- Adriatic Campaign of World War I
The Adriatic Campaign of World War I was a naval campaign fought during
World War I between theAustro-Hungarian Navy , and theMediterranean squadrons of the United Kingdom,France , and the Kingdom of Italy.It consisted mainly of Austro-Hungarian coastal bombardments of Italy's Adriatic coast, and wider-ranging German/Hungarian submarine warfare into the Mediterranean. Allied forces mainly limited themselves to blockading the German/Hungarian navies in the Adriatic, which was successful in regards to surface units, but failed for the U-boats, which found safe harbours and easy passage into and out of the area for the whole of the war. Considered a relatively minor part of the naval warfare of World War I, it nonetheless tied down significant forces.
History
1914
Beginning of the war
On
6 August 1914 anAnglo-French naval agreement was signed, givingFrance the leadership of naval operations in theMediterranean . The remaining British Mediterranean forces, onearmored cruiser , fourlight cruisers , and sixteendestroyers were placed under the control of the French Mediterranean Fleet and bothGibraltar andMalta would be open as bases to the French.One day after the French declaration of war against
Austria-Hungary on11 August the French fleet under AdmiralAugustin Boué de Lapeyrère entered Malta. He had orders to sail with all available French and British ships, pass into theAdriatic Sea and undertake whatever operation he thought best against an Austrian port. Lapeyrère decided to surprise the Austrian vessels enforcing a blockade ofMontenegro . The main Allied force comprised the French battleships "Courbet", "Jean Bart", and the cruiser "Julien De La Graviere ". Two French squadrons of pre-dreadnoughts, two squadrons of cruisers, and 5 destroyer squadrons were held back in support. The British support group comprised two armored cruisers and three destroyer divisions. The Anglo-French force succeeded in cutting off and sinking the Austro-Hungarian light cruiser "SMS Zenta " off Bar on16 August .Throughout most of late August most of the action was simple bombardment of
Serbia n and Montenegrin troops by Austrian ships. OnAugust 9 the pre-dreadnought "Monarch" shelled the French radio station atBudva , while the destroyer "Panther" shelledMount Lovcen . OnAugust 17 "Monarch" shelled a Montenegrin radio station off Bar, then another station offVolovica Point onAugust 19 . Meanwhile a French squadron shelled Austrian troops onPrevlaka .Both the French and the Austrians spent much of this time laying extensive
minefields throughout the shallow waters of the Adriatic. Mostly this was done by destroyers, and at night. Several steamships ran afoul of these mines and either sunk or were damaged.The Goeben
In July the German battlecruiser "Goeben" sailed to
Triest from Pola. She and the German cruiser "Breslau" had been anchored there since the beginning of the summer. OnAugust 1 "Goeben" and "Breslau" rendezvoused atBrindisi , then headed forMessina to take on coal. They left forConstantinople onAugust 6 , shadowed by British cruiser "Gloucester".On
August 7 the Austro-Hungarian Fleet (6 battleships, 2 cruisers, 19 destroyers and torpedo boats) sortied from Pola to escort "Goeben" and "Breslau" through Austro-Hungarian territorial waters, returned to port following day without ever making contact. "Goeben" and "Breslau" briefly engaged "Gloucester" and the chase was abandoned by the British. ByAugust 10 both German warships were safely in theDardanelles and heading forTurkey .Winter
In November the French submarine "Cugnot" managed to slip into the Bocche di Cattaro as far as
Topla Bay but was chased out by the Austrian destroyer "SMS Blitz", and the torpedo boat "Tb 57T". Later that month the French submarine "Curie" raided the harbor barrage of Pola to wait for her chance to intrude. Two days later, on20 December , during an attempt to sneak into the harbour she got entangled in ananti-submarine net and could not free herself. Forced to surface for fresh air, she was sunk by the Austrian destroyer "Magnet" and "Tb 63T", with three casualties. The Austrians raised the wreck between December 1914 and February 1915. It was then repaired and commissioned as "U 14" in June 1915.On
21 December the submarine "U-12" scored one torpedo hit on the French battleship "Jean Bart" offSazen Island . The battleship had to withdraw toMalta for extensive repairs.1915
In February the French destroyer "Dague", while escorting the transport "Whitehead" to Bar was sunk after hitting a mine. Also that month the Austrian submarine "U-12" was unsuccessfully attacked off
Cape Menders by a French submarine. Austrian destroyer "Csikós" shelledMontenegrin positions at Bar with "Tb 15" and "Tb 68F".In April the Austrian "U-5" (commanded by Lt.
Georg Ritter von Trapp ) chased the French armored cruiser "Victor Hugo" offPaxos , but was unable to fire any torpedoes. The "U-5" also torpedoed the French armored cruiser "Léon Gambetta" after a two-day chase offSanta Maria di Leuca , causing 684 fatalities including Rear-Admiral Sénès. Only 137 French sailors survived. The Austrian "U-4" torpedoed and damaged the British light cruiser "HMS Dublin". Also the Austrian destroyer "Warasdiner" shelled enemy positions at Bar.Bombardment of Ancona
When
Italy declared war againstAustria-Hungary onMay 23 the Austrian fleet was quick to act, launching several attacks on theMarche region of Italy. [Dario Petković: Ratna mornarica austro-ugarske monarhije, Pula 2004, ISBN 953-6250-80-2] That day the destroyer "Dinara" and "Tb 53T" bombarded the port ofAncona . The destroyer "Lika", on reconnaissance duty betweenPalagruža andCape Gargano , shelled the semaphore andradio station atVieste and fired upon the Italian destroyer "Turbine". OnMay 24 the bulk of the Austrian fleet at Pola sailed for the Italian Adriatic coast. This included the dreadnoughts "Viribus Unitis", "Tegetthoff", "Prinz Eugen", and eight pre-dreadnoughts. The fleet bombarded several cities and other targets in and around theProvince of Ancona , especially damaging the port town of Ancona itself.The destroyer "Velebit" shelled the Italian airship "Città di Ferrara" off Ancona. The pre-dreadnought "Radetzky" and two torpedo boats bombardedPotenza Picena , then returned to Pola. The Radetzky-class pre-dreadnought "Zrinyi", with two torpedo boats bombardedSenigallia , destroying a train and damaging a railway station and a bridge, then returned to Pola. The torpedo boat "Tb 3" was unsuccessfully bombed by an Italian airship. The light cruiser "Admiral Spaun" shelled the Italian signal station at Cretaccio Island, while "Sankt Georg", with two torpedo boats, shelledRimini , damaging a freight train. The destroyer "Streiter" shelled the signal station nearTorre di Mileto . The light cruiser "Novara", a destroyer and two torpedo boats enteredCorsini Channel and shelled an Italian torpedo boat station, a semaphore station, and coastal artillery batteries.The light cruiser "Helgoland", aided by four destroyers sank the Italian destroyer "Turbine" in a pitched battle south of
Pelagosa . The destroyer "Tatra" shelled the railway embankment nearManfredonia while the destroyer "Csepel" shelled the Manfredonia railway station.Finally Austro-Hungarian
flying boat s dropped bombs onVenice and airship hangars at Chiaravalle.Allied raids
In response, on
5 June , four different Allied task forces attacked the Austrian coast. Four Italian armoured cruisers, escorted by four French destroyers, shelledCavtat ; the British cruiser "HMS Dublin" escorted by five Italian destroyers shelledDonzella ; the Italian light cruiser "Quarto" escorted by four destroyers bombardedLastovo ; The Italian light cruiser "Nino Bixio", two Italian and two French destroyers shelled the island of Lissa. OnJune 9 a mixed force of British, French and Italian destroyers shelled the Austro-Hungarian signal station atCape Rondini inAlbania .Gallipoli
During the Gallipoli Campaign the British battleships "Triumph" and "Majestic" were both sunk by the German submarine "U-21" off
Cape Helles in late May.The summer of 1915
The armoured cruiser "Sankt Georg" and a squadron of torpedo boats bombard
Rimini onJune 16 , causing minor damage. Then onJune 17 the cruisers "Novara", "Admiral Spaun" and their escorts attack and sink the Italian steamer Maria Grazia off Giulianova. The next day they shellRimini andFano , destroying the Italian signal station there.The summer of 1915 was a successful time for Austrian submarines as well. On
June 10 the "U-11" sank the Italian submarine "Medusa" and torpedo boat "Serpente". "U-10" sank the Italian torpedo boat "PN 5" onJune 26 offVenice . The "U-4" torpedoed and sank the Italian armoured cruiser "Giuseppe Garibaldi" onJuly 18 . And "U-5" captured the Greek steamer "Cefalonia vor Durazzo" onAugust 29 . But this was not without losses. OnAugust 13 the "U-3" was sunk atBrindisi by the French Destroyer "Bisson", after having been severely damaged by the Italian auxiliary cruiser "Città di Catania" the day before.The Austro-Hungarian naval air-arm also began regular bombing raids against
Bari andBrindisi in June, slightly damaging the British protected cruiser "Amethyst" in one such raid with machine gun fire. And the British armed trawler "Schiehallion" was sunk by a mine. The Italian cruiser "Amalfi" was sunk off Venice by German "UB-14" onJuly 2 . While the Italian scout cruiser "Marsala" shellsGravosa station onJuly 18 , the Italian scout cruiser "Quarto" and three Italian destroyers attack the Austrian installation atGuiparra ."Helgoland", seven destroyers and four torpedo boats support the Austrian landings at
Palagruža onJuly 28 but within two weeks the battalion of troops are taken off. OnAugust 17 the cruiser was unsuccessfully torpedoed by an Italian submarine on return journey. The town's freshwater cistern was damaged during the bombardment and the Italian troop evacuation had to take place the following day. The last act of the summer was the sinking onSeptember 26 of the Italian battleship "Benedetto Brin" inBrindisi Harbor by Italian-speaking Austro-Hungariansaboteur s. Over 450 were killed.In late September the Allies establish the
Otranto Barrage , blockading the entrance to the Adriatic Sea at theStrait of Otranto .December
In early December the French submarine "Fresnel" ran aground off the
Bojana River estuary due to bad navigation, and was sunk by the Austrian destroyer "Warasdiner". The "Helgoland" and three destroyers sortie against theOtranto Barrage fromDecember 5 throughDecember 22 and reconnaissance off the Albanian coast andSan Giovanni di Medua . They sink an Italian picket boat, three steamships loaded with ammunition and two armed schooners en route to Northern Albania.On
December 30 the French submarine "Monge" is rammed by the Austrian cruiser "Helgoland", and finally sunk by gunfire from the destroyer "Balaton".1916
Austrian submarines sank or damaged a number of ships in 1916. "U-11" captured the Italian hospital ship "King Albert" on
January 18 atSan Giovanni di Medua . "U-6" sank the French destroyer "Renaudin" onMarch 16 atDurazzo . OnJune 8 "U-5" torpedoed and sank the Italian troop transport "Principe Umberto" atLinguetta . Later "U-5" fought a French-Italian destroyer group to a stalemate onAugust 2 , and torpedoed the Italian Q-Ship "Pantelleria" south ofTaranto onAugust 14 .On
September 15 ,1916 the two Austro-Hungarian seaplanes L.132 (Konjovics, Sewera) and L.135 (Zelezny, Klimburg) force by bombing the French sub "Foucault" (Dévin) to surface. L.135 finally sinks the sub while the 27 survivors were clinging to the two planes now floating, to be finally saved by the alarmed Tb 100M. This was the first sinking of a submarine by airplanes in naval war history.The very same day the French sub "Ampére" (Dévin) scores two torpedo hits on the Austro-Hungarian Hospital ship No I (the former Lloyd steamer Elektra) off Cape Planka [Rat Ploca] causing two fatalities. The damaged hospital ship had to be beached in Borovica Bay for further repairs.
During night of December 22/23., 1916 Austro-Hungarian destroyers "Scharfschuetze", "Reka", "Dinara" and "Velebit" attacked the drifters patrolling the Otranto barrage, which applied for help to the French destroyers Casque, Protet, Commandant-RIVIÈRE, Commandant-Bory, Dehorter and Boutefeu which were escorting a convoy from Brindisi to Taranto. Because of communication problems only Casque and Commandant-RIVIÈRE attacked, but Caque's boiler rooms were hit immediately and she had to slow down to convert|23|kn|km/h. For further assistance the Italians ABBA, Nievo and Pilo left Brindisi shortly followed by the British cruiser Gloucester escorted by Impavido and Irriquieto. The French and the Italian groups met during darkness, ABBA rammed Casque, some moments later Boutefeu rammed ABBA. While the damaged vessels had to be taken into tow the Austrians escaped in the darkness.
The return from the Otranto battle, May 15, 1917, brought the British cruiser Dartmouth within the range of the German sub UC 25 which had already laid mines off Brindisi.
At 13.30 UC 25 torpedoed Dartmouth approximately thirty-six miles off Brindisi, for some time the ship was considered to be lost, but was manned by a rescue crew later and finally towed into port. On hearing that Dartmouth had been torpedoed, the Boutefeu went to assist, only to hit one of UC 25's mines.
1917
By August 1917 Lt. Von Trapp and "U-14" had sunk more than 24,000 tons of enemy shipping, including the Italian steamer "Milazzo" (11,480 t). The "U-5" torpedoed the French cruiser "Italia" near
Taranto onMay 30 , and onNovember 16 "U-43" severely damaged the Italian steamer "Oriona" betweenBrindisi andValona .The Premuda attack
At 3.30 a.m. on the morning of
June 10 ,1918 , in the company of SMS "Tegetthoff" and seven other ships en route to attack the Otranto Barrage, Szent István was hit by two torpedoes launched from the Italian MAS-15Motor Torpedo Boat under Corvette CaptainLuigi Rizzo nearPremuda island, present-day Croatia. Many of the 1087 crew were asleep, getting rested for the battle expected in a few hours. Immediate chaos soon changed into frantic efforts to save the vessel which was rapidly shipping water. The "Tegetthoff", which had at first sped away from the vicinity of the torpedo attack, returned and took the "Szent István" in tow, in an attempt to reach the massive dry dock at Pola. However the pumps were unequal to the task before them and the ship continued to slowly list, sinking at 6.12 a.m. [Dario Petković: Ratna mornarica austro-ugarske monarhije, Pula 2004, ISBN 953-6250-80-2]It is said she sank easily due to faults in the Tegetthoff class design: relatively low displacement and high
centre of gravity , together with the tremendous weight of 12 × 305 mmmain artillery . There were, however, only 89 dead, partly attributed to the fact that all sailors with the KuK had to learn to swim before entering active service. [Dario Petković: Ratna mornarica austro-ugarske monarhije, Pula 2004, ISBN 953-6250-80-2]The attack on the Otranto Barrage was cancelled as a consequence of this attack. [Dario Petković: Ratna mornarica austro-ugarske monarhije, Pula 2004, ISBN 953-6250-80-2]
1918
On February 13, 1918 the submarine Bernoulli (Audry) is lost with all hands after hitting a mine off the Bocche di Cattaro.
On 22/23 April 1918 the Austro-Hungarian destroyers Triglav, Uzsok, Dukla, Lika (II) and Csepel encountered the British destroyers Jackal and Hornet, the Australian Torrens and the French Cimeterre. Hornet was badly damaged in the ensuing fight but the alarm went up and the Austrians turned for home, pursued by Jackal who had lost her mainmast.
On 20 September 1918 the submarine CIRÇÉ (Viaud) is torpedoed 7 nm north west of Cape Rodoni [Sqepi i Skenderbeut, Albania] , by the Austro-Hungarian submarine U 47 (Seyffertitz) and lost with all hands.
On
1 November , the ex-Austro-Hungariandreadnought SMS "Viribus Unitis" was sunk at anchor atPula by a limpet mine attached by the crew of an Italian "mignatta"human torpedo . The whole navy was just being transferred to the new state (State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs ) after the dissolution of Austria Hungary.Austro-Hungarian submarines results
Austro-Hungarian and many German U-boats operated out of the Adriatic for the whole of the war. Due to lack of cooperation of the Allies in the Mediterranean control zones, and the late institution of the convoy system, U-boats experienced substantial success throughout the first war years."First World War" - Willmott, H.P.,
Dorling Kindersley , 2003, Page 186-187]K.u.K. Kriegsmarine submarines sunk 117 ships during WW1, with the total tonnage of 220.121T. The most well-known casualties were: [Dario Petković: Ratna mornarica austro-ugarske monarhije, Pula 2004, Page 84, ISBN 953-6250-80-2]
* "Leon Gambetta"
* "Giuseppe Garibaldi"
* "Nereide"
* "Renaudin"
* "Fourche"
* "Impetuoso"
* "Nembo"
*HMS|Phoenix|1911|2
* "Circé"Also, the K.u.K. Kriegsmarine submarines damaged the following ships: [Dario Petković: Ratna mornarica austro-ugarske monarhije, Pula 2004, Page 84, ISBN 953-6250-80-2]
* "Jean Bart"
* "Dublin"
* "Sakaki"
* "Weymouth"ee also
*
Mediterranean naval engagements during World War I
*Otranto Barrage References
External links
* [http://www.naval-history.net/WW1CampaignsSerbia.htm Serbia, Balkans & Macedonia 1914-18]
* [http://worldatwar.net/chandelle/v1/v1n2/adriatic.html Combined Operations in the Adriatic, 1915-18]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.