-
151 British ships, 9 battle cruisers, HMS Invincible
HMS Inflexible, HMS Indomitable, HMS Indefatigable, HMS New Zealand, HMS Lion
HMS Princess Royal, HMS Queen Mary, HMS Tiger
German ships 110 battlecruisers 5 ships, Feng. Morality. Von der Tann
Moltke,
Seydlitz,
Derfflinger,
Luetzow
-
British: Lion, Royal Princess, Queen Mary, Tiger, New Zealand Indefatigable.
German: Lützov, De Vellinger, Cedritz, Moltke, Feng. Morality. Tann.
-
The British Royal Navy participated in the battle with 151 warships, including 28 battleships, 9 battlecruisers, 33 cruisers, 1 seaplane carrier, 79 destroyers, and 1 minelayer.
The German High Seas Fleet took part in the battle with 110 warships, including 22 battleships, 5 battlecruisers, 11 cruisers, and 72 destroyers.
The British lost 3 battle cruisers, 3 light cruisers and 8 destroyers, **6945 people.
The Germans lost 1 old battleship, 1 battle cruiser, 4 light cruisers and 5 destroyers, ** 3058 people.
-
British Home Fleet: 2 aircraft carriers; 7 battleships; 15 cruisers; 17 destroyers; 21 submarines.
North Atlantic Fleet: 2 cruisers; 9 destroyers; 2 submarines patrol strike fleet: 2 aircraft carriers; 2 battleships; 5 cruisers; 65 destroyers in the Mediterranean theater.
2 aircraft carriers in the UK; 4 escort aircraft carriers; 6 battleships; 16 cruisers; 99 destroyers.
Eastern Front. North-Western European Theater (1942-1945).
5 aircraft carriers in the UK; 7 battleships; 22 cruisers; 60 destroyers; 52 submarines.
Pacific Theater (
5 British battleships; 3 light aircraft carriers; 7 cruisers; 16 destroyers.
-
WWII German Navy Large Ships:
1. Aircraft carriers:
USS Graf-Zeppelin (not finalized by the end of the war) II. Battleships:
Deutschland-class battle cruisers: "Deutschland", "Admiral Scheer", "Admiral Graf Spee".
Scharnhorst-class battlecruisers: "Scharnhorst", "Gneisenau" Bismarck-class battleships: "Bismarck", "Tirpitz".
III. Cruisers:
Admiral Hipper-class heavy cruisers: "Admiral Hipper", "Blucher", "Prinz Eugen".
Königsberg-class light cruisers: Königsberg, Karlsruhe, Cologne Emden.
Leipzig" light cruiser.
Nuremberg "light cruiser.
Atlantis" auxiliary cruiser.
Orion" auxiliary cruiser.
Auxiliary cruiser USS Coronel.
Hanseatic "auxiliary cruiser.
-
Before World War I, there were 30 ships, and in the first two years they lost 13 ships.
Deyenne Reston class 2 Dresden, Emden.
7 ships of the Laimen class, Bremen, Hamburg, Berlin, Lübeck, Munich, Leipzig, Danzig.
And a bunch more. Type III during the war.
2 Bloomer class ships USS Bloomer and USS Beams.
4 ships of the Koenigsberg class: Königsberg, Nuremberg, Karlsruhe, and Emden (the name of the ship comes from the name of the ships lost by Germany at the beginning of World War I).
Cologne-class 10 sails (only 2 Cologne and Dresden are actually built).
-
1 All battleships included: Nassau, Westphalia, Rhineland, Posen (the four ships of the same class); Helgoland, Ostfrisland, Thuringia, Oldenburg (the four ships of the same class); Caesar, Frederick the Great, Empress, King Albert, Regent Louitpod (the five ships of the same class); HMS King, ** Emperor, HMS Frontier Governor, HMS Crown Prince (the four ships are of the same class); The Byrne (Bavaria), the Baden, Württemberg, and the Saxony (these four are of the same class, and are German superships of the Elizabeth class, a new type of battleship for the British Royal Navy, equipped with 380 mm guns. The latter 2 of these were not built).
The battlecruisers included: Blucher, Von der Tann, Moltke, Goburn, Seydlitz (the legendary unsinkable battleship of the Battle of Jutland), De Fleet, Lüzo, Hindenburg, and two more stages, none of which were built (the Mackensen-class, which is considered a model for the Bismarck-class in World War II, and the York-class, which is considered a model for the Bismarck-class in World War II).
During World War I, Germany claimed to have the second largest navy in the world, and the cruisers you are talking about are basically light cruisers (there was no such thing as heavy cruisers at that time, and the large cruisers of the German Navy were actually battle cruisers), and there were too many of them to count. There are not many domestic ** introductions to this aspect of the information, if you are interested, you can go to some foreign ** inquiries.
-
Oh my boy, this is amazing.
Frank Lampard. England fans have always expressed their displeasure with Frank Lampard's performances at two World Cups, failing to score despite his efforts. >>>More
There are "A Midsummer Night's Dream", "Robin Hood", and "Gone with the Wind", all of which were loved by the audience at the time and were particularly good-looking.
The Japanese are commonly used to naturally aspirate, the German system is good at using turbocharging, the United States likes to merge capital with other brands, and the good technology is used on themselves, so the reason for the high fuel consumption of American cars is that they use good things, but these good things can not be matched very well, so the fuel consumption is high, the Japanese do a good job of technology, but the cost savings, there is a lot of controversy about the quality, the German car is more solid as a whole, but the price is high, the power depends on what price you choose, in general, the German turbo power is strong, The Japanese naturally aspirated power has an advantage, and the second American depends on what price you spend.
Year: Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon, US Open.
1999 First Round First Round >>>More
I think the love between the two of them is particularly beautiful, both of them love each other, no matter what they do, they think of each other in their hearts.