German auxiliary cruiser Hansa

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Career (Denmark) File:Flag of Denmark.svg
Class and type: Merchant vessel
Name: Glengarry
Builder: Burmester & Wain, Copenhagen
Fate: Requisitioned by Kriegsmarine
Notes: Under construction when Denmark was occupied by Germany
Career (Nazi Germany) 60px
Class and type: Auxiliary cruiser (1943), Training Ship (1944)
Name: Hansa
Builder: Wilton, Rotterdam
Blohm & Voss, Hamburg
Yard number: 5
Acquired: 1940
Commissioned: 12 February 1944
Renamed: Zielschiff Meersburg, Hansa
Nickname: HSK-5 (II)
Schiff 5[1]
Fate: Interned, 1945
Career (United Kingdom) Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg
Class and type: Merchant vessel
Acquired: 1945
Fate: Scrapped 1971
General characteristics
Class and type: unclassed auxiliary cruiser
Displacement: 19,200 tons (9,138 gross register tons (GRT))
Length: 153 metres (502 ft)
Beam: 20.1 metres (66 ft)
Draft: 8.7 metres (29 ft)
Speed: 20.5 knots (38.0 km/h)
Range: 65,000 nautical miles (120,000 km; 75,000 mi) at 15 knots (28 km/h)
Complement: 400 men (plus 400 cadets as a cadet training ship)
Armament: 8× 150 mm guns (8x1)[2]
1× 105mm/45 caliber[2] gun
6×37mm[2] AA guns
36×20 mm AA guns (2x4, 28x1)[2]
Aircraft carried: One

The Hansa was a German auxiliary cruiser of the Kriegsmarine used during World War II.

She was known to the KM as HSK 5(II) (i.e., the second of that designation; the first was Pinguin), or also as Schiff 5. She was not given a raider letter by the Royal Navy as she did not enter active service as a commerce raider. She was the last German vessel to be converted into an auxiliary cruiser. She was named after the Hanseatic League.

History

Hansa was originally conceived as the cargo ship Glengarry. She was taken over by the Germans during the occupation of Denmark, while under construction at Burmeister & Wain in Copenhagen. She was temporary renamed Zielschiff Meersburg and served as a target ship for the 27th U-boat flotilla.

In the winter of 1942/43, she was sent to the Wilton shipyard in Rotterdam, and later to Blohm & Voss, Hamburg, where she was converted into an auxiliary cruiser. She bore the designation HSK 5(II), reflecting the number of the ship yard she was converted in.

De-commissioned as a hilfskruezer in February 1944 the ship became a Kadettenschulschiff (cadet training ship).

From September 1944 to May 1945 she participated in the Baltic Sea evacuations, transporting over 12,000 soldiers and civilians at a time.

Fate

On 20 May 1945 she sailed off to internment to Fehmarn. She was taken over by the British and sailed under different names until 1971 when she was scrapped.

Commanders

  • Kapitän zur See Hans Henighst, from April 1943 to August 1943;
  • Kapitän zur See Fritz Schwoerer, from February 1944 to May 1945.

Notes

  1. Ward, Ian, ed. The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Weapons and Warfare (London: Phoebus, 1978), Volume 11, p.1217, "Hansa".
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Ward, p.1217.

Books

  • Paul Schmalenbach (1977). German Raiders 1895–1945. ISBN 0 85059 351 4. 
  • August Karl Muggenthaler (1977). German Raiders of World War II. ISBN 0 7091 6683 4. 
  • Stephen Roskill (1956). The War at Sea 1939–1945 Volume II. 

it:Hansa (HSK 11) pl:HSK Hansa ru:Ганза (вспомогательный крейсер)