Leonardo Da Vinci, the most successful Italian submarine in World War II | |
Class overview | |
---|---|
Operators | |
In commission | 1940–1945 |
Completed | 6 |
Lost | 5 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Submarine |
Displacement |
|
Length | 76.5 m (251 ft 0 in) |
Beam | 6.81 m (22 ft 4 in) |
Draught | 4.72 m (15 ft 6 in) |
Propulsion | |
Speed |
|
Range |
|
Test depth | 90 m (300 ft)+ |
Complement | 57 |
Armament |
|
The Marconi class was a class of six submarines built for the Royal Italian Navy (Italian : Regia Marina). The submarines were all launched between 1939 and 1940, and all but one, Luigi Torelli, were lost in the Atlantic during the Second World War.
Guglielmo Marconi (pennant number MN) was launched 27 July 1939 [1] and completed on 2 February 1940. On its first wartime patrol in the Mediterranean Sea, Marconi torpedoed the Royal Navy destroyer HMS Escort on 8 July 1940. Marconi sailed on 6 September 1940 and passed the Strait of Gibraltar on 11 September for an Atlantic patrol to Bordeaux on 29 September. En route Marconi sank the neutral Spanish fishing boat Almirante Jose de Carranza. Marconi sank one ship on its first BETASOM patrol from Bordeaux. After an unsuccessful patrol, Marconi sank three ships on its third BETASOM patrol and damaged a Yugoslavian freighter on the following patrol which was later sunk by U-126. Marconi was lost to unknown causes sometime after 28 October 1941 on its fifth BETASOM patrol. [2]
Ship | Flag | Patrol | Date | Tonnage (GRT) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
HMS Escort | Royal Navy | 1st | 8 July 1940 | — | Destroyer; 2 killed |
Vingaland | Sweden | 3rd | 9 November 1940 | 2,734 gross register tons (GRT) | Freighter from Convoy HX 84 |
Cairndale | United Kingdom | 5th | 30 May 1941 | 8,129 | Tanker; 4 killed |
Baron Lovat | United Kingdom | 5th | 6 June 1941 | 3,395 | Freighter from Convoy OG 63 |
Taberg | Sweden | 5th | 6 June 1941 | 1,392 | Freighter from Convoy OG 63, 6 survivors from a crew of 22 |
Total: | 17,055 |
Leonardo da Vinci (pennant number LV) [1] was launched 16 September 1939. da Vinci sailed on 22 September 1940 and passed the Strait of Gibraltar on 27 September for an Atlantic patrol to Bordeaux on 31 October. After unsuccessful patrols from 21 December to 20 January 1941 and from 4 April to 4 May, da Vinci sank one ship on its third BETASOM patrol. After another unsuccessful patrol from 15 August to 24 September, da Vinci sank two ships during Operation Neuland and four ships on the following patrol. After being modified to carry a midget submarine, da Vinci sailed without the midget submarine and sank four ships. Sailing again without the midget submarine, da Vinci sank six ships on its last patrol. While attempting to return to Bordeaux, da Vinci was sunk on 23 May 1943 by the escorts of convoy KMF 15. There were no survivors. Leonardo da Vinci was the top scoring non-German submarine of the entire war. [3] [4] [5]
Ship | Flag | Patrol | Date | Tonnage (GRT) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Auris | United Kingdom | 4th | 28 June 1941 | 8,030 | Tanker; 27 survivors from a crew of 59 |
Cadebello | Brazil | 6th | 25 February 1942 | 3,557 | Freighter; no survivors |
Everasma | Latvia | 6th | 28 February 1942 | 3,644 | Freighter from Convoy TAW 12 torpedoed at 16°00′N49°00′W / 16.000°N 49.000°W ; 15 survivors |
Reine Marie Stewart | Panama | 7th | 2 June 1942 | 1,087 | Schooner |
Chile | Denmark | 7th | 7 June 1942 | 6,956 | Freighter; 39 survivors from a crew of 44 |
Alioth | Netherlands | 7th | 10 June 1942 | 5,483 | Freighter; 8 survivors from a crew of 36 |
Clan Macquarrie | United Kingdom | 7th | 13 June 1942 | 6,471 | Collier; 1 killed from a crew of 90 |
Empire Zeal | United Kingdom | 8th | 2 November 1942 | 7,009 | Freighter |
Andreas | Greece | 8th | 5 November 1942 | 6,566 | Freighter |
Marcus Whitman | United States | 8th | 10 November 1942 | 7,176 | Liberty ship; no casualties |
Veerhaven | Netherlands | 8th | 11 November 1942 | 5,291 | Freighter; no casualties |
RMS Empress of Canada | Canada | 9th | 14 March 1943 | 21,517 | Troopship; 392 killed from 1,800 aboard |
Lulworth Hill | United Kingdom | 9th | 18 March 1943 | 7,628 | Freighter |
Sembilan | Netherlands | 9th | 17 April 1943 | 6,566 | Freighter |
Manar | United Kingdom | 9th | 18 April 1943 | 8,007 | Freighter |
John Drayton | United States | 9th | 21 April 1943 | 7,177 | Liberty ship |
Doryessa | United Kingdom | 9th | 25 April 1943 | 8,078 | Tanker; 11 survivors from a crew of 54 |
Total: | 120,243 |
Michele Bianchi (pennant number BH) was launched 3 December 1939. [1] Its first war patrol was in the Mediterranean Sea from 15 August to 3 September 1940. Bianchi sailed on 27 October 1940 and reached the Strait of Gibraltar on 3 November. The attempted transit to the Atlantic was detected by Royal Navy forces; and Bianchi took refuge in the neutral port of Tangier. Bianchi sailed from Tangier on 12 November and reached Bordeaux on 18 December 1940. Bianchi sank three ships on its first BETASOM patrol from Bordeaux; but the next patrol from 30 April to 30 May 1941 was unsuccessful. After sailing from Bordeaux on 4 July 1941, Bianchi was sunk with all hands by HMS Tigris on 5 July. [6]
Ship | Flag | Patrol | Date | Tonnage (GRT) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Belcrest | United Kingdom | 4th | 14 February 1941 | 4,517 | Freighter from Convoy SC 21; no survivors |
Huntingdon | United Kingdom | 4th | 24 February 1941 | 10,946 | Credit for sinking shared with U-96; no casualties |
Baltistan | United Kingdom | 4th | 27 February 1941 | 6,803 | Freighter; 18 survivors from a crew of 69 |
Total: | 22,266 |
Torelli (pennant number TI) was launched 6 January 1940. [1] After one short war patrol in the Mediterranean, Torelli sailed on 31 August 1940 and passed the Strait of Gibraltar on 8 September for an Atlantic patrol to Bordeaux on 5 October. Torelli sank four ships on its first BETASOM patrol; and, after an unsuccessful second patrol, sank one ship on a third patrol. After another unsuccessful patrol, Torelli assisted the three Calvi-class submarines on a rescue mission of 254 sailors from the sunken German auxiliary cruiser Atlantis in December 1941.
Torelli sank two ships during Operation Neuland. Torelli again sailed from Bordeaux on 2 June 1942, but was twice damaged by aircraft and sought refuge in the neutral Spanish ports of Avilés and Santander, Cantabria before returning to Bordeaux on 15 July. After an extensive refit, Torelli was again damaged at sea by aircraft on 16 March 1943 and returned to Bordeaux on 3 April. [7] Torelli was then selected for conversion to a "transport submarine" in order to exchange rare or irreplaceable trade goods with Japan. Cargo capacity of 160 tons reduced reserve buoyancy from 20–25% to 3.5–6%; and armament was reduced to defensive machine guns. Torelli sailed as a transport submarine on 18 June 1943 and reached Penang on 27 August 1943. [8]
Torelli was commissioned into the German Kriegsmarine as UIT-25 when Italy capitulated to the Allies in September 1943.
UIT-25 was taken over by the Imperial Japanese Navy and became I-504 when Germany surrendered in May 1945. I-504 shot down a B-25 Mitchell bomber while under Japanese flag near the very end of the war in the Pacific, [9] allegedly the last success of a Japanese naval vessel in that conflict. [10] It was found at Kobe when Japan surrendered and scuttled by the United States Navy in Kii Suido. [11]
Ship | Flag | Patrol | Date | Tonnage (GRT) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nemea | Greece | 3rd | 15 January 1941 | 5,198 | Freighter; 14 survivors from a crew of 31 |
Brask | Norway | 3rd | 15 January 1941 | 4,079 | Freighter; 20 survivors from a crew of 32 |
Nicolas Filinis | Greece | 3rd | 16 January 1941 | 3,111 | Freighter; 26 survivors from a crew of 29 |
Urla | United Kingdom | 3rd | 28 January 1941 | 5,198 | Freighter; no casualties |
Ida Knudsen | Norway | 5th | 21 July 1941 | 8,913 | Tanker; 5 killed |
Scottish Star | United Kingdom | 8th | 19 February 1942 | 7,224 | Freighter; 4 killed from a crew of 73 |
Esso Copenhagen | Panama | 8th | 25 February 1942 | 9,245 | Tanker; 1 killed from a crew of 39 |
Total: | 42,968 |
Alessandro Malaspina (pennant number MP) was launched 18 February 1940 [1] and completed on 20 June 1940. Its first patrol was through the Strait of Gibraltar on 3 August for an Atlantic patrol. Malaspina sank one ship before reaching Bordeaux on 4 September. Admiral Karl Dönitz visited Malaspina on 30 September to welcome Regia Marina sailors to the German base. The first BETASOM patrols from 9 October to 9 November 1940, from 5 January to 28 February 1941 were unsuccessful; but during a third patrol Malaspina damaged the British liner Lycaon on 3 May 1941. Malaspina then sank two ships on the next patrol. Malaspina sailed from Bordeaux on 7 September 1941; and is believed to have been sunk on 10 September by No. 10 Squadron RAAF Short Sunderland "U". [12]
Ship | Flag | Patrol | Date | Tonnage (GRT) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
British Fame | United Kingdom | 1st | 12 August 1940 | 8,406 | Tanker from Convoy OB 193; 3 killed from crew of 49 |
Lycaon | United Kingdom | 3rd | 3 May 1941 | Passenger Liner. Damaged | |
Nikiklis | Greece | 4th | 14 July 1941 | 3,576 | Freighter; 11 killed from crew of 28 |
Guelma | United Kingdom | 4th | 17 July 1941 | 4,402 | Freighter; no casualties |
Total: | 16,384 |
Maggiore Baracca (pennant number BC) was launched 21 April 1940 [1] and completed on 10 July 1940. Its first patrol was through the Strait of Gibraltar on 7 September for an Atlantic patrol. Baracca sank one ship before reaching Bordeaux on 6 October. Baracca sank one ship on its first BETASOM patrol from Bordeaux, but last four patrols were unsuccessful. On the final patrol, Baracca was sunk by HMS Croome on 7 September 1941. Thirty-two members of the submarine crew survived the sinking. [13]
Ship | Flag | Patrol | Date | Tonnage (GRT) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aghios Nicolaus | Greece | 1st | 1 October 1940 | 3,687 | Freighter |
Lilian Moller | United Kingdom | 2nd | 18 November 1940 | 4,866 | Freighter; no survivors |
Total: | 8,553 |
The Regia Marina (RM) or Royal Italian Navy was the navy of the Kingdom of Italy from 1861 to 1946. In 1946, with the birth of the Italian Republic, the Regia Marina changed its name to Marina Militare.
Barbarigo was a World War II Italian Marcello-class submarine. It was built by the Cantieri Riuniti dell'Adriatico, and was commissioned on 19 September 1938.
The Marcello class was a class of nine submarines built in 1937 and 1938 by CRDA in Trieste for the Royal Italian Navy. Two similar submarines built in 1939 at La Spezia by Oto Melara are sometimes considered part of the class. All eleven served in the Mediterranean Sea at the start of the Second World War. After Provana's 1940 sinking, the remaining boats were transferred to the BETASOM Atlantic submarine base at Bordeaux in August 1940. After four boats had been sunk in the Atlantic, Barbarigo and Comandante Cappellini were then selected for conversion to "transport submarines" in order to exchange rare or irreplaceable trade goods with Japan. Cargo capacity of 160 tons reduced reserve buoyancy from 20–25% to 3.5–6%; and armament was reduced to defensive machine guns. Only Dandolo was in operational condition at the end of the war.
BETASOM was a submarine base established at Bordeaux, France by the Regia Marina during the Second World War. From this base, Italian submarines participated in the Battle of the Atlantic from 1940 to 1943 as part of the Axis anti-shipping campaign against the Allies.
The Cagni or Ammiraglio Cagni class was a class of submarines built for Italy's Regia Marina during World War II.
Leonardo da Vinci was a Marconi-class submarine of the Italian navy during World War II. It operated in the Atlantic from September 1940 until its loss in May 1943, and became the top scoring non-German submarine of the entire war.
Italian submarine Luigi Torelli was a Marconi-class submarine of the Italian navy during World War II. The vessel operated in the Atlantic from September 1940 until mid-1943, then was sent to the Far East. After Italy's surrender in 1943, the Luigi Torelli was taken over by Nazi Germany's Kriegsmarine, then, in the waning months of the war, the Japanese Imperial Navy. It was one of only two ships to serve in all three major Axis navies, the other being the Italian submarine Comandante Cappellini.
SS Lulworth Hill was a British cargo ship completed by William Hamilton & Co in Port Glasgow on the Firth of Clyde in 1940. Lulworth Hill had a single 520 NHP triple-expansion steam engine driving a single screw. She had eight corrugated furnaces heating two 225 lbf/in2 single-ended boilers with a combined heating surface of 7,643 square feet (710 m2), plus one auxiliary boiler.
Operation Neuland was the code name of the Kriegsmarine extension of unrestricted submarine warfare into the Caribbean Sea during World War II. U-boats demonstrated range to disrupt United Kingdom petroleum supplies and United States aluminum supplies which had not been anticipated by Allied pre-war planning. Although the area remained vulnerable to submarines for several months, U-boats never again enjoyed the opportunities for success resulting from the surprise of this operation.
The Calvi class was a class of three submarines built by Oderno-Terni-Orlando in Genoa for the Royal Italian Navy. The submarines were built in 1935, and all three served in the Mediterranean at the start of the Second World War. The boats were transferred to the BETASOM Atlantic submarine base at Bordeaux in August 1940. In December 1941 the boats were used for a rescue mission of 254 sailors from the sunken German auxiliary cruiser Atlantis. After Calvi had been sunk, Finzi and Tazzoli were selected for conversion to "transport submarines" in order to exchange rare or irreplaceable trade goods with Japan. Cargo capacity of 160 tons reduced reserve buoyancy from 20–25% to 3.5–6%; and armament was reduced to defensive machine guns.
Pietro Micca was an Italian submarine which served with the Regia Marina in World War II. She was the third ship named after Pietro Micca, the Savoyard soldier who became a national hero for his sacrifice in the defence of Turin against the French troops in 1706. This boat was the prototype for a class of fast, long range submarines with conventional torpedo armament, naval mine laying capability, and useful secret transport capacity. The ship was built at the Tosi shipyard in Taranto. She was laid down on 15 October 1931 and launched on 31 March 1935. The boat fully met design requirements, but was too expensive to be repeated.
Archimede was a Brin-class submarine built for the Royal Italian Navy during the 1930s.
The Argo-class was a class of two coastal submarines built by Cantieri Riuniti dell'Adriatico in Monfalcone for Portugal but operated by the Royal Italian Navy after Portugal was unable to pay construction costs. The submarines were built in 1936, and both served in the Mediterranean Sea at the start of the Second World War. The boats were transferred to the BETASOM Atlantic submarine base at Bordeaux in 1940, but returned to the Mediterranean in 1941, where both were sunk within a few days of the September 1943 Italian armistice.
The Liuzzi class was a class of four submarines built by Tosi in Taranto for the Royal Italian Navy. The submarines were built in 1939 and began their Second World War service in the Mediterranean Sea, where Liuzzi was sunk. The three surviving boats were transferred to the BETASOM Atlantic submarine base at Bordeaux in 1940. After Tarantini was sunk, Bagnolini and Giuliani were selected for conversion to "transport submarines" in order to exchange rare or irreplaceable trade goods with Japan. Cargo capacity of 160 tons reduced reserve buoyancy from between 20 and 25% to between 3.5 and 6%; and armament was reduced to defensive machine guns. The submarines saw action in the Second World War during which they collectively sunk 5 freighters and 1 light cruiser and were eventually either sunk or captured.
Giuseppe Finzi was one of three Calvi-class submarines built for the Regia Marina during the 1930s. Completed in 1936, she played a minor role in the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939 supporting the Spanish Nationalists. The submarine made multiple patrols in the Atlantic Ocean during the Second World War, sinking five Allied ships. Gisueppe Finzi began conversion into a transport submarine in 1943, but was captured by the Germans in September 1943 before it was completed and redesignated as UIT-21. She was scuttled by them in August 1944 to prevent her capture.
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Michele Bianchi was a Marconi-class submarine of the Italian Regia Marina that saw action in the Second World War. The submarine,, was launched on 3 December 1939.
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