List of Kriegsmarine ships
The list of Kriegsmarine ships includes all ships commissioned into the Kriegsmarine, the navy of Nazi Germany, during its existence from 1935 to the conclusion of World War II in 1945.
See the list of naval ships of Germany for ships in German service throughout the country's history.
Major warships
Battleships
- Bismarck class (42,000 tons, 8 × 380 mm guns)
- Bismarck, Laid down, 1936, Commissioned 1939, Completed 1940. Sunk in battle 1941
- Tirpitz, Laid down 1936, Commissioned 1939 Completed 1941. Sunk by bombing 1944
- Scharnhorst class (32,000 tons, 9 × 280 mm guns)
- Scharnhorst, Laid down 1934, Commissioned 1936, Completed January 1939. Sunk in battle 1943
- Gneisenau, Laid down 1934, Commissioned 1936, Completed May 1938. Out of combat service from 1942. Sunk as blockship 1945.
Pre-dreadnought battleships
- Deutschland class (15,000 tons, 4 × 280mm guns)
- Hannover, 1905. Decommissioned 1931. Used in explosive tests. Scrapped 1944-1946.
- Schleswig-Holstein, 1906. Sunk by bombing, 1944.
- Schlesien, 1906. Mined and sunk, 1945.
Heavy cruisers
- Admiral Hipper class (14,000 tons, 8 × 203 mm guns)
- Admiral Hipper, Laid down 1935, Commissioned 1937, Completed 1939*, Scuttled 1945.
- Blücher, Commissioned 1937. Sunk in battle 1940.
- Prinz Eugen, Laid down 1936, Commissioned 1938, Completed 1940*, Sunk after Operation Crossroads 1946
- Deutschland class (12,000 tons, 6 × 280 mm guns)
- Deutschland (renamed Lützow), Laid Down, 1929, Commissioned 1931, Completed 1933, Disabled 1945, Raised and Sunk as Target 1947.
- Admiral Scheer, Laid down 1931, Commissioned 1933, Completed 1934*, Sunk by Bombing 1945.
- Admiral Graf Spee, Laid down 1932, Commissioned 1934, Scuttled 1939.
Light cruisers
- Emden class (6,000 tons, 8 × 150 mm guns)
- Emden, Laid down 1921, Commissioned 1925*, Scuttled 1945.
- Königsberg class (7,200 tons, 9 × 150 mm guns)
- Königsberg, Commissioned 1927. Sank 1940
- Karlsruhe, Commissioned 1927. Sank 1940
- Köln, Laid down 1926, Commissioned 1928, Completed 1930*, Sunk by Bombing 1945.
- Leipzig class (8,000 tons, 9 × 150 mm guns)
Destroyers and torpedo boats
Destroyers
- Type 1934 (3,155 tons, 5 × 127 mm guns)
- Z1 Leberecht Maass, 1937
- Z2 Georg Thiele, 1937
- Z3 Max Schultz, 1937
- Z4 Richard Beitzen, 1937
- Type 1934A (Commissioned 1937–1939)
- Type 1936
- Type 1936A (Narvik)
- Type 1936A (Mob)
- Type 1936B
- Type 1936C
Torpedo boats
- Torpedoboot 1923 ("Raubvogel") (900 tons, 3 × 105 mm guns)
- Torpedoboot 1924 ("Raubtier") (950 tons, 3 × 105 mm guns)
- Torpedoboot 1935 (1,090 tons, 1 × 105 mm gun)
- Torpedoboot 1937 (1,150 tons, 1 × 105 mm gun)
- Flottentorpedoboot 1939 (Elbing) (1,750 tons, 4 × 105 mm guns)
Mine warfare craft
Minelayers
- Tannenberg 1935 (5,500 tons, 3 × 150mm guns, 460 mines)
- Brandenburg 1936 (3,900 tons, 3 × 105mm guns, 250 mines)
- Lothringen 1941 (2,000 tons, 2 × 88mm guns, 200 mines)
- Niedersachsen 1934 (1,800 tons, 2 × 105mm guns, 260 mines)
- Romania 1942 (3,152 tons, 4 x 20mm guns, 80 mines)[2][3]
- Drache 1924 (1,800 tons, 2 × 88mm guns, 120 mines)
- Brummer 1940 (3 × 10.5 cm guns, 2 × 3.7 cm anti-aircraft guns, 10 × 2 cm anti-aircraft guns, 4 × 46 cm torpedo tubes, 280 mines)
- Oldenburg 1934 (1,200 tons, 2 × 88mm guns, 145 mines)
- Kamerun 1939 (370 tons, 2 × 88mm guns, 100 mines)
- Togo 1939 (370 tons, 2 × 88mm guns, 100 mines)
- Kiebitz 1943
Sperrbrecher
- Sperrbrecher 1 – Sperrbrecher 100 (5,000 tons, 2 × 88mm guns)
Minesweeper
- M1935 class (875 tons, 2 × 105mm guns)
- M1 – M69
- M1940 class (775 tons, 1 × 105mm gun)
- M70 – M196
- M1943 class (825 tons, 2 × 105mm guns)
- M197 – M214
R Boats
- R1 class 1929 (60 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 6 mines)
- R1 – R16
- R17 class 1934 (115 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 12 mines)
- R17 – R24
- R25 class 1938 (110 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 12 mines)
- R25 – R40
- R41 class 1939 (125 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 12 mines)
- R41 – R129
- R130 class 1940 (150 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 12 mines)
- R130 – R150
- R151 class 1940 (125 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 12 mines)
- R151 – R217
- R218 class 1942 (140 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 16 mines)
- R218 – R300
- R301 class 1942 (160 tons, 1 × 88mm gun, 16 mines, 2 torpedo tubes)
- R301 – R312
Mine hunters
- KM1 – KM36
Small craft
S-boats
- S1 class (50 tons, 1 × 20mm gun, 2 torpedo tubes)
- S1 – S25
- S26 class (75 tons, 1 × 20mm gun, 2 torpedo tubes)
- S26 – S29
- S30 class (80 tons, 1 × 20mm gun, 2 torpedo tubes)
- S30 – S37
- S38 class (80 tons, 1 × 20mm gun, 2 torpedo tubes)
- S38 – S60
- S38b class (90 tons, 2 × 20mm guns, 2 torpedo tubes)
- S61 – S99
- S100 class (100 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 2 torpedo tubes)
- S100 – S150
- S151 class (100 tons, 1 × 37mm gun, 2 torpedo tubes)
- S151 – S205
U-boats
Coastal submarines
Ocean-going submarines
- Type VIIA
- Type VIIB
- Type VIIC
- U-69 through U-72
- U-77 through U-82
- U-88 through U-98
- U-132 through U-136
- U-201 through U-212
- U-221 through U-232
- U-235 through U-291
- U-301 through U-316
- U-331 through U-394
- U-396 through U-458
- U-465 through U-486
- U-551 through U-683
- U-701 through U-722
- U-731 through U-768
- U-771 through U-779
- U-821 through U-822
- U-825 and U-826
- U-901 through U-907
- U-921 through U-928
- U-951 through U-994
- U-1051 through U-1058
- U-1101 and U-1102
- U-1131 and U-1132
- U-1161 and U-1162
- U-1191 through U-1210
- Type VIIC 41
- Type IXA
- Type IXB
- Type IXC
- Type IXC 40
- Type IXD
Supply submarines
Electric boats
Midget submarines
Auxiliary ships
Troop ships
- Cap Arcona, 1927
- Deutschland, 1923
- Goya, 1940
- General von Steuben, 1923
- Wilhelm Gustloff, 1937
- Hamburg, 1926
- Pretoria, 1936
- Albert Ballin/Hansa, 1923
Artillery training ships
Torpedo training ships
- Hugo Zeye, 1942
Radio-controlled targets
- Braunschweig class
- Hessen, 1900
- Wittelsbach class
- Zähringen, 1898
Sail training ships
- Niobe, 1913
- Gorch Fock, 1933 (Russian training ship Tovarishch)
- Horst Wessel, 1936 (US Coast Guard Ship Eagle)
- Albert Leo Schlageter, 1937 (Portuguese training ship Sagres)
Floating anti-aircraft batteries
- Arcona
- Medusa
- Ariadne (ex-Dutch HNLMS Hertog Hendrik coastal defense ship)
- Niobe (ex-Dutch HNLMS Gelderland (1898) cruiser)
- Nymphe (ex-Norwegian HNoMS Tordenskjold coastal defense ship)
- Thetis (ex-Norwegian HNoMS Harald Haarfagre coastal defense ship)
Gunboats
- LS1 – LS12
- The Following Gunboats were generally armed with one 5.9 inch, two 37mm (1×2) and six 20mm (6×1) guns.
- August 400 tons Launched 1936
- Berkelstrom
- Cascade 338 tons Launched 1937
- Globe 314 tons Launched 1937
- Hast I
- Helene 400 tons Launched 1937
- Joost
- Kemphaan 343 tons Launched 1936
- Nijnberg
- Oostzee 336 tons Launched 1936
- Ost 565 tons Launched 1939
- Paraat
- Polaris 322 tons Launched 1936
- Robert Muller 399 tons Launched 1936
- Soemba
- Trompenberg
- West
- West Vlaanderen 346 tons Launched 1927
Blockade runners/Auxiliary minelayers
Weather ships
- Adolf Vinnen (WBS 5)
- August Wriedt (WBS 8)
- Berlebek (WBS 7 / WBS 14)
- Coburg (WBS 2 )
- Externsteine (WBS 11)
- Hermann / Sachsen (WBS 1)
- Hessen (WBS 11 / WBS 8)
- Hinrich Freese (WBS 4)
- Hoheweg (WBS 5)
- Fritz Homann (WBS 3 / WBS 4)
- Kehdingen WBS 6)
- Carl J. Busch (WBS 3)
- Lauenburg (WBS 3)
- Leipzig
- Merceditta (WBS 9)
- Mob. FD 34 (WBS 10)
- München (WBS 6)
- Ostmark (WBS 5)
- Sachsenwald (WBS 7)
- Skudd 1 (WBS 10)
- Star XV (WBS 10)
- Teutoberger Wald (WBS 12)
- Wuppertal (WBS 1)
Hospital ships
Patrol boats
- Kamerun
- KT1
- V 1101 Preußen
- V 1102 Gleiwitz[4]
- V 1103 Nordkap[4]
- V 1104 Ernst von Breisen[4]
- V 1105 Ernst Gröschel[4]
- V 1106 Ernst von Breisen[4]
- V 1107 Portland[4]
- V 1108 Weißenfels[4]
- V 1109 Moravia[4]
- V 5506 Zick
- V 5519 Tarantel (May–December 1940: NB. 19)
- V 5908 Togo (re-designated V 6512 in 1944)
- V 6105 (other names used: NO-05 Samoa and NH-05)
Captured foreign warships
A significant number of foreign warships were captured and recommissioned into the Kriegsmarine. Some were never completed.
- Clemenceau, captured 1940, launched 1943 (never completed)
- Faà di Bruno, laid down 1915, captured 1943, commissioned as monitor Biber, surrendered in 1945 and broken up.
- Sovetskaya Ukraina, laid down 1938, captured 1941 (never completed)
- O 8, captured in 1940, taken into service as UD-1
- HMS Seal, captured 1940, taken into service as UB
- The Danish training ship/coastal defense ship HDMS Niels Juel (1918) was refloated after an attempted destruction of the ship via running aground during Battle of Isefjord, disarmed and used as a training ship renamed Nordland by the Kriegsmarine. Scuttled a second time 3 May 1945, scrapped 1952.[5]
- Four Norwegian Sleipner-class destroyers, HNoMS Gyller (1938), HNoMS Odin (1939), HNoMS Tor (1939), & HNoMS Balder (1939) were captured in 1940. All four ships saw service in the Kriegsmarine.
- Four French Flower-class corvettes, Arquebuse, Hallebarde, Sabre, & Poignard were captured in 1940 following the Fall of France. All except Poignard were completed and entered service as ‘Patrol vessels’ PA 1 to PA 4 (the latter saw no service).
- HNLMS Gerard Callenburgh was scuttled to prevent her capture in 1940, but was nevertheless raised and commissioned into the Kriegsmarine as ZH1 in 1942.
- RHS Vasilefs Georgios was scuttled to prevent her captured in 1941, but was raised and commissioned into the Kriegsmarine as Hermes in 1942.
- French Destroyer L'Opiniâtre was captured while still under construction. Germany intended to completed her, but construction was halted in 1943 and broken up for scrap that year.
- HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën (C802) and HNLMS De Ruyter (C801) were captured while still under construction. Work was resumed to completed them, but halted following sabotage from the Dutch Resistance. Both ships were completed and commissioned into Dutch service in 1953.
- KB Dalmacija was captured first by Italy, then by Germany following the Italian Armistice in 1943. She was sunk by British torpedo boats.
- KB Dubrovnik was captured first by Italy, then by German following the Italian Armistice in 1943. She was scuttled in Genoa in 1945 following the Battle of the Ligurian Sea.
- KB Beograd was captured first by Italy, then by German following the Italian Armistice in 1943. She was sunk in Trieste, though sources vary of how so.
- KB T3 was captured first by Italy, then by German following the Italian Armistice in 1943. She was sunk by Allied aircraft in February 1945.
- Four Yugoslav Orjen-class torpedo boats was captured first by Italy, then by German following the Italian Armistice in 1943. All four were scuttled in 1944.
- KB Zmaj was captured in 1941 and used as a troop transport until her sinking in 1944.
- Yugoslav minelayer D2 was captured first by Italy, then by German following the Italian Armistice in 1943. She was sunk in 1944.
Unfinished Ships
Aircraft carriers
- Graf Zeppelin class
- Graf Zeppelin, Laid down 1936, commissioned 1938 (85% complete at start of war, never completed)*
- Flugzeugträger B, Laid Down 1938, never launched, broken up 1940*[6]
Heavy cruisers
Destroyers
- Zerstörer 1936C
- Zerstörer 1938A/Ac
- Zerstörer 1938B
- Zerstörer 1942: Z51 launched 1944, but bombed and never completed
- Zerstörer 1944
- Zerstörer 1945
- Spähkreuzer
Torpedo boats
- Flottentorpedoboot 1940 (Never completed)
- Flottentorpedoboot 1941 (Never completed)
- Flottentorpedoboot 1944 (Never completed)
A multitude of other ships also remained unfinished by the end of the war: escorts, gunboats, landing craft, fleet tenders, AA batteries, training ships, auxiliary ships, patrol boats, minelayers, mine hunters, fast torpedo attack boats (E-Boats) and more.
References
- Janes Fighting Ships of World War Two. 1994 reprint of 1945/46 edition, Crescent Books, Random House, New York
-
- Janes Fighting Ships of World War Two. 1994 reprint of 1945/46 edition, Crescent Books, Random House, New York
- Neculai Pădurariu, Reinhart Schmelzkopf, Die See-Handelsschiffe Rumäniens
- H. T. Lenton, German warships of the Second World War, p. 374
- "11. Vorpostenflottille" (in Polish). Piotr Mierzejewski. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
- "NIELS IUEL i tysk tjeneste (1943-1945) En: NIELS JUEL in German service (1943-1945), Søren Nørby".
- Breyer, Stephen, "German Aircraft Carriers", Schiffer Publishing Co, Atglen, PA
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.