Contemporary postcard: Ausro-Hungarian cruiser Zenta under fire from French Dreadnought Courbet |
Prior to 1914 it was widely assumed that fleets of battleships,
supported by scouting cruisers, and by flotillas of destroyers and torpedo
boats, would clash in climatic battles that might well decide the outcome of an
entire war. This had indeed happened three times since Trafalgar – Japanese victories
over China at the Yalu in 1895, and, massively, over the Russians in Tsu-Shima
in 1905, and the American triumphs over Spanish forces at Manila Bay and
Santiago in 1898, had been the decisive factors in bringing the vanquished to the
negotiating table.
Russian annihilation at Tsu Shima 1905 The "Super Trafalgar" of the Age of Steam |
What had not been sufficiently appreciated however was the
fact that the very magnitude of this fighting capability, and the massive investment,
it represented, made risking its loss potentially fatal. Churchill summed up the
situation with his description of Admiral Jellicoe, commander of the Royal Navy’s
Grand Fleet as “The only man who could
lose the entire war in a single afternoon.” World War 1’s only full-fleet confrontation,
that between the British and German navies at the Battle of Jutland in 1916, was to be characterised by caution on both
sides, though it can be argued that the Germans “blinked first”. Pre-war thinking had emphasised the role of
gunnery and had taken insufficient note of the extent to which minefields, and
increasingly submarines, would change the nature of sea warfare. In practice the
presence of a “Fleet in Being”, kept in protected anchorages but representing a
threat which could be unleashed at any time, was to prove critical in obliging
an enemy to deploy its forces so as to be ready to deal with it. The initiative
rested with the possessor of the fleet in being.
The informal Anglo-French accords reached in the decade
before the war were based on an assumption of confrontation with the Triple
Entente of Germany, Austro-Hungary and Italy. It was agreed that British naval
power was to be primarily concentrated in the North Sea to confront Germany,
while French forces were to face the Italian and Austro-Hungarian navies in the
Mediterranean. In the event Italy was to stay out of the war initially, and
when she finally entered, in 1915, was to do so, for the most cynical of
reasons, on the side of Britain and France.
In August 1914 the main French concern was protection of
troop convoys between French possessions in North Africa and Metropolitan
France (and indeed throughout the war France was to depend heavily on colonial
troops). With Turkey not yet formally involved in the war the main threat to
such convoys would come from the Austro-Hungarian fleet, a powerful force with four
modern dreadnoughts, ten pre-dreadnoughts and three old coast-defence ships, with significant
cruiser, destroyer, torpedo boats and submarine forces to support them. It was
a well-balanced fleet but its weakness was that it was based in the Adriatic, a
long-narrow sea that could only be exited or entered by the 48-mile wide Strait
of Otranto. The main Austro-Hungarian naval base was at Pola, at the Adriatic’s
northern end.
For the larger French navy there were two options – to enter the
Adriatic in force and hope that the Austro-Hungarian fleet would accept the challenge
and face annihilation or to close off the Adriatic by blockading the Otranto
Straits. In the first month of the war the first option looked like an
attractive one, possibly the more so since France had no naval victory to its name
since its humiliation at Trafalgar.
The pride of the Austro-Hungarian Navy: Viribus Unitis, lead ship of a class of four |
Zenta (1897), small, obsolete and lightly armed |
Destroyer Streiter of the Hussar Class,similar to the Ulan |
French:
Dreadnought Battleships:
Courbet, Jean Bart
Pre-dreadnought battleships (Last of this type, 6- 8 years in
service):
Voltaire, Vergniaud, Diderot, Danton, Condorcet,
Vérité, Justice, Démocratie, Patrie, République
Armoured cruisers:
Victor
Hugo, Jules Ferry
Protected cruiser:
Jurien de la Gravière
5 destroyer squadrons
British:
Armoured Cruisers:
Warrior, Defence
3 Destroyer divisions
Courbet - France's first dreadnought |
Captain Pachner |
The Zenta's last stand, as depicted on a contemporary postcard |
The Danton - an appointment with a German U-boat off Sardinia in 1917 lies in her future |
Forgotten today, the hopeless stand by the Zenta deserves to be remembered in the
same way as those of the Rawalpindi
and the Jervis Bay in World War 2. In
all these cases flight was an option – and it was always refused. The Zenta’s crew died in the service of a
moribund empire and a senile emperor, better men that those they died for so
heroically.
Britannia’s Spartan - and the Taku Forts, 1859
The Anglo-French assault at the Taku Forts in Northern China – and the highly irregular but welcome intervention of the neutral United States Navy – was one of the most dramatic incidents of the mid-nineteenth century. It also led to the only defeat of the Royal Navy between the end of the Napoleonic Wars and the outbreak of World War 1.
A remark of the American commander at the height of the battle - "Blood is thicker than water" - has entered the English language.
The Taku Forts attack event is described in detail in the opening of Britannia's Spartan.
Thank you very much for another interesting post and thank you for your free e-book offer.
ReplyDeleteI really like to get background information related to your novels.
Very glad that you liked it Edi - I'll be keeping these posts coming.
ReplyDeleteI've forwarded you the e-book and hope you'll enjoy it.
Best Wishes: Antoine
One minor correction - the final ship of the four A-H Dreadnoughts, SZENT ISTVAN, which of course is worth her own story, didn't complete until December 1915, so technically they only had 3 in August 1914.
ReplyDeleteWell spotted. Was there some legal fiction about providing some Hungarian port on the Adriatic at which the Szent Istvan could be built on Hungarian soil?
Deletehttps://dd-sha2.blogspot.ru/2013/12/blog-post_24.html
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for this - the photographs and other illustrations are a superb resource.
DeleteBest Wishes: Antoine