Italian Battleship Giulio Cesare

Giulio Cesare was an Italian Conte di Cavour-class battleship that served in the Regia Marina in both World Wars before joining the Soviet Navy. Her keel was laid down on June 24, 1910 at Cantieri Ansaldo, Genua. She was launched October 15, 1911, and construction was completed May 14, 1914. Giulio Cesare (Italian for Julius Caesar) had no active missions during World War I. In 1926 attacked the Greek island of Corfu, as a reaction against the killing of Italian representatives in Jamina; later was renovated. From 1928 to 1933 she was used as an artillery training ship, then went into the yards for extensive modifications. Between 1933 and 1937 her length was increased by 10.3 meters, and she was given new armored decks and new propulsion machinery that uprated her to 93,000 horsepower (69 MW), and allowed a speed of 28 knots (52 km/h). During the Battle of Punta Stilo on July 9, 1940, Giulio Cesare was hit by a 15 inch (381 mm) shell as HMS Warspite set the record for naval gunnery against a moving target at well over 24,000 meters (26,000 yards). Giulio Cesare was assigned to covering convoys until 1942, when she was declared obsolete for operative missions and used for training purposes only. After the war Giulio Cesare, for compensation of war damages, was ceded to the Soviet Union who commissioned her as the Soviet battleship Novorossiysk.

Novorossiysk

As the Novorossiysk, it was a battleship of the Soviet Navy, which sank in 1955 with the loss of 608 lives, one of the worst maritime disasters after World War II. Novorossiysk was originally the Italian battleship Giulio Cesare and on 3 February 1949 at Vlor she was ceded to the Soviet Union as war reparations. The ship was commissioned into the Soviet Navy as Novorossiysk, and from July 1949 was based at Sevastopol, serving as flagship of the Black Sea Fleet and later as a gunnery training vessel. On 1955-10-29, the Novorossiysk was moored in Sevastopol Bay, 300 meters (1000 feet) from shore and opposite a hospital. At 1:30am, an explosion estimated to be the equivalent of 1,200 kilograms of TNT under the bow of the ship pierced all decks from the bottom plating to the forecastle deck. In the forecastle deck there was one hole which measured 14×4 meters in size. The damage extended from the bow aft 22 meters. The ship sank slowly from the bow, capsizing at 4:15am, 2 hours 45 minutes after the explosion, and 18 hours later became fully submerged. The capsizing resulted in the death of 608 sailors, most of whom were staying in the ship's compartments -- the greatest disaster in Russian naval history. Because of the politics of the Cold War, the fate of the Novorossiysk remained clouded in mystery until the late 1980s. The cause of the explosion is still unclear, but seems likely to have resulted from a ground mine that had been left behind since the Nazi occupation of Sevastopol. During the next two years divers found 19 German ground mines on the bottom of Sevastopol Bay. Eleven of the mines had the same TNT equivalent as the blast under Novorossiysk. A more theatrical explanation was that Italian frogmen were avenging the transfer of the formerly-Italian battleship to the USSR. Covert action by the Italian special operations unit Decima Flottiglia MAS has often been surmised, and there are reports that not long thereafter a small group of Italian Navy frogmen received high military awards. However, no firm evience exists for this hypothesis. No real traces of other types of sabotage have been found, though Soviet enquiries did not rule out this possibility because of the poor safeguarding of the fleet base on the night when the explosion happened. The enormous loss of life was directly blamed on the incompetent actions of her captain, Fleet Commander Vice Admiral Victor Parkhomenko. Among other underestimates of the danger to his ship, he did not know the conditions of the sea bottom, believing that the ratio between the sea depth (17 meters) and the ship's beam (28 meters) would prevent capsizing. However, the bottom was soft ooze, 15 meters deep, which offered no resistance. It was also reported that the commander displayed conceit and groundless calmness during this critical situation, and had even expressed the wish to "go have some tea." Because of the loss of Novorossiysk, the First Deputy Minister of Defence and the Commander-in-Chief of the Navy Nikolai Gerasimovich Kuznetsov was fired from his post in November 1955, and in February 1956 he was demoted to the rank of vice admiral and sent to retirement without the right to return to active service in the Navy. Novorossiysk Giulio Cesare

 

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