SCHLACHTSCHIFFEThe Dreadnoughts
| 1st and 2nd Squadrons in Kiel (U.S. National Archives)
| German battleship design started out well with the SMS Nassau and only got better. Broad and extensively compartmentalized, they were able to take extensive damage and still get home. Built with the North Sea in mind, where constant bad weather was expected to keep battling ranges short, German battleships were slow to adopt a heavier main armament that would make their ships more of a match for their British rivals, expecting a higher quantity of hits to make up for lesser effect of their small shells. But when they did decide to increase their gun size, they went whole heartedly into the 380mm (15") gunned Bayern, probably one of the most balanced battleship designs to come out of World War I.
|
| 1909SMS Nassau, Westfalen, Rheinland, and Posen 1911SMS Helgoland, Ostfriesland, Thüringen, and Oldenburg 1912SMS Kaiser, Friedrich der Grosse, Kaiserin, König Albert, and Prinzregent Luitpold 1914SMS König, Grosser Kurfürst, Markgraf, and Kronprinz 1916SMS Bayern, Baden, Württemberg, and Sachsen
| Back to HOME. Click here if you have questions and want to contact the creator of this page. Last Update on 04/15/2008
|