Greek battleship Salamis

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Career (Greece) Hellenic Navy ensign
Ordered: 1912
Launched: November 1914
Fate: scrapped 1932
General characteristics
Displacement: 19,500 tons
Length: 173.7 m (570 ft)
Beam: 24.7 m (81 ft)
Draft: 7.6 m (25 ft)
Propulsion: 18 Yarrow-type boilers
AEG turbines
3 shafts
40,000 shp
Speed: 23 knots (43 km/h) maximum
Complement: 1000?
Armament:

8 × 14-inch (356 mm) guns (4 × 2)
12 × 6-inch (152 mm) guns in casemates
12 × 75 mm guns

5 × 500 mm torpedo tubes
Armor:

Belt: 100-250 mm
Deck: 75 mm
Barbettes: 250 mm

Turrets: 250 mm

The Greek battleship Salamis (Greek: Σαλαμίς) was a dreadnought ordered for the Greek Navy from the AG Vulkan shipyard in Hamburg, Germany in 1912. She was named after the battle of Salamis. Construction stopped after the outbreak of World War I in 1914 (the hull was launched in November 1914). The armament for this ship was ordered from Bethlehem Steel in the United States and could not be delivered due to the British blockade of Germany. Bethlehem sold the guns to Britain and they were used for arming the Abercrombie class monitors. The hull of the ship remained intact after the war and became the subject of a protracted legal dispute. She was finally awarded to the builders and the hull was scrapped in 1932.

[edit] References

  • Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906-1922