HNLMS De Gelderland
300px The wreck of Niobe in Kotka | |
Career | 60px |
---|---|
Name: | HNLMS De Gelderland |
Builder: | Fijenoord, Rotterdam |
Laid down: | 1 November 1897 |
Launched: | 28 September 1898 |
Commissioned: | 16 July 1900 |
Fate: | Seized by Germany, 1940 |
Notes: | |
Career | 60px |
Name: | Niobe |
Commissioned: | 1940 |
Fate: | Sunk by enemy action on July 16 1944 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Holland-class |
Displacement: | 4,100 t |
Length: | 94.76 m |
Beam: | 14.76 m |
Draught: | 5.4 m |
Propulsion: |
Two 3-cycle triple expansion engines 12 Yarrow boilers 2 shafts 10,500 PS |
Speed: |
as Gelderland: 19.5 kt (1914) as Niobe: 16 kt (1944) |
Complement: | 397 |
Sensors and processing systems: |
as Niobe: 2× FlaK-Kommandogeräte (optical range finders) 1× Würzburg radar |
Armament: |
as Gelderland: 8× 10.5 cm FlaK L/45 C/32 4× 40 mm Bofors L/60 4× 20 mm (4×4) Vierlinge C/38 |
HNLMS Gelderland was a Dutch warship. During its career in the Dutch Navy it was most notable for being the ship Queen Wilhelmina sent to South Africa to rescue Paul Kruger during the Second Boer War. The ship was taken over by the Germans during World War II and renamed Niobe. She was sunk in Kotka harbour in Finland on 16 July 1944.
History
The ship began its history as the Dutch Holland-class armoured deck cruiser (pantserdekschip) HNLMS Gelderland. After World War I she served as an artillery training ship in the Dutch navy. The ship was seized by the Germans during their invasion of the Netherlands in 1940. Gelderland joined the German Kriegsmarine under its new name Niobe. She was in use between 1940-44, first as a cruiser, then as a training ship, and finally as an AA-cruiser ("Flakschiff").
During the great offensive of 1944 the Soviets tried to finish the war against the Finns, once and for all. The Germans came to the aid of the Finns, among the material brought with them was the AA-cruiser Niobe, which was ordered to strengthen the Kotka air defences, then one of the most bombed cities in Finland. The Soviet Union put much emphasis on finding and sinking the Finnish coastal defence ship Väinämöinen. Soviet aerial reconnaissance spotted a large ship in Kotka harbour and the decision to attack was taken. 132 bombers and fighters took off on 16 July 1944. The ship was, however, the Niobe and the aircraft were met with fierce resistance. Nine aircraft were shot down before the ship was hit by seven bombs and two bouncing bombs (similar to the ones used in Operation Chastise) from two Soviet A-20 Havoc bombers. The guns were still firing while she was settling in her shallow grave. 70 men were lost.
The Niobe was raised and scrapped in 1953.
External links
de:Hr. Ms. Gelderland (1898) sv:Niobe (fartyg) fi:Niobe (ilmatorjunta-alus) ru:Ниобе (крейсер ПВО)