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'''Günther Lütjens''' (1899-1941) was an admiral in the German Navy (navy) of the [[Second World War]], a specialist in [[battleship]]s and [[anti-surface warfare]] who was killed in action when ''[[KMS Bismarck]]'' was sunk. | '''Günther Lütjens''' (1899-1941) was an admiral in the German Navy (navy) of the [[Second World War]], a specialist in [[battleship]]s and [[anti-surface warfare]] who was killed in action when ''[[KMS Bismarck]]'' was sunk. | ||
In the First World War, he was a successful commander of gunboats and | In the First World War, he was a successful commander of gunboats and fast attack craft. <ref>{{citation | ||
| url = http://www.battleshipbismarck.info/admiral_lutjens.htm | | url = http://www.battleshipbismarck.info/admiral_lutjens.htm | ||
| title = Admiral Günther Lütjens | | title = Admiral Günther Lütjens |
Latest revision as of 09:34, 27 November 2024
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Günther Lütjens (1899-1941) was an admiral in the German Navy (navy) of the Second World War, a specialist in battleships and anti-surface warfare who was killed in action when KMS Bismarck was sunk. In the First World War, he was a successful commander of gunboats and fast attack craft. [1] He worked in commercial shipping between the wars, but returned to the navy in 1923 as a torpedo specialist. On 2st October, 1937, he became Rear Admiral Commanding Destroyer Flotillas Second World WarInvasion of NorwayIn October 1939, commanding scouting forces: the battlecruisers KMS Scharnhorst and KMS Gneisenau, in the invasion of Norway, he received the Iron Cross, with the citation from Adolf Hitler,
Promoted to AdmiralOn 1 September 1940, he was promoted to full Admiral and made commander of all scouting forces. His most successful operation was a commerce raid with the same two battlecruisers, in 1941. It sank 116,000 tons of shipping, including the armed merchant cruiser HMS Jervis Bay. Final operationThe followup was to have involved both battlecruisers, as well as the new battleships KMS Bismarck and KMS Tirpitz, but only Bismarck was available. She sortied, accompanied only by the cruiser KMS Prinz Eugen. His unit met a British scout force, sinking HMS Hood and damaging battleship HMS Prince of Wales, but also suffering some damage to a fuel tank of Bismarck, his flagship. Reducing the scope of the operation, he sent the cruiser back to Germany. With much of the Royal Navy in pursuit, Bismarck was eventually rendered unmaneuverable, and sunk, along with her captain and admiral. His last message was:There are conflicting reports if "Long live the Fuhrer!" was the last part of the message; the Naval Intelligence Division report does not include it. It does say
LegacyThe first guided missile destroyer of the postwar German Navy was named for him. References
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