Soviet cruiser Komintern

From SpottingWorld, the Hub for the SpottingWorld network...
300px
The Komintern before modernization, 1920s.
Career (Soviet Union) 60px
Name: Komintern
Namesake: Communist International
Acquired: 1920
Commissioned: 1923
Decommissioned: 17 July 1942
Fate: Sunk as breakwater late 1942
General characteristics (after 1923 rebuild)
Type: light cruiser
Displacement: 7,838 tonnes (7,714 long tons)
Length: 133 m (436 ft 4 in)
Beam: 16.6 m (54 ft 6 in)
Draught: 7.2 m (23 ft 7 in)
Propulsion: 2 shaft vertical triple-expansion steam engines
16 Normand-type boilers
19,500 shp (14,500 kW)
Speed: 23 knots (26 mph; 43 km/h)
Endurance: 2,200 nmi (4,070 km) at 12 knots (22 km/h)
Complement: 730
Armament: 2 × 2, 12 × 1 - 130 mm (5.1 in) guns
2 × 3 - 450 mm (18 in) torpedo tubes
Armour: Deck: 80 mm (3.1 in)
Turrets: 127 mm (5.0 in)
Casemates: 80 mm (3.1 in)
Conning tower: 140 mm (5.5 in)

Komintern was a Soviet light cruiser originally named Pamiat' Merkuria (Memory of Mercury), a Bogatyr-class protected cruiser built for the Imperial Russian Navy. She saw service during World War I in the Black Sea and survived the Russian Civil War, although heavily damaged. She was repaired by the Soviet Navy and put into service as a training cruiser. In 1941 she was reclassified as a minelayer and provided gunfire support and transported troops during the Siege of Odessa, Siege of Sevastopol, and the Kerch-Feodosiya Operation in the winter of 1941—42. She was damaged beyond repair at Poti by a German air attack on 16 July 1942. Afterwards she was disarmed and hulked. At some point before October 1942 she was towed to the mouth of the Khobi river and sunk as a breakwater.

Service history

File:Komintern1923Sevastopol.jpg
The Komintern under repair in 1923.

Pamiat' Merkuria was seized by the Ukrainian People's Republic on 12 November 1917 and laid up on 28 March 1918 with her guns stripped by Bolsheviks to equip armoured trains. She was captured by the Germans on 1 May 1918 and used as a barracks ship. She was renamed to Hetman Ivan Mazepa on 17 September 1918 and formally hand over to the Ukrainian State's Navy. She fell into the hands of the Whites in November 1918. She had her engines sabotaged in April 1919 by order of the British when the Whites temporarily lost control of Sevastopol.[1] She was further damaged by the explosion of a mine when the Whites abandoned the Crimea in 1920. Once she fell into Soviet hands she spent several years under repair, which required parts and material from her sisters that were even more damaged, including machinery from the Bogatyr, before they were scrapped. She was rearmed with sixteen 130 mm (5.1 in) guns in two twin turrets and a dozen single mounts in casemates and in open mounts in her waist. She was given the proper revolutionary name of Komintern, after the Communist International on 31 December 1922 and was recommissioned in June 1923.[2]

File:Komintern1923.jpg
The Komintern after modernization. Her armament was reduced.

She was refitted in 1930 as a training cruiser and lost four boilers which were converted to classrooms. Her twin turrets were exchanged for single, shielded 130 mm gun mounts and six of her waist guns were replaced by four obsolete 75 mm (3.0 in)/50 guns. Her submerged broadside torpedo tubes were also removed during this refit.[3] She collided with Krasny Kavkaz in 1932 and seriously damaged the forecastle of the latter ship.[4] Sources are unclear when she was rearmed, but it probably wasn't until the late 1930s, probably when her forward smokestack was also removed. She landed all of her 75 mm/50 guns in exchange for a modern suite of anti-aircraft guns: three single 76.2 mm (3.00 in), three single 45 mm (1.8 in) 21-K, two single 25 mm (0.98 in) and five 12.7 mm (0.50 in) machine guns. In 1941 she was modified as a minelayer and could carry 195 mines, but her speed had been reduced to 12 knots (14 mph; 22 km/h).[2]

World War II

File:Komintern1941.jpg
The Komintern, 20 June 1941.

Komintern, in company with the cruisers Krasny Kavkaz, Chervona Ukraina and a number of destroyers, laid down a defensive mine barrage protecting the Black Sea Fleet base at Sevastopol on 22 June.[5] Komintern, along with the destroyers Nezamozhinsk and Shaumyan, was assigned to cooperate with the Separate Coastal Army on 8 August 1941 and spent much of the next month bombarding Romanian positions and coast defenses.[6] During the Siege of Odessa she escorted a number of convoys to and from the besieged city.[7] During the Crimean Campaign Komintern delivered supplies to the 44th Army at Feodosiya on 1 January 1942 and ferried troops and supplies to Sevastopol for the next several months.[8]

She was badly damaged by a German air attack on 11 March[2], but was able to continue under her own power. She was damaged again in Novorossiysk by I. Gruppe, Kampfgeschwader 76 on 2 July 1942 and moved to Poti shortly afterwards. She was severely damaged again by another German air attack on 16 July at Poti that she was deemed non-repairable. She was disarmed in August—September 1942, her guns forming coast defense batteries at Tuapse, and hulked.[1] At some point before October 1942 she was towed to the mouth of the Khobi river, just north of Poti, and sunk as a breakwater.[2][9]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Бронепалубный крейсер "Память Меркурия"" (in Russian). http://navsource.narod.ru/photos/02/026/index.html. Retrieved 2009-07-19. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 "Cruiser Komintern". http://flot.sevastopol.info/ship/cruiser/komintern.htm. Retrieved 2009-07-17. 
  3. Whitley, p. 203
  4. Breyer, Siegfried (1992). Soviet Warship Development: Volume 1: 1917-1937. London: Conway Maritime Press. p. 168. ISBN 0-85177-604-3. 
  5. Rohwer, pp. 80-1
  6. Rohwer, pp. 91, 97-8
  7. Rohwer, pp. 100, 106
  8. Rohwer, pp. 131, 136, 138, 143, 149, 150
  9. Rohwer, pp. 177, 181

References

  • Rohwer, Jürgen (2005). Chronology of the War at Sea 1939-1945: The Naval History of World War Two (Third Revised Edition ed.). Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-119-2. 
  • Whitley, M. J. (1995). Cruisers of World War Two: An International Encyclopedia. London: Cassell. ISBN 1-86019-874-0. 

External links

Commons-logo.svg
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
[[Commons: Category:Cruiser Kagul

| Komintern

]]

ja:パーミャチ・メルクーリヤ (防護巡洋艦) ru:Кагул (крейсер) uk:Гетьман Іван Мазепа (крейсер)