Battleship
The 20th century battleship, although obsolete as a naval weapon, evolved from the ship of the line, as a naval vessel intended to engage the most powerful ships of an opposing navy. Their main armament were multiple heavy cannon in turrets [1], and they were heavily armored and designed to survive punishment from other battleships.
Pre-dreadnoughts
Dreadnoughts
For a ship that only fought once, and that by ramming a German submarine, [[HMS Dreadnought (1905) made every other battleship in existence, or under construction, obsolete. ADM Jacky Fisher can fairly consider himself her father, insisting on the characteristics: guns of a single large caliber, in turrets; and high speed. Her large-caliber guns made irrelevant the intermediate-caliber guns of other battleships, as they could not get close enough to use them.
The Diversion of the Battlecruiser
A less successful creation of Fisher, the idea of the battlecruiser was a vessel with battleship-caliber guns, very high speed, and reduced armor, so it could kill whatever it could catch and run away from whatever could kill it. Unfortunately, those large guns were seductive to battleship admirals, and, rather than using it as a cruiser killer and commerce raider, succumbed to the temptation of adding battlecruiser firepower to a battleship engagement.
As Admiral Sir David Beatty, commanding the battlecruisers at the Battle of Jutland observed as the second of his battlecruisers exploded and sank, "there seems to be something wrong with our bloody ships today." This should not have been a mystery: the "something" was inadequate armor for the role in which they were placed.
Fast battleships
The last giants
References
- ↑ or barbettes in early designs