![]() Frundsberg circa 1905 | |
History | |
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Name | SMS Frundsberg |
Builder | Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino, Trieste |
Laid down | 19 June 1871 |
Launched | 11 February 1873 |
Completed | October 1873 |
Reclassified | Hulked, 1905 |
Fate | Ceded to Yugoslavia, 1920 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Screw corvette |
Displacement | 1,353 long tons (1,375 t) |
Length | 69.08 m (226 ft 8 in) |
Beam | 10.45 m (34 ft 3 in) |
Draft | 5 m (16 ft 5 in) |
Installed power | 1,000 ihp (750 kW) |
Propulsion | |
Speed | 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph) |
Complement | 210 |
Armament |
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SMS Frundsberg was an Austro-Hungarian corvette built by Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino.
Frundsberg was an Aurora-class corvette, sometimes referred to as sloops, of the Austro-Hungarian Navy. She was 69.08 m (226 ft 8 in) long overall and 59.1 m (193 ft 11 in) long between perpendiculars. She had a beam of 10.45 m (34 ft 3 in) and a draft of 5 m (16 ft 5 in). The ship had a displacement of 1,353 long tons (1,375 t ). Her crew numbered 210 officers and enlisted sailors. [1]
The ship was powered by a single triple-expansion steam engine that drove a screw propeller. The number and type of boilers is not known, but smoke from the boilers was vented through a single funnel located amidships, between the fore- and main mast. The propulsion system was capable of generating 1,000 indicated horsepower (750 kW ), for a top speed of 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph). The ship was fitted with a three-masted sailing rig to supplement the steam engine on long voyages. [1]
Frundsberg was armed with a main battery of four 15 cm (5.9 in) Wahrendorf breechloading guns. She also carried a pair of 7 cm (2.8 in) guns and two 25 mm (0.98 in) machine guns. By 1891, the ship's armament had been revised significantly. Two of the 15 cm guns, one of the 7 cm guns, and both of the 25 mm machine guns were removed, and a new light battery of four 9 cm (3.5 in) guns and two 47 mm (1.9 in) Hotchkiss revolving cannon were installed. [1]
The keel for Frundsberg was laid down at the Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino shipyard on 19 June 1871. She was launched on 11 February 1873, and was completed in October that year. [1]
On 5 January 1874, Frundsberg was assigned to the active squadron of the Austro-Hungarian fleet. At that time, the unit also included the ironclad Kaiser, the screw frigate Radetzky, the screw corvette Fasana, and the gunboat Velebich. Most of the ships were stationed in Pola in February, though Fasana and Velebich were in Spanish waters at the time, as a result of the Cantonal Revolution against the Spanish government. Frundsberg, Kaiser, and the gunboat Dalmat were all sent to join them there in the coming weeks. Frundsberg sailed on 4 February, bound for Barcelona, Spain, where she awaited the arrival of Kaiser, the squadron flagship, which reached the port on 4 March. The two ships carried out shooting practice on 28 and 29 March, and on 7 April, the two ships departed together to conduct two days of tactical maneuvers in company with Fasana. The Austro-Hungarian ships patrolled the southern Spanish coast over the summer, and visited a number of Spanish ports, including Cadiz, Cartagena, Tarragona, and Valencia, along with Gibraltar and Tangier in Morocco. [2]
While in Valencia in early May, Frundsberg was delayed departing by a Spanish mob that attacked the Austro-Hungarian consulate there on the 4th. She remained there until 9 May, when she left to return to Barcelona. She remained there for the next two months, eventually sailing again on 11 July to return to Valencia. Upon returning to Barcelona on 18 July, Frundsberg received orders to return home, and she departed three days later in company with Kaiser. While underway, she received orders from Kaiser to maneuver independently, so Frundsberg detached from Kaiser, using her sails only, and passed south of Sardinia and then through the Strait of Messina to stop in Messina. From there, she proceeded to Gravosa, ultimately arriving in Pola on 19 August. In early September, she moved to the Fasana Channel, where she rejoined Kaiser. The deployment to Spain was used, in part, to evaluate the recently completed Frundsberg, and it was found that she maneuvered just as well under sail as under steam, and her top speeds were comparable. [3]
In 1884, Frundsberg embarked on a major voyage overseas. She passed through the Suez Canal and the Red Sea and toured eastern Africa before returning to Pola in 1885. [4] During this voyage, she visited Madagascar and other islands off the coast, [5] including Zanzibar and the Seychelles. [6] On 12 August that year, she departed Pola for another lengthy trip abroad, this time to East Asia. She once again passed through the Suez Canal and the Red Sea, stopping in Suakin in Mahdist Sudan and Massawa in Italian Eritrea on the way, but instead sailed east to British India, stopping in many ports in the country, including Madras, Pondicherry, and Calcutta. [7] She arrived back in Austria-Hungary in 1886. [4]
The ship returned to the east coast of Africa for a cruise in 1892, though this year she sailed around the southern tip of the continent to visit ports in West Africa. [6] Frundsberg made another overseas cruise in 1896 and 1897, which included visits to ports in western and southern Africa, the West Indies, and South America. [8] In 1898, Frundsberg and the screw corvette Saida went on a deployment to East Asia. They were joined there in 1899 by the protected cruiser Kaiserin Elisabeth, though all three ships returned home later that year, having been replaced by the new cruiser Zenta. [9] In 1905 Frundsberg was reduced to a storage hulk. After the outbreak of World War I in July 1914, she was used to store naval mines, based in Šibenik. Following Austria-Hungary's defeat in 1918, she was transferred to the new Royal Yugoslav Navy and renamed Zlarin. Her ultimate fate is not known. [1] [10]
SMS Panther was a torpedo cruiser (Torpedoschiff) of the Austro-Hungarian Navy. She and her sister ship, Leopard were part of a program to build up Austria-Hungary's fleet of torpedo craft in the 1880s. She was the lead ship of her class, and was built in Britain by Armstrong, from her keel laying in October 1884 to her completion in December 1885. She was armed with a battery of two 12 cm (4.7 in) guns and ten 47 mm (1.9 in) guns, along with four 356 mm (14 in) torpedo tubes.
SMS Kaiser was a 92-gun wooden ship of the line of the Austrian Navy, the last vessel of the type, and the only screw-driven example, to be built by the Austrians. She was built by the naval shipyard in Pola; she was laid down in March 1855, was launched in October 1858, and was completed the following year. The ship took part in the Second Schleswig War of 1864, but saw no action during her deployment to the North Sea. Kaiser did see action during the Seven Weeks' War two years later, during which she took part in the Battle of Lissa as the flagship of Anton von Petz, commander of the Austrian 2nd Division. Kaiser engaged several Italian ironclads simultaneously, rammed one—Re di Portogallo—and damaged another—Affondatore—with gunfire. In doing so, she became the only wooden ship of the line to engage an ironclad warship in battle.
SMS Salamander was a Drache-class armored frigate built for the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the 1860s; she was laid down in February 1861, launched in August that year, and completed in May 1862, six months before her sister Drache. She was a broadside ironclad, mounting a battery of twenty-eight guns in gun ports along the length the hull. During the Second Schleswig War in 1864, Salamander remained in the Adriatic to protect Austria from a possible Danish attack that did not materialize. Two years later, during the Seven Weeks' War, she participated in the Austrian victory over a superior Italian fleet in the Battle of Lissa in July 1866. Immediately after the war, she was modernized with a battery of more powerful guns. Little used thereafter owing to reduced naval budgets, she was stricken from the Navy List in 1883 and hulked for use as a mine storage ship before being broken up in 1895–1896.
SMS Lissa, named for the Battle of Lissa, was a unique ironclad warship built for the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the 1860s and 1870s, the only member of her class. She was the first casemate ship built for Austria-Hungary, she was armed with a main battery of twelve 9-inch (229 mm) guns in a central armored casemate, unlike the earlier broadside ironclads. Construction of the ship lasted from June 1867 to May 1871, and was delayed by budgetary shortfalls; the lack of funding also plagued the ship during her career, preventing her from taking an active role in the fleet. She spent the majority of her time in service laid up in Pola, apart from a lengthy reconstruction in 1880–1881. Lissa was ultimately stricken from the fleet in 1892 and broken up for scrap starting the following year.
SMS Erzherzog Ferdinand Max was the lead ship of the Erzherzog Ferdinand Max class of broadside ironclads built for the Austrian Navy in the 1860s. She was built by the Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino, with her keel laying in October 1863, launching in May 1865, and commissioning in June 1866 at the outbreak of the Third Italian War of Independence and the Austro-Prussian War, fought concurrently. The ship was armed with a main battery of sixteen 48-pounder guns, though the rifled guns originally intended, which had been ordered from Prussia, had to be replaced with old smoothbore guns until after the conflicts ended.
SMS Habsburg was the second and final member of the Erzherzog Ferdinand Max class of broadside ironclads built for the Austrian Navy in the 1860s. She was built by the Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino; her keel was laid down in June 1863, she was launched in June 1865, and commissioning in June 1866 at the outbreak of the Third Italian War of Independence and the Austro-Prussian War, fought concurrently. The ship was armed with a main battery of sixteen 48-pounder guns, though the rifled guns originally intended, which had been ordered from Prussia, had to be replaced with old smoothbore guns until after the conflicts ended.
SMS Don Juan d'Austria was the third member of the Kaiser Max class built for the Austrian Navy in the 1860s. Her keel was laid in October 1861 at the Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino shipyard; she was launched in July 1862, and was completed in 1863. She carried her main battery—composed of sixteen 48-pounder guns and fifteen 24-pounders—in a traditional broadside arrangement, protected by an armored belt that was 110 mm (4.3 in) thick.
The Panther class was a group of two torpedo cruisers, Panther and Leopard, built for the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the 1880s. The ships' primary armament was their four torpedo tubes, though they also carried a battery of medium and light-caliber guns. The ships were ordered in an effort to strengthen the defensive capabilities of the Austro-Hungarian Navy, during a period where funding for more expensive ironclad warships could not be secured from parliament. Since Austro-Hungarian naval designers did not have sufficient experience designing vessels of the type, the navy ordered the ships from the British Armstrong shipyard; work took from late 1884 to early 1886. After arriving in Austria-Hungary in 1886, the two ships served in a variety of roles. These included active duty with the main fleet in home waters, overseas training cruises, and showing the flag abroad. During World War I, the cruisers were mobilized for coastal defense duties, but saw no major action, apart from Panther shelling Montenegrin forces in 1916. After the war, both vessels were surrendered to Britain as war prizes and were broken up for scrap in 1920.
SMS Radetzky was a screw frigate in the Austro-Hungarian Navy, built in England in 1856. She was lost after the detonation of her powder magazine in 1869.
SMS Aurora was a screw corvette of the Austro-Hungarian Navy built in the early 1870s; she was the lead ship of the Aurora class.
SMS Zrinyi was a screw corvette of the Aurora class and was built for the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the early 1870s.
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SMS Erzherzog Friedrich was a screw corvette of the Austrian Navy, and was built in the 1850s. She was the lead ship of the Erzherzog Friedrich class, the first vessels of that type built for the Austrian fleet. She had one sister ship, Dandolo.
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