Ottoman cruiser Heibetnuma

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Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1844-1922).svg Ottoman Empire
NameHeibetnuma
Builder Constantinople
Laid down1881
FateScrapped in 1911
General characteristics (as designed)
Type unprotected cruiser
Displacement1463 t
Length226 ft (68.9 m)
Beam37 ft (11.3 m)
Draft17 ft (5.2 m)
Propulsion1 shaft HTE, 2,785 ihp (2,077 kW)
Speed14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Armament
  • 3 × 1 – 6.7-inch (170 mm) guns
  • 6 × 1 – 4.7-inch (119 mm) guns
  • 4 × 1 – 47-millimeter (1.9 in) guns
  • 2 × 1 – 14-inch (356 mm) torpedo tubes

Heibetnuma was an unprotected cruiser [ citation needed ] with a composite hull of the Ottoman Navy, laid down in 1881 at the Constantinople dockyard and completed in 1893. The ship had six rectangular boilers and carried about 280 tons of coal. The main armament was three Krupp 6.7in/25 caliber 5.6 ton breechloading guns, mounted fore and aft. The secondary guns were six Krupp 4.7in/25 BL guns in sponsons amidships. [1]

This ship and the slightly smaller cruiser Lütf-ü Hümayun were similar in armament and performance to the Miaoulis, an unprotected cruiser acquired in 1879 for the navy of the Ottoman Empire's main naval rival, Greece. [2] The Russian Black Sea Fleet, another threat to the Ottoman navy, included the slightly larger unprotected cruiser Pamiat Merkuria.

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The Osmaniye class was a group of four ironclad warships built for the Ottoman Navy in the 1860s. The class comprised Osmaniye, the lead ship, Aziziye, Orhaniye, and Mahmudiye. They were the first vessels of the type to be built for the Ottoman Empire; all four were built in Great Britain, the first three by Robert Napier and Sons and the fourth by Thames Iron Works. The ships were broadside ironclads, carrying a battery of fourteen 203 mm (8 in) Armstrong guns and ten 36-pounder Armstrong guns in a bank of guns on each broadside.

Ottoman cruiser <i>Lütf-ü Hümayun</i> Ottoman unprotected cruiser

Lütf-ü Hümayun was an unprotected cruiser of the Ottoman Navy.

References

  1. Gardiner (1979), p. 392
  2. Gardiner (1979), p. 387

Bibliography