About: Nautilus class   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

After it had become apparent in the Russo-Japanese War that mines had a great potential in the event of a war at sea, the Imperial German Navy decided to build a special mine laying ship. Entering service in 1907, SMS Nautilus and her sister ship SMS Albatross were the first German ships of cruiser size dedicated to mine laying operations. Their initial layout intended them to sail with the High Seas Fleet and, in the event of a retreat, lay mines behind them to discourage pursuers. This was why they were designated as mine laying cruisers, although their weak armament of only eight 8,8cm guns made them vulnerable to other cruisers. Before the war, Nautilus was used as a school ship. Albatross was discovered by Russian forces in the Baltic near Gotland in June 1915 and had to flee into a S

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Nautilus class
rdfs:comment
  • After it had become apparent in the Russo-Japanese War that mines had a great potential in the event of a war at sea, the Imperial German Navy decided to build a special mine laying ship. Entering service in 1907, SMS Nautilus and her sister ship SMS Albatross were the first German ships of cruiser size dedicated to mine laying operations. Their initial layout intended them to sail with the High Seas Fleet and, in the event of a retreat, lay mines behind them to discourage pursuers. This was why they were designated as mine laying cruisers, although their weak armament of only eight 8,8cm guns made them vulnerable to other cruisers. Before the war, Nautilus was used as a school ship. Albatross was discovered by Russian forces in the Baltic near Gotland in June 1915 and had to flee into a S
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • After it had become apparent in the Russo-Japanese War that mines had a great potential in the event of a war at sea, the Imperial German Navy decided to build a special mine laying ship. Entering service in 1907, SMS Nautilus and her sister ship SMS Albatross were the first German ships of cruiser size dedicated to mine laying operations. Their initial layout intended them to sail with the High Seas Fleet and, in the event of a retreat, lay mines behind them to discourage pursuers. This was why they were designated as mine laying cruisers, although their weak armament of only eight 8,8cm guns made them vulnerable to other cruisers. Before the war, Nautilus was used as a school ship. Albatross was discovered by Russian forces in the Baltic near Gotland in June 1915 and had to flee into a Swedish port, where she was interned.
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