the planning stage. The
larger ships would naturally be more expensive, but also would
require enlargement of harbours, locks and the Kiel canal, all of
which would be enormously expensive. Estimated cost for new
dreadnoughts was placed at 36.5 million GM for 19,000 ton
displacement ships (larger than
Dreadnought at 17,900
tons), and 27.5 million GM for battlecruisers. 60 million GM was
allocated for dredging the canal. The Reichstag was persuaded to
agree to the program and passed a
Novelle amending the
navy bills and allocating 940 million GM for a dreadnought program
and the necessary infrastructure. Two dreadnoughts and one
battlecruiser were to be built each year.

Nassau class battleship: centre side
turrets could not fire across the ship
Construction of four
Nassau class battleships
began in 1907 with the greatest possible secrecy. Chief German
naval designer was Hans Bürkner. A principle was introduced that
the thickness of side armour on a ship would equal the calibre of
the large guns, while ships were increasingly divided internally
into watertight compartments to make them more resistant to
flooding when damaged. The design was hampered by the necessity to
use reciprocating engines instead of the smaller turbines, since no
sufficiently powerful design was available and acceptable to the
German navy. Turrets could not be placed above the centre of the
ship and instead had to be placed at the side, meaning two of the
six turrets would always be on the wrong side of the ship when
firing broadsides. Main armament was twelve 28 cm guns. The
ships were all completed by 1910, over budget, averaging 37.4
million GM each. In 1910 they were transferred from Kiel to
Wilhelmshaven, where two new large docks had been completed and
more were under construction.
The first German battlecruiser— —was commenced March 1908. Two
Parsons turbines were used, improving speed to 27 knots and
reducing weight. Four twin turrets mounted 28 cm guns;
although the two centre turrets were still placed one either side
of the ship, they were offset so could now fire either side. The
design was considered a success, but the cost at 35.5 million GM
was significantly above the 1906 allocation. Light cruiser
development continued with the
Dresden class light
cruisers, which were to become famous for their actions in the
start of World War I in the pacific. The ships were 3,300 tons, and
armed with ten 10.5 cm rapid fire guns and a speed around 24
knots.
Dresden cost 7.5 million GM, and
Emden 6
million GM. Four
Kolberg class cruiser were produced
between 1907 and 1911 at 4,400 tons and around 8 million GM each.
These had turbines, twelve 10.5 cm guns as main armament, but
were also equipped to carry and lay 100 mines. From 1907 onward,
all torpedo boats were constructed using turbine engines.
Despite their ultimate importance, the German navy declined to take
up the cause of another experiment, the submarine, until 1904. The
first submarine,
U-1 was
delivered in December 1906, built by Krupp's Germania yard in Kiel.
The first submarine had 238 ton displacement on the surface and 283
tons submerged. The paraffin engine developed 10 knots on the
surface with a range of 1500 sm. Submerged, the ship could manage
50sm at 5 knots using battery electric propulsion. The ships
followed a design by
Laubeuf first used
successfully in 1897, having a double hull and flotation tanks
around the outside of the main crew compartments. The submarine had
just one torpedo tube at the front and a total of three torpedoes.
The early engines were noisy and smokey, so that a considerable
boost to the usefulness of the submarine came with the introduction
of quieter and cleaner diesel engines in 1910, which were much more
difficult for an enemy to detect.
1908-1912, Second Novelle
German expenditure on ships was steadily rising. In 1907, 290
million GM was spent on the fleet, rising to 347 million GM or 24%
of the national budget in 1908, with a predicted budget deficit of
500 million GM. By the outbreak of World War I, one billion GM had
been added to Germany's national debt because of naval
expenditures. While each German ship was more expensive than the
last, the British managed to reduce the cost of the succeeding
generations of
Bellerophon and
St.Vincent
class battleships. Successive British battlecruisers were more
expensive, but less so than their German equivalents. Overall,
German ships were some 30% more expensive than the British. This
all contributed to growing opposition in the Reichstag to any
further expansion, particularly when it was clear that Britain
intended to match and exceed any German expansion program. In the
fleet itself, complaints were beginning to be made in 1908 about
underfunding and shortages of crews for the new ships. The State
Secretary of the Treasury,
Hermann
von Stengel, resigned because he could see no way to resolve
the budget deficit.
The elections of 1907 had returned a Reichstag more favourable to
military exploits, following the refusal of the previous parliament
to grant funds to suppress uprisings in colonies in South West
Africa. Despite the difficulties, Tirpitz persuaded the Reichstag
to pass a further
Novelle in March 1908. This reduced the
service life for ships from 25 years to 20 years, allowing for
faster modernisation, and increased the building rate to four
capital ships per year. Tirpitz' target was a fleet of 16
battleships and 5 battlecruisers by 1914, and 38 battleships and 20
battlecruisers by 1920. There were also to be 38 light cruisers,
and 144 torpedo boats. The bill contained a restriction, that
building would fall to two ships per year in 1912, but Tirpitz was
confident of changing this at a later date. He anticipated that
German industry, now heavily involved in shipbuilding, would back a
campaign to maintain a higher construction rate.
Four battleships of the
Helgoland class were
laid down in 1909-1910, with displacements of 22,800 tons, twelve
30.5 cm guns in 6 turrets, reciprocating engines generating a
maximum speed of 21 knots, and a price tag of 46 million GM. Again,
the turret configuration was dictated by the need to use the centre
of the ship for machinery, despite the disadvantage of the turret
layout. The ships were now equipped with 50 cm
torpedoes.
The
Kaiser class
battleships built between 1909 and 1913 introduced a change in
design as turbine engines were finally approved. The ships had ten
30.5 cm guns, losing two of the center side turrets but
gaining an additional turret astern on the centre line. As with the
Von der Tann design, which was drawn up at a similar time,
all guns could be fired either side in broadsides, meaning more
guns could come to bear than with the
Helgoland design,
despite having fewer in total. Five ships were constructed rather
than the usual four, one to act as a fleet flagship. One ship, the
Prinzregent
Luitpold, was equipped with only two turbines rather than
three, with the intention of having an additional diesel engine for
cruising, but the Howaldt engine could not be developed in time.
Luitpold had a top speed of 20 knots as a result, compared
to 22 knots for the other ships. The ships were larger than the
preceding class at 24,700 tons, but cheaper at 45 million GM. They
formed part of the third squadron of the High Seas Fleet as it was
constituted for World War I.
Between 1908 and 1912 two
Moltke class
battlecruisers were constructed, adding an extra turret on the
centre line astern, raised above the aft turret, but still using
28 cm guns. became part of the High Seas Fleet, but became
part of the Mediterranean squadron and spent World War I as part of
the Turkish navy. The ships cost 42.6 and 41.6 million GM, with
maximum speed of 28 knots. was constructed as a slightly enlarged
version of the
Moltke design, reaching a maximum speed of
29 knots. All cruisers were equipped with turbine engines from 1908
onwards. Between 1910 and 1912 four
Magdeburg class light
cruisers were constructed of 4,600 tons, at around 7.4 million GM
each. The ships were fitted with oil burners to improve the
effectiveness of their main coal fueling. These were followed by
the similar but slightly enlarged and marginally faster
Karlsruhe and
Graudenz
classes.
In 1907 a
naval artillery school was established at Sonderburg
(north of Kiel). This aimed to address the
difficulties with the new generation of guns, which with
potentially greater range required aiming devices capable of
directing them at targets at those extreme ranges. By 1914,
experiments were being conducted with guns in increasing sizes up
to 51 cm. Capital ships were fitted with spotting tops high up
on masts with range finding equipment, while ship design was
altered to place turrets on the centre line of the ship for
improved accuracy.
The four
König
class battleships were commenced between October 1911 and May
1912 and entered service in 1914 at a cost of 45 million GM,
forming the other part of the Third Squadron of the High Seas
Fleet. They were 28,500 tons, with a maximum speed of twenty one
knots from three triple stage Brown-Boverie-Parsons turbines. Main
armament was five double turrets housing twin 30.5 cm guns,
arranged with two turrets fore and aft and one in the centre of the
ship. The second turret either end was raised higher than the outer
so that it could fire over the top (superfiring). As with
Prinzregent Luitpold, the ships were originally intended
to have one diesel engine for cruising, but these were never
developed and turbines were fitted instead. The ships were equipped
with torpedo nets, trailed along the hull intended to stop
torpedoes, but these reduced maximum speed to an impractical 8
knots and were later removed.
Construction began in 1910 of the first submarine powered by twin
diesel engines. U-19 was twice the size of the first German
submarine, had five times the range at 7,600 sm cruising at 8
knots, or 15 knots maximum. There were now two bow and two stern
torpedo tubes, with six torpedoes carried. The ships were designed
to operate at a depth of 50m, though could go to 80m.
1912-1914, Third Novelle
Chancellor Bethmann-Hollweg, argued for a guaranteed proportion of
military expenditure for the army
Spending on the navy increased inexorably year by year. In 1909
Chancellor Bernhard von Bülow and Treasury Secretary Reinhold von
Sydow attempted to pass a new budget boosting taxes in an attempt
to reduce the deficit. The Social Democratic parties refused to
accept the increased taxes on goods, while the conservatives
opposed increases in inheritance taxes. Bülow and Sydow resigned in
defeat and
Theobald von
Bethmann-Hollweg became Chancellor. His attempted solution was
to initiate negotiations with Britain for an agreed slow down in
naval building. Negotiations came to nothing when in 1911 the
Agadir Crisis brought France and
Germany into conflict.
Germany attempted to 'persuade' France to
cede territory in the Middle Congo
in return for giving France a free hand in
Morocco. The effect was to raise concerns in Britain over
Germany's expansionist aims, and encouraged Britain to form a
closer relationship with France, including naval cooperation.
Tirpitz saw this once again as an opportunity to press for naval
expansion and the continuation of the four capital ships per year
building rate into 1912. The January 1912 elections brought a
Reichstag where the Social Democrats, opposed to military
expansion, became the largest party.
The German army, mindful of the steadily increasing proportion of
spending going to the navy, demanded an increase of 136,000 men to
bring its size closer to that of France. In February 1912 the
British war minister,
Viscount
Haldane, came to Berlin to discuss possible limits to naval
expansion. Meanwhile in Britain, First Lord of the Admiralty
Winston Churchill made a speech describing the German navy as a
'luxury', which was considered an insult when reported in Germany.
The talks came to nothing, ending in recriminations over who had
offered what. Bethmann-Hollweg argued for a guaranteed proportion
of expenditure for the army, but failed when army officers refused
to support him publicly. Tirpitz argued for six new capital ships,
and got three, together with 15,000 additional sailors in a new
combined military budget passed in April 1912. The new ships,
together with the existing reserve flagship and four reserve
battleships were to become one new squadron for the High Seas
Fleet. In all the fleet would have five squadrons of eight
battleships, twelve large cruisers and thirty small, plus
additional cruisers for overseas duties. Tirpitz intended that with
the rolling program of replacements, the existing coastal defence
squadron of old ships would become a sixth fleet squadron, while
the eight existing battlecruisers would be joined by eight more as
replacements for the large cruisers presently in the overseas
squadrons. The plan envisaged a main fleet of 100,000 men, 49
battleships and 28 battlecruisers by 1920. The Kaiser commented of
the British, "... we have them up against the wall."
Although Tirpitz had succeeded in getting more ships, the
proportion of military expenditure on the navy declined in 1912 and
thereafter, from 35% in 1911 to 33% in 1912 and 25% in 1913. This
reflected a change in attitude amongst military planners that a
land war in Europe was increasingly likely, and a turning away from
Tirpitz's scheme for worldwide expansion using the navy. In 1912
General von Moltke commented, "I consider war to be unavoidable,
and the sooner the better." The Kaiser's younger brother, Admiral
Prince Heinrich of
Prussia, considered that the cost of the navy was now too
great. In Britain, Churchill announced an intention to build two
capital ships for every one constructed by Germany, and reorganised
the fleet to move battleships from the Mediterranean to channel
waters. A policy was introduced of promoting British naval officers
by merit and ability rather than time served, which saw rapid
promotions for
Jellicoe and
Beatty, both of whom had
important roles in the forthcoming World War I. By 1913 the French
and British had plans in place for joint naval action against
Germany, and France moved its Atlantic fleet from Brest to Toulon,
replacing British ships.
Britain also escalated the arms race by expanding the capabilities
of its new battleships. The 1912
Queen Elizabeth class of
32,000 tons would have 15 inch guns and be completely oil
fueled, allowing a speed of 25 knots. For 1912-13 Germany
concentrated on battlecruisers, with three
Derfflinger class ships of
27,000 tons and 26-27 knots maximum speed, costing 56-59 million GM
each. These had four turrets mounting two 30.5 cm guns
arranged in two turrets either end, with the inner turret able to
fire over the outer. Derflinger was the first German ship to have
anti-aircraft guns fitted.
In 1913, Germany responded to the British challenge laying down two
Bayern class
battleships.
These did not enter service until after the
Battle of
Jutland
, so failed to take part in any major naval action
of the war. They had displacement of 28,600 tons, a crew of
1100 and a speed of 22 knots, costing 50 million GM. Guns were
arranged in the same pattern as the preceding battlecruisers, but
were now increased to 38 cm diameter. The ships had four
8.8 cm anti-aircraft and also sixteen 15 cm lighter guns,
but was coal fueled. It was considered that coal bunkers at the
sides of the ship added to protection against penetrating shells,
but Germany also did not have a reliable supply of fuel oil. Two
more ships of the class were later laid down, but never
completed.
Three light cruisers commenced construction in German yards in
1912-1913 ordered by the Russian Navy, costing around 9 million GM.
The ships were seized at the outbreak of World War I becoming
SMS Regensburg,
SMS Pillau and
SMS Elbing. Two larger cruisers,
SMS Wiesbaden and
SMS Frankfurt were also commenced and
entered service in 1915. More torpedo boats were constructed, with
gradually increasing sizes having reached 800 tons for the V-25 to
V-30 craft constructed by Vulcan in Kiel before 1914. In 1912
Germany created a Mediterranean squadron consisting of the
battlecruiser
Goeben and light cruiser
Breslau.
Air Power
Naval trials of balloons began in 1891, but the results were
unsatisfactory and none were purchased by the navy. In 1895 Count
Ferdinand von Zeppelin
attempted to interest both the army and navy in his new dirigibles,
but without success. The dirigibles were considered too slow and
there were concerns with their reliability operating over water. In
1909 the navy rejected proposals for aircraft to be launched from
ships, and again in 1910 declined Zeppelin's dirigibles. Finally in
1911, trials with aircraft began and in 1912 Tirpitz agreed to
purchase the first dirigible for naval reconnaissance at a cost of
850,000 GM.
The machine had insufficient range (1440 km) to operate over
Britain, but had machine guns for use against aircraft and
experimental 80 kg bombs. The following year ten more were
purchased and a new naval air division was created at Johannisthal,
near Berlin. However, in September 1913 L1 was destroyed in a
storm, while the following month L2 was lost in a gas explosion.
Orders for the undelivered machines were cancelled, leaving the
navy with one machine, the L3.
In 1910 Prince Heinrich learnt to fly and supported the cause of
naval aviation. In 1911 experiments took place with Albatros
seaplanes and in 1912 Tirpitz authorised 200,000 GM for seaplane
trials. The Curtiss seaplane was adopted. By 1913 there were four
planes, now including a British Sopwith and long term plans to
create six naval airstations by 1918. By 1914 there were twelve
seaplanes and one land plane and an 8.5 million GM budget. Trials
in 1914 using sea planes operating with the fleet were less than
impressive, when out of four taking part one crashed, one was
unable to take off and only one succeeded in all tasks. The most
successful plane had been the British design, and indeed
experiments in Britain had been proceeding with the support of
Winston Churchill, including converting initially ferries and
liners into aircraft tenders and aircraft carriers.
World War I
By the start of World War I, the Kaiserliche Marine possessed 22
pre-Dreadnoughts, 19 dreadnought battleships and 7
battlecruisers.
Admiral von Tirpitz became the commander of the Navy. The main
fighting
forces
of the navy were to become the
High Seas
Fleet, and the
U-boat fleet. Smaller
fleets were deployed to the German overseas protectorates, the most
prominent being assigned to the
East Asia Station at
Tsingtao.
World War I engagements
Notable battles fought by the Navy were:
Notable minor battles:
Minor engagements included the
commerce
raiding carried out by the , , and the sailing ship and
commerce raider .
The Imperial Navy carried out land operations, eg operating the
long-range
Paris Gun which was based on a
naval gun. The
Siege of Tsingtao
used naval troops as Tsingtao was a naval base, and also as the
Imperial Navy was directly under the Imperial Government (the
German Army was made up
of regiments from the various states).
Marines
The
Marines were referred to as Seebatallione [sea battalions] they
served in the Prussian navy, the navy of the
North German
Confederation
, the Imperial German Navy and briefly in the modern
Federal German Navy, the
Bundesmarine.
Navy Aviation
The
German Navy purchased 14 Zeppelins and
labeled them L 1/2/... and the main use of the airships was in
reconnaissance over the North
Sea
and the Baltic
, where the
endurance of the craft led German warships to a number of Allied
vessels. Zeppelin patrolling had priority over any other
airship activity. During the entire war around 1,200 scouting
flights were made. During 1915 the German Navy had some 15
Zeppelins in commission and was able to have two or more patrolling
continuously at any one time, almost regardless of weather. They
kept the British ships from approaching Germany, spotted when and
where the British were laying sea-mines, and later aided in the
destruction of those mines. Zeppelins would sometimes land on the
sea surface next to a minesweeper, bring aboard an officer and show
him the lay of the mines. Before the widespread availability of
incendiary ammunition made
commerce raiding too risky, they
would also land or hover close to a merchant ship suspected of
carrying contraband, order all ship's hands to leave in boats, then
inspect the ship, and either destroy it or take it back to Germany
as
prize.
The Naval and Army Air Services also directed a number of strategic
raids against Britain, leading the way in bombing techniques and
also forcing the British to bolster their anti-aircraft defences.
The possibility of airship raids were approved by the Kaiser on
January 9, 1915, although he excluded London as a target and
further demanded that no attacks be made on historic or government
buildings or museums. The night-time raids were intended to target
only military sites on the east coast and around the Thames
estuary, but after blackouts became widespread, many bombs fell
randomly in East Anglia.
Post War
After the
end of World War I, the bulk of the Navy's modern ships (74 in all)
were interned at Scapa
Flow
where the entire fleet (with a few exceptions) was
scuttled by its crews
on 21 June 1919 on orders from its commander, Rear
Admiral Ludwig von
Reuter.
Notes and references

Flags used by the Imperial German
Navy
- The German squadron of ships was subsequently defeated at the
Battle of the Falkland
Islands, only one ship escaping destruction
- Herwig p.13
- Herwig p.14
- Herwig p.17-19
- Herwig p.15
- Herwig p.20
- Herwig p.24-26
- Herwig p.21-23
- Herwig p.26
- Herwig p.35
- Herwig p.41-42
- Herwig p.42
- Gottschall, By Order of the Kaiser, p. 260
- Herwig p.36-37
- Herwig p.48-50
- Herwig p.43-44
- Herwig p.27-28
- Herwig p.44-45
- Herwig p.22
- Herwig p.22-23
- Herwig p.54-56
- Novelle - supplementary law
- Herwig p.58-59
- Herwig p. 59
- Herwig p.60-61
- Herwig p.87
- Herwig p. 61-62
- Herwig p.62-64
- Herwig p.64
- Herwig p.65
- Herwig p.66
- Herwig p.70-71
- Herwig p.88
- Herwig p.72-75
- Herwig p.75-77
- Herwig p.78-79
- Herwig p. 81
- Herwig p.82
- Herwig p. 83
- (Kurfürst Friedrich
Wilhelm and Weißenburg, of the
Brandenburg class, had been sold to the Ottoman Empire in
1910)
- Lehmann Chapter
VI
- Cord Eberspächer: Die deutsche Yangtse-Patrouille.
Deutsche Kanonenbootpolitik in China im Zeitalter des
Imperialismus 1900-1914 (The German Yangtse Patrol.
German gunboat diplomacy in China in the age of
imperialism), Bochum 2004.
- Gerhard Wiechmann: Die preußisch-deutsche Marine in
Lateinamerika 1866-1914. Eine Studie deutscher
Kanonenbootpolitik (The Prussian-German Navy in Latin
America 1866-1914. A study of German gunboat diplomacy
1866-1914), Bremen 2002, ISBN 3-89757-142-0.
See also
External links