Greek submarine Delfin
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Delfin - Δελφίν |
|
Career (Greece) | |
---|---|
Ordered: | September 1910 |
Builder: | Schneider Shipyards, Toulon |
Laid down: | 1911 |
Launched: | 1912 |
Commissioned: | 21 August 1912 |
Decommissioned: | 1920 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Schneider-Laubeuf |
Displacement: | surfaced: 360 tons submerged: 452 tons |
Length: | 49.5 m |
Speed: | surfaced: 12 knots submerged: 8 knots |
Complement: | 24 |
Armament: | 5×450mm T/T |
Delfin (Greek: Δελφίν, English translation: "dolphin") was a Greek submarine (actually called a "submersible", καταδυόμενον, according to the then current French terminology) which served during the Balkan Wars and World War I. It was the second submarine to enter service in the Greek navy, after the Nordenfelt I (in service 1886-1901), and is notable as the first submarine in the world to launch a torpedo attack (albeit without success) against a warship.[1]
[edit] History
Delfin was ordered in 1910 from the Toulon shipyards along with its sister ship, Xifias. It was delivered to the Royal Hellenic Navy just before the outbreak of the First Balkan War. Its first captain, Lt Cmdr Stefanos Paparrigopoulos, together with the 17-man crew, had been sent to France to receive their training,[2] which, in the event, was cut short when the outbreak of the war became inevitable. The Navy Ministry ordered them to sail home, and Delfin sailed from France on September 29, arriving in Corfu on the very outbreak of the war, October 4. From Corfu the submarine sailed to the main Greek naval station at Piraeus, where it remained until October 19, its crew completing their training and preparations.[2] From Piraeus, Delfin joined the Fleet at its forward anchorage of Moudros Bay in Lemnos, but did not sail out until the end of November, instead being engaged in diving exercises. Although the vessel was plagued by numerous mechanical problems, after November 20 it began patrolling outside the Dardanelles, retiring to Tenedos during the nights.[2]
In the morning of December 9, the Ottoman light cruiser Mecidiye sailed out of the Dardanelles on a scouting mission. Delfin launched a torpedo against Mecidiye from a distance of 800 meters, but failed to sink it, presumably because of a torpedo malfunction.[3] In its attempt to return to Tenedos, the ship ran aground on a shoal north of the island, and had to drop its lead ballast in order to escape. This however meant that the ship was unable to submerge any more, and therefore sailed back to Piraeus. Delfin, along with Xifias and the rest of the Greek fleet, were confiscated by the French in 1916, during the Greek National Schism. When they were returned in 1919, they were in a bad shape, and the following year, they were decommissioned.[1]
[edit] Tradition
Two other vessels of the Hellenic Navy have received the name Delfin: the British V class submarine Delfin II (Υ-9) (in service 1945-1957) and a German Type 149 Seemöwe torpedo boat (in service 1968-1974).
[edit] References
- ^ a b (Greek) History of the Hellenic Navy Submarine Command
- ^ a b c (Greek) Greek submarines: 110 years of history from the ΠΤΗΣΗ magazine, issue 135, May 1996
- ^ Sondhaus, Lawrence (2001). Naval Warfare, 1815-1914. Routledge, p. 220. ISBN 0415214785.