COASTAL DEFENCE SHIP

Dutch coastal defence ship ''Hertog Hendrik''

'Coastal defence ships' (sometimes called 'coast-defence battleships') were warships built for the purpose of coastal defence, mostly in the period 1860–1920. They were small cruiser-sized warships which sacrificed speed and range for armour and armament, built by nations which could not afford battleships or which needed specially-suited shallow-draught vessels small enough to operate close to their coast, particularly in the island-dotted coastal waters of the Scandinavian area. Some had limited blue-water capacity; others operated in rivers.
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The coastal defence ships differed from earlier monitors by their higher freeboard, usually higher speed, sometimes casemated guns (monitors' guns were almost always in turrets) and usually, possession of secondary armament. Over their time period, and from nation to nation, they varied in size from around 1,500 tons to around 8,000 tons. Several survived into the 1970s, but were mostly fairly useless after World War I in nations which had blue-water capability.
Their construction and appearance was of a "mini-pre-dreadnought", with heavier armor relative to their size than cruisers or gunboats, a higher speed than most monitors and a main armament of two or four cruiser- or battleship-size guns mounted in two turrets, fore and aft, or sometimes in casemates, as well as smaller guns. They were mainly used as movable coastal artillery, and had offence and defence roles. Few of them ever saw combat in the First World War, some of them did in Second World War, and the last were scrapped in the 1970s.
Navies with coastal defence ships as main capital ships included Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Ecuador, Finland, Greece, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Sweden, Thailand and the British colonies of India and Victoria. They were also built by Germany and Russia, the latter of which used three of them at the Battle of Tsushima in 1905.
Apart from specially built coastal defence ships, some navies used obsolete pre-dreadnought battleships in this role—they were bigger and better armed but cost more.

Contents
Categorization
The Swedish ''Pansarskepp''-ships
Technical details
Effectiveness
The Dutch ''Pantserschepen''-ships
Operators
References

Categorization


One of the last of its type, the Finnish coastal defence ship ''Väinämöinen''.

This class of vessels has always been categorized differently by different countries, due to treaties, different judging grounds and also by reasons of pride. In the United Kingdom, the Scandinavian ships were called ''coast defence ships''. Germany referred to the Scandinavian ships as "Coastal Armoured Ships" (''Küstenpanzerschiff''), in contrast to their own Deutschland class of larger seagoing "Armoured ships" (''Panzerschiff''), later renamed "Heavy cruisers" (''Schweren Kreuzer''). The Danes referred to their ships as both as "Coast Defence Ships" (''Kystforsvarsskib'') and "Armoured Ship" (''Panserskib''). In Norway they were refered to as "Armoured Ship" (''Panserskip''). The Dutch called their ships "Cruisers" (''Kruiser''), "Armoured Ships" (''Pantserschip'') or "Battleships" (''Slagschip'').

The Swedish ''Pansarskepp''-ships


''Pansarskepp'' ("armoured ship") is the Swedish term used for their coastal defence ships. This class of vessel should not be confused with the similarly named German "Panzerschiff", popularly known as a "Pocket battleship", as the design and purpose was very different.
Technical details

A ''pansarskepp'' is most related to a monitor. It is a relatively small vessel, with limited speed, shallow draft, and very heavy guns for its displacement. It was designed for close in-shore work near the islands or in the fiords of Scandinavia, and other countries that have a coast with shallow waters. The aim was to outgun any ocean going warship of the same draft by a significant margin, making it a very dangerous opponent for a cruiser, and deadly to anything smaller. The limitations in speed and seaworthiness were a trade-off for the heavy armament carried. The cruise to Great Britain by the HMS ''Sverige'', for the festivities at the coronation of king George VI was an unusual event - these vessels almost never departed local waters, and would have been unsafe in an oceanic environment. Vessels similar to the Swedish ''Pansarskepp'' were also built and operated by Denmark, Norway, and Finland, all of which shared similar naval requirements.
Effectiveness

It has been suggested that the ''Sverige'' and ''Äran'' class ships were one reason why Germany did not invade Sweden during World War II.[1] This is however unlikely, since if the Germans would have invaded, they would have used their strong forces in Norway, as well as its strong air power to gain tactical superiority wherever needed.

The Dutch ''Pantserschepen''-ships


The Dutch used these ships as of 1900 amongst others to provide artillery support in the Dutch colony Indonesia and to escort merchant ships along the Spanish coast during the Spanish Civil War. In 1933 there took place a mutiny on De Zeven Provinciën, off Sumatra - quelled bloodily by an aerial bombardment in which twenty-three of the mutinous sailors (who apprently wanted no more than to protest cuts in their wages) were killed. This incidentally demonstrated the vulnerabilty of such ships (and of surface warships in general) to attacks from the air.
In WWII ''De Zeven Provinciën'' was sunk in shallow waters by Japanese bombing, dredged up by the Japanese after their occuption of the Dutch Indies and used by them as a battery ship, and sunk again (this time permanently) by allied bombers.

Operators



★ 'Argentina':


★ La Plata class (''La Plata'' and ''Los Andes'')


★ Independencia class (''Independencia'' and ''Nueve de Julio'')

★ 'Brazil':


★ ''Barrozo''


★ ''Brasil''


★ ''Lima Barros''


★ ''Rio de Janeiro''


★ ''Bahia''


★ ''Silvado''


★ Mariz e Barros class (''Mariz e Barros'' and ''Herval'')


★ Cabral class (''Cabral'' and ''Colombo'')


★ ''Sete de Setembro''


★ Javary class (''Javary'' and ''Solimoes'')


★ Marshal Deodoro class (''Marshal Deodoro'' and ''Marshal Floriano'')

★ 'China':


★ ''Ping Yuan''

★ 'Denmark'


★ Herulf Trolle class (''Herulf Trolle'', ''Olfert Fischer'' and ''Peder Skram''[1])


★ ''Niels Juel''[2]

★ 'Finland':


★ Ilmarinen class ''Panssarilaiva'' ships (''Ilmarinen'' and ''Väinämöinen'')

★ 'Germany'


Siegfried class and Odin class (''Ägir'', ''Beowulf'', ''Siegfried'', ''Hagen'', ''Frithjof'', ''Heimdall'', ''Odin'' and ''Hildebrand'')


''Oldenburg''

★ 'The Netherlands':


★ Evertsen class (''Evertsen'', ''Piet Hein'' and ''Kortenaer'')


★ Koningin Regentes class (''Koningin Regentes'', ''De Ruyter'' and ''Hertog Hendrik'')


★ ''Marten Harpertszoon Tromp''


★ ''Jacob van Heemskerck''


★ ''Kortenaer''


★ ''Zeven Provinciën''

★ 'Norway':
Norwegian Tordenskjold class.
Norwegian Eidvold class.



Tordenskjold class (KNM ''Tordenskjold'' and KNM ''Harald Haarfagre'')


Eidsvold class (''Eidsvold'' and ''Norge'')


Bjørgvin class (''Bjørgvin'' and ''Nidaros'') - (requisitioned by the Royal Navy during World War I, renamed HMS ''Glatton'' and HMS ''Gorgon'')

★ 'Portugal':


★ ''Vasco da Gama''

★ 'Russia':


★ ''Novgorod''


★ ''Vice-Admiral Popov''


★ Admiral Ushakov class (''Admiral Ushakov'', ''Admiral Seniavin'' and ''General Admiral Graf Apraksin'')

★ 'Sweden':


★ Svea class (''Svea'', ''Göta'' and ''Thule'')


Oden class (''Oden'', ''Thor'' and ''Niord'')


''Dristigheten''


★ Äran class (''Äran'', ''Wasa'', ''Tapperheten'' and ''Manligheten'')


★ ''Oscar II''


Sverige class (''Sverige'', ''Gustav V'' and ''Drottning Victoria'')

★ 'Thailand':


★ Dhonburi class (''Dhonburi'' and ''Sri Ayuthia'')

★ 'India':


Cerberus class (''Magdala'')

★ 'Victoria':


★ Cerberus class (''Cerberus'')

References


1. This speculation appeared in Warship Magazine - the author was writing an article on the ''Sverige'' class, and so may have been prejudiced.


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