Chinese turret ship Dingyuan

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The Dingyuan, or Ting Yuen (photographed in 1884, waiting for delivery in Germany)
Career Beiyang Navy Ensign
Builder: Stettiner Vulcan AG; Stettin Germany
Ordered: 1881
Laid down 31 March 1881
Launched: 28 December 1881
Completed: 1884, Commissioned 29 October 1885
Fate: scuttled 10 February 1895
General characteristics
Displacement: 7,144 tons standard; 7,355 tons full load
Length: 94.5m
Beam: 18.4m
Draught: 5.94m
Propulsion: 2-shaft reciprocating triple expansion steam engine, 2 boilers; 7,500 shp
Speed: 15.4 knots
Fuel: 1000 tons coal
Complement: 363
Armament:
  • 4 × 305 mm guns
  • 2 x 150 mm guns
  • 2 x 57mm guns
  • 2 x 47mm guns
  • 8 x 37mm guns
  • 3 x 14' torpedo tubes
Armor:
  • 355mm belt armor;
  • 305 mm barbettes;

The Dingyuan (traditional Chinese: 定遠; simplified Chinese: 定远; pinyin: Dìngyǔan) was a Chinese battleship and the flagship of the Imperial Beiyang Fleet; her name was traditionally spelled Ting Yuen or Ting Yuan in older books. Her sister ship was the Zhenyuan.

Contents

[edit] Design

The Dingyuan was an "armoured turret ship" design. It was recognized as one of the most advanced battleships of its time, as good as or better than any ship in the fleets of Great Britain and Germany when she was built. It measured 94.5 metres long (298ft, 5in) and 18.4 metres wide (60ft, 4in) and drew 5.94 metres (19 ft, 6 in) of water. It was protected by an armoured belt 30-centimetre (1ft) thick. Experts say the ship was resistant to any firepower available at the time.

The ship, 7670 tons when loaded, had 6,000 hp (4,500 kW) and a speed of 14.5 nautical miles (27 km) per hour, and a range of around 4,500 nautical miles (8,330 km) at 10 knots (19 km/h).

The Dingyuan Brief Side View
The Dingyuan Brief Side View

[edit] Armament

The main armament was four 305 mm calibre Krupp cannons in two barbettes one to the port and one to the starboard forward of amidships. These guns had a range of 7.8 kilometres, firing with a muzzle velocity of 500 metres per second. Another two 150 mm calibre Krupp cannons were installed in turrets at the extreme bow and stern. These had a range of 11,000 metres. The armament also included 6 37 mm guns and three above waterline torpedo tubes. The complete crew was around 363 officers and men.

Two torpedo boats were also carried on board, enlarging the Dingyuan's striking distance and battle effectiveness. To meet the demands on ship, 20 desalinators were installed which could serve 300 people fresh water daily.

[edit] History

After negotiations with both British and German governments, the Qing Dynasty in 1881 handed the contract to build the advanced warship to Germany's Stettiner Maschinenbau AG Vulcan shipyard, at a cost of 1.7 million taels of silver (6.2 million German Goldmark). The hull was laid down on 31 March, 1881 and she was launched on 28 December, 1881 and sea trials commenced on 2 May 1883.

The delivery of the Dingyuan, sailed by a German crew, started in 1884, but was stopped following a request from the French who were in the middle of a conflict with China which culminated with the Sino-French War (1884-1885). The Dingyuan was a very powerful ship and vastly superior to any of the French ships of the French China Squadron, and should have been able to participate advantageously to the conflict, especially the Battle of Foochow [1].

In 1885, the Dingyuan finally set sail for China, arriving the following year. Also in 1885, the Beiyang Fleet was founded in Weihai, and based at Liugongdao Island, marking the establishment of Qing Dynasty's first modern fleet.

By the middle of the 1890s, the waning Qing Dynasty lost its desire to keep ahead in the naval race, in contrast to the strengthening Japanese navy. Because of internal corruption, lack of funding and incompetence, by the time of the First Sino-Japanese War the Imperial Japanese Navy was able to outmaneuver the Beiyang Navy. Dingyuan served as Admiral Ding Ruchang's flagship at the Battle of the Yalu River on September 17, 1894. After this, the Beiyang Fleet was based at Liugongdao Island. In early 1895, the Japanese surrounded the Beiyang Fleet both on land and from the sea. On February 5, 1895, the Dingyuan was seriously damaged after being hit by a Japanese torpedo and later cannon fire. Captain Liu Buchan ordered the ship scuttled.

[edit] Reconstruction

To commemorate this period of history, the Weihai Port Bureau and local Weigao Group invested 50 million yuan (US$6 million) to construct a replica Dingyuan. The replica's construction began on a scale of 1:1 on December 20, 2003. The duplicate Dingyuan is now a floating museum. Inside are records of Dingyuan, the Beiyang Fleet, the First Sino-Japanese War and life-at-sea exhibits.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Source (Japanese)

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • Wright, Richard N. J., The Chinese Steam Navy 1862-1945, Chatham Publishing, London, 2000, ISBN 1-86176-144-9
  • Chesneau, Roger and Eugene M. Kolesnik (editors), All The World's Fighting Ships 1860-1905, Conway Maritime Press, 1979 reprinted 2002, ISBN 0-85177-133-5