- Kriegsmarine
Infobox Military Unit
unit_name=Kriegsmarine (KM)
caption=KriegsmarineEnsign
dates=1935–1945
country=Nazi Germany
allegiance= Nazi Germany
branch=
type=Navy
role=
size=
command_structure=
current_commander=
garrison=
ceremonial_chief=
colonel_of_the_regiment=
nickname=
patron=
motto=
colors=
march=
mascot=
battles=World War II
notable_commanders=Erich Raeder Karl Dönitz
anniversaries=The "Kriegsmarine" (English: "War navy") was the name of the
German Navy between 1935 and 1945, during the Nazi regime, superseding theReichsmarine , and theKaiserliche Marine ofWorld War I . The Kriegsmarine was one of three official branches of theWehrmacht .Command structure
Adolf Hitler was the commander-in-chief of all German armed forces, including the Kriegsmarine. His authority was exercised through theOberkommando der Marine , or OKM, with a Commander-in-Chief (Oberbefehlshaber der Kriegsmarine), a Chief of Naval General Staff (Chef der Stabes der Seekriegsleitung) and a Chief of Naval Operations (Chef der Operationsabteilung). [cite web | last = Pipes | first = Jason | title = Organization of the Kriegsmarine | work = Feldgrau.com | date = 1996–2006 | url = http://www.feldgrau.com/kmsorg.html | accessdate = 2007-08-31 ]Below these were regional, squadron and temporary flotilla commands:
Regions
These covered significant naval regions (commanded by a
Generaladmiral or Admiral) and were themselves sub-divided, as necessary. There was a "Marineoberkommando" for the Baltic Fleet, Nord, Nordsee, Norwegen, Ost/Ostsee (formerly Baltic), Süd and West.quadrons
Each type of ship also had a command structure with its own
Flag Officer . The commands were Battleships, Cruisers, Destroyers, Submarines, Torpedo Boats, Minesweepers, Reconnaissance Forces, Naval Security Forces, Big Guns and Hand Guns, and Midget Weapons.Flotillas
Major naval operations were commanded by a Flottenchef. The commands were, by their nature, temporary.
History
Post-World War I origins
Under the terms of the
Treaty of Versailles , Germany was only allowed a minimal navy of 15,000 personnel, sixcapital ships of no more than 10,000 tons, sixcruisers , twelvedestroyers , twelvetorpedo boats and nosubmarines . However, even before the Nazi takeover German naval rearmament had begun with the launching of the firstpocket battleship , "Deutschland" in 1931.When the Nazis came to power in 1933,
Adolf Hitler soon began to ignore many of the Treaty restrictions and accelerated German rearmament. TheAnglo-German Naval Agreement of18 June 1935 then allowed Germany to build a navy equivalent to 35% of British surface ship tonnage and 45% of British submarine tonnage; battleships were to be limited to no more than 35,000 tons. That same year theReichsmarine was renamed as the Kriegsmarine.Build-up during the interwar period
Following the 1938 crisis caused by the
German occupation of Czechoslovakia , Germany abandoned all pretensions of adherence to treaty limitations on its navy.Plan Z , the blueprint for the German naval construction program finalized in 1938, envisaged building a navy of approximately 800 ships between the period 1939 – 1947. The building programme was to include:
*ten new design battleships and battlecruisers,
*four aircraft carriers, fifteen armored ships ("Panzerschiffe"),
*fiveheavy cruiser s, forty-fourlight cruiser s,
*158 destroyers and torpedo boats, and
*249 submarines, as well as numerous smaller crafts.Personnel strength was planned to rise to over 200,000.
Since the simultaneous and rapid build-up of the German army and airforce demanded substantial effort and resources, the planned naval program was not very far advanced by the time
World War II began. Implementation only began in January 1939 when three H-class battleships and two M-class light cruisers were laid down. OnSeptember 1 ,1939 , the navy still had a total personnel strength of only 78,000, and it was not at all ready for a major role in the war. With expectations in Germany of a quick victory by land, Plan Z was essentially shelved and the resources initially allocated for its realization were largely redirected to the construction of "U-boats ".panish Civil War
The first military action of the Kriegsmarine came during the
Spanish Civil War (1936–1939). Following the outbreak of hostilities in July 1936 several capital ships of the German fleet were sent to the region. The "Deutschland", "Admiral Scheer", and light cruiser "Köln" were the first to be sent in July 1936. These capital ships were accompanied by the 2nd Torpedo-boat Flotilla. Ostensively, the German presence was used to covertly support Franco's Nationalists although the immediate involvement of the "Deutschland" was humanitarian relief operations and the rescuing of 9,300 refugees from the fighting, including 4,550 Germans. Following the brokering of theInternational Non-Intervention Patrol to enforce an international arms embargo the Kriegsmarine was allotted the patrol area betweenCabo de Gata (Almeria) andOropesa . Numerous vessels served as part of these duties including "Admiral Graf Spee". Uboats also participated in covert action against Republican shipping as part ofOperation Ursula . At least eight uboats engaged a small number of targets in the area throughout the conflict. By way of comparison the Italian Navy,Regia Marina , operated fifty-eight submarines in the area as part ofSottomarini Legionari . On29 May 1937 the "Deutschland" was attacked in the Deutschland incident offIbiza by two bombers from the Republican Airforce. Total casualties from the Republican attack were 31 dead and 110 wounded, 71 seriously, mostly burn victims and in retaliation the "Admiral Scheer" shelled the harbour of Almeria on31 May . Following further attacks by Republican submarine forces against the "Leipzig" off port ofOran between 15–18 June 1937 Germany withdrew from the Non-Intervention Patrol although maintained a continuous presence in the area until the end of the conflict.World War II
The "Kriegsmarine" was involved in World War II from the start of the war and participated in the
Battle of Westerplatte and theBattle of the Danzig Bay during the Invasion of Poland. In 1939, major events for the "Kriegsmarine" were theBattle of the River Plate , the sinking of theBattleship HMS "Royal Oak", and the sinking of theAircraft Carrier HMS "Courageous". The Battle of the Atlantic started in 1939, although the German submarine fleet was hampered by the lack of good ports from which to attack Allied shipping.In
April 1940, the main action the German Navy was involved in was the invasion of Norway, where it suffered quite heavy losses, including theHeavy Cruiser "Blücher" sunk by the guns ofOscarsborg Fortress in theOslofjord , ten destroyers lost in theBattles of Narvik and two light cruiser lost elsewhere during the campaign. The "Kriegsmarine" did however sink a number of British ships during this campaign, including the Aircraft Carrier HMS "Glorious".The losses in the
Norwegian Campaign meant that only a handful of heavy ships were ready for action for the planned, but never executed, invasion of Britain (Operation Sealion ) in the summer of 1940. There were serious doubts that the invasion sea routes could have been protected against British naval action. After the fall of France and the conquest of Norway, the German submarine fleet was brought much closer to the British shipping lanes in theAtlantic . At first, the British merchant convoys lackedradar equipped escorts; as such, the submarines were very hard to detect during their nighttime surface attacks. This year was for these reasons one of the most successful for the Kriegsmarine, as measured in terms of merchant shipping sunk compared to submarines lost (theFirst Happy Time ).Italy entered the war in June 1940, and the
Battle of the Mediterranean began: from September 1941 to May 1944 some 62 German submarines were transferred there, sneaking past the British naval base atGibraltar . The Mediterranean submarines sunk 24 major Allied warships (including 12 destroyers, 4 cruisers, 2 aircraft carriers and 1 battleship) and 94 merchant ships (449,206 tons of shipping). None of the Mediterranean submarines made it back to their home bases as they were all either sunk in battle or scuttled by their crews at the end of the war [ [http://uboat.net/ops/med-ove.htm uboat.net - U-boats in the Mediterranean - Overview ] ] In 1941 one of the four modern German battleships, the "Bismarck" sank HMS "Hood" while breaking out into the Atlantic for commerce raiding. However, the "Bismarck" was in turn hunted down by much superior British forces after receiving crippling damage from a torpedo plane and scuttled after taking a heavy beating from two British battleships.Throughout the war the Kriegsmarine was responsible for
coastal artillery protecting major ports and important coastal areas and also anti-aircraft batteries protecting major ports. [http://www.feldgrau.com/articles.php?ID=38 Feldgrau :: Organization of the Kriegsmarine in the West 1940-45 ] ]During 1941, the Kriegsmarine and the United States Navy became
de facto belligerent s, although war was not formally declared, leading to the sinking of the USS "Reuben James". The Japaneseattack on Pearl Harbor and the subsequent German declaration of war against theUSA in December 1941 led to another phase of the Battle of the Atlantic. InOperation Drumbeat and subsequent operations until August 1942, a large number of Allied merchant ships were sunk by submarines off the American coast as the Americans had not prepared for submarine warfare, despite clear warnings (this was the so-calledSecond happy time for the German navy). The situation became so serious that military leaders feared for the whole allied strategy.The vast American ship building capabilities and naval forces were however now brought into the war and soon more than offset any losses inflicted by the German submariners. In 1942, the submarine warfare continued on all fronts, and when German forces in the Soviet Union reached the
Black Sea , a few submarines were eventually transferred there.The
Battle of the Barents Sea was an attempt by a German naval force to attack an Allied Arctic convoy. However, the advantage was not pressed home and they returned to base. There were serious implications: this failure infuriated Hitler, who nearly enforced a decision to scrap the surface fleet. Instead, resources were diverted to the U-boats, and the surface fleet became a lesser threat to the Allies.After 1943 when the "Scharnhorst" had been sunk in theBattle of North Cape by HMS "Duke of York", most of the German surface ships were pent up in or close to their ports as a "fleet in being ", for fear of losing them in action and to tie up British naval forces. The largest ship of these ships, the battleship "Tirpitz", was stationed in Norway as a threat to Allied shipping and also as a defense against a potential Allied invasion. When she was sunk by British bombers in late 1944 (Operation Catechism ), several British capital ships could be moved to the Pacific.From late 1944 until the end of the war, the surface fleet of "Kriegsmarine" was heavily engaged in providing artillery support to the retreating German land forces along the Baltic coast and in ferrying civilian refugees to the western parts of Germany (
Lübeck ,Hamburg ) in large rescue operations. Large parts of the population of eastern Germany fled the approachingRed Army out of fear for Soviet retaliation and mass rapes and killings. The Kriegsmarine evacuated large numbers of civilians in theevacuation of East Prussia and Danzig in January 1945. It was during this activity that the catastrophic sinking of several large passenger ships occurred: the "Wilhelm Gustloff" and the "Goya" was sunk by Soviet submarines, while the "SS Cap Arcona " was sunk by British bombers, each sinking claiming thousands of civilian lives. The Kriegsmarine also provided important assistance in the evacuation of the fleeing German civilians ofPomerania andStettin in March and April 1945. In the last stage of the war, the Kriegsmarine also organized a number of divisions of infantry from its personnel (submarine crews and so on).During 1943 and 1944, due to Allied anti-submarine tactics and better equipment the U-boat fleet started to suffer heavy losses.
Radar , longer range air cover, improved tactics and new weapons all contributed. German technical developments, such as the Schnorchel, attempted to counter these. New U-boat types, the "Elektroboote", were in development and, had these become operational in sufficient numbers, the Allied advantage would have been eroded.Between 1943 and 1945, a group of U-boats known as the "Monsun Boats" ("
Monsun Gruppe ") operated in theIndian Ocean from Japanese bases in occupiedIndonesia . As the Allied merchant convoys had not yet been organized in those waters, the initial sinkings were plentiful. However, this situation was soon remedied. [ [http://uboat.net/ops/monsun.htm uboat.net - U-boat Operations- The Monsun U-boats] ] During the later war years, the "Monsun Boats" were also used as a means of exchanging vital war supplies with Japan.Epilogue
After the war, the German surface ships that remained afloat (only two large warships were operational) were divided among the victors. Some (like the unfinished aircraft carrier "Graf Zeppelin") were used for target practice, while others (mostly destroyers and torpedo boats) were put into the service of Allied navies that lacked surface ships after the war. The British, French and Soviet navies received the destroyers, and some torpedo boats went to the Danish and Norwegian navies. The destroyers were all retired by the end of the 1950s, but some of the torpedo boats were returned to the new West German navy in the 1960s.
For the purpose of mine clearing, the "
Royal Navy " employed German crews and minesweepers from June 1945 to January 1948 [ [http://www.janmaat.de/m_gesch0.htm German Mine Sweeping Administration (GMSA)] (in German), accessed:09 June 2008 ] , organised in the "German Mine Sweeping Administration ", the "GMSA", which consisted of 27,000 members of the former "Kriegsmarine" and 300 vessels [ [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=8Uczn3-3F34C&pg=PA41&lpg=PA41&dq=GMSA+mine+sweeping&source=web&ots=46TWkZw-WY&sig=qCDJ_-O-7BF5WEsxnGLoRG2rUqo&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=2&ct=result Google book review: "German Seaman 1939-45"] Page: 41, author: Gordon Williamson, John White, publisher: Osprey Publishing, accessed:09 July 2008 ] .In 1956, with
West Germany 's accession toNATO , a new navy was established and was referred to as the "Bundesmarine" (Federal Navy). Some "Kriegsmarine" commanders likeErich Topp andOtto Kretschmer went on to serve in the "Bundesmarine". InEast Germany the "Volksmarine " (People's Navy) was established some time after the war. With the reunification of Germany in 1990, it was decided to simply use the name "Deutsche Marine" (German Navy ).Major Kriegsmarine wartime operations
*Wikinger (1940) – foray by destroyers into the North Sea
*Weserübung ("Exercise Weser") (1940) – invasion of Denmark and Norway
*Juno (1940) – operation to disrupt Allied supplies to Norway
*Nordseetour (1940) – first Atlantic operation of "Admiral Hipper"
*Berlin (1941) – Atlantic cruise of "Scharnhorst" and "Gneisenau"
*Rheinübung ("ExerciseRhine ") (1941) – breakout by "Bismarck" and "Prinz Eugen"
*Doppelschlag ("Double blow") (1942) – anti-shipping operation offNovaya Zemlya by "Admiral Scheer" and "Admiral Hipper"
*Sportpalast (1942) – aborted operation (including "Tirpitz") to attack Arctic convoys
*Rösselsprung ("Knights Move") (1942) – operation (including "Tirpitz") to attack Arctic convoy PQ-17
*Wunderland (1942) – anti-shipping operation in Kara Sea by "Admiral Scheer"
*Paukenschlag ("Drumbeat" ("Beat of the Kettle Drum")); "Second Happy Time") (1942) – U-boat campaign off the United States east coast
*Regenbogen ("Rainbow") (1942) – failed attack on Arctic convoy JW-51B, by "Admiral Hipper" and "Lützow"
*Cerberus (1942) – movement of capital ships from Brest to home ports in Germany (Channel Dash)
*Ostfront ("East front") (1943) – final operation of "Scharnhorst", to intercept convoy JW-55B
*Domino (1943) – second aborted Arctic sortie by "Scharnhorst", "Prinz Eugen" and destroyers
*Zitronella ("Lemon extract") (1943) – raid upon Allied-occupied Spitsbergen (Svalbard)
*Deadlight (1945) – postwar scuttling of U-boatships
"See also:
List of Kriegsmarine ships "By the start of World War II, much of the Kriegsmarine were modern ships: fast, well-armed and well-armoured. This had been achieved by concealment but also by deliberately flouting World War I peace terms and those of various naval treaties. However, the war started with the German Navy still at a distinct disadvantage in terms of sheer size with what were expected to be its primary adversaries-the navies of France and Great Britain. Although a major re-armament of the navy (
Plan Z ) was planned, and initially begun, the start of the war in 1939 meant that the vast amounts of material required for the project were diverted to other areas. The sheer disparity in size when compared to the other European powers navies prompted German naval commander in chief Grand Admiral Erich Raeder to write of his own navy once the war began "The surface forces can do no more than show that they know how to die gallantly." A number of captured ships from occupied countries were added to the German fleet as the war progressed.Some ship types do not fit clearly into the commonly used ship classifications. Where there is argument, this has been noted.
Surface ships
The main combat ships (not
U-boat s) of the Kriegsmarine:Aircraft carriers
Construction of the "Graf Zeppelin" was started in 1936 with an unnamed sister ship started two years later in 1938, but neither ship was completed. In 1942 conversion to auxiliary carriers was begun on three German passenger ships and two unfinished cruisers—the captured French light cruiser "De Grasse" and the German heavy cruiser "Seydlitz"—but by 1943 all the conversion work was halted for lack of materials and the deteriorating military situation. [http://german-navy.de/kriegsmarine/zplan/carrier/index.html] With no carriers in train, orders for the
Fieseler Fi 167 ship-borne biplane torpedo and reconnaissance bomber were canceled.Battleships
"Bismarck" and "Tirpitz"
Battlecruisers
"Scharnhorst" and "Gneisenau". The classification of these ships is problematic. The "battlecruiser" designation is largely a British and Royal Naval usage (arguing that 11" armament would not be adequate) while the Germans in particular describe them as "battleships" or "Schlachtschiff".
Pre-dreadnought battleships
The
World War I era Pre-dreadnought battleships "Schlesien" and "Schleswig-Holstein" were used mainly as training ships, although they also participated in several military operations. "Hessen" was converted into a radio-guided target ship in 1930.Pocket battleships ("Panzerschiff")
The "
Pocket battleship s" "Deutschland" / "Lützow", ""Admiral Scheer", and ""Admiral Graf Spee". Modern commentators favour classifying these as "heavy cruisers" and indeed the "Kriegsmarine" itself reclassified these ships as such ("Schwere Kreuzer") in 1940. [ [http://german-navy.de/kriegsmarine/ships/panzerschiffe/deutschland/history.html Deutschland History ] ]Heavy cruisers
"Admiral Hipper", "Blücher", and "Prinz Eugen"
Light cruisers
The term "
light cruiser " is a shortening of the phrase "lightarmoured cruiser ." Light cruisers were defined under theWashington Naval Treaty by gun calibre. Light cruiser describes a small ship that carried armour in the same way as an armoured cruiser. In other words, like standard cruisers, light cruisers possessed a protective belt and a protective deck. Prior to this, smaller cruisers tended to be of theprotected cruiser model and possessed only an armoured deck. Germany's light cruisers are as follows:
* "Emden"
* "Königsberg"
* "Karlsruhe"
* "Köln"
* "Leipzig"
* "Nürnberg"Auxiliary cruisers
During the war, nine merchant ships were converted into "
auxiliary cruiser s" and used ascommerce raiders , particularly in theIndian Ocean andPacific Ocean . The German auxiliary cruisers were:
* "Orion" (HSK-1)
* "Atlantis" (HSK-2)
* "Widder" (HSK-3)
* "Thor" (HSK-4)
* "Pinguin" (HSK-5)
* "Stier" (HSK-6)
* "Komet" (HSK-7)
* "Kormoran" (HSK-8)
* "Michel" (HSK-9)
* "Coronel" (HSK-10)
* "Hansa" (HSK-11)Destroyers
Although the German World War II destroyer ("Zerstörer") fleet was modern and the ships were larger than conventional destroyers of other navies, they had problems. Early classes were unstable, wet in heavy weather, suffered from engine problems and had short range. Some problems were solved with the evolution of later designs, but further developments were curtailed by the war and, ultimately, by Germany's defeat. In the first year of World War II, they were used mainly to sow offensive minefields in shipping lanes close to the British coast.
Torpedo boats
These vessels evolved through the 1930s from small vessels, relying almost entirely on torpedoes, to what were effectively small destroyers with mines, torpedoes and guns. Two classes of fleet torpedo boats were planned, but not built, in the 1940s.
Troop ships
"
Cap Arcona ", "Goya", "Steuben", "Wilhelm Gustloff".Miscellaneous
Minelayers , Minesweepers,Gunboats ,E-boat s and Watchboats. Catapult-launched spotter planes:Arado Ar 196 .Submarines (U-boat)
At the outbreak of war, the Kriegsmarine had a relatively small fleet of submarines (
U-boat s) - 57. This was increased, particularly after Hitler lost patience with the large surface ships. It is arguable that, had more resources been put more into U-boats earlier, then Britain would not have been able to defend its convoys quickly enough to avoid defeat. In fact after a year of war, production of new ships had only kept up with losses.The principal types were the Type IX, a long range type used in the western and southern Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans; and the Type VII, the most numerous type, used principally in the north Atlantic. Type X was a small class of mine-layers and Type XIV was a specialised type used to support distant U-boat operations - the "Milchkuh" (Milkcow).
Types XXI and XXIII, the "Elektroboot", would have negated much of the Allied anti-submarine tactics and technology, but they were never deployed in sufficient numbers. Post-war, they became the prototypes for modern submarines, in particular, the Soviet W-class.
During World War II, about 60% of all U-boats commissioned were lost in action; 28,000 of the 40,000 U-boat crewmen were killed during the war and 8,000 were captured. The remaining U-boats were either surrendered to the Allies or scuttled by their own crews at the end of the war.
Uniforms
Many different types of uniforms were worn by the Kriegsmarine, here is a list of the main ones:
ee also
*
List of Kriegsmarine ships
*List of ships of the German navies
*List of Knight's Cross recipients of the Kriegsmarine
*Alwin-Broder Albrecht
*Erich Raeder
*Karl Dönitz
* Horst WesselNotes
External links
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