SMS Friedrich der Grosse (1911)

SMS Friedrich der Grosse was the second vessel of the Kaiser class of battleships of the German Imperial Navy. The ship was equipped with ten 30. 5-centimeter guns in five twin turrets, and had a top speed of 23. 4 knots. She was assigned to III Battle Squadron of the High Seas Fleet for the majority of World War I. Along with her four sister ships, Kaiser, Kaiserin, König Albert, and Prinzregent Luitpold, she participated in all the major fleet operations of the war.

About SMS Friedrich der Grosse (1911) in brief

Summary SMS Friedrich der Grosse (1911)SMS Friedrich der Grosse was the second vessel of the Kaiser class of battleships of the German Imperial Navy. The ship was equipped with ten 30. 5-centimeter guns in five twin turrets, and had a top speed of 23. 4 knots. She was assigned to III Battle Squadron of the High Seas Fleet for the majority of World War I, and served as fleet flagship from her commissioning until 1917. Along with her four sister ships, Kaiser, Kaiserin, König Albert, and Prinzregent Luitpold, she participated in all the major fleet operations of the war. After Germany’s defeat in the war and the signing of the Armistice in November 1918, the ships were interned by the British Royal Navy in Scapa Flow. The ships were disarmed and reduced to skeleton crews while the Allied powers negotiated the final version of the Treaty of Versailles. On 21 June 1919, days before the treaty was signed, the commander of the interned fleet, Rear Admiral Ludwig von Reuter, ordered the fleet to be scuttled to ensure that the British would not be able to seize the ships. In 1936, the ship was raised in 1936 and broken up for scrap metal. Her bell was returned to Germany in 1965 and is now located at the Fleet Headquarters in Glücksburg. As with the other ships in her class, Friedrich der. Grosse carried anti-torpedo nets until the Battle of Jutland in 1916.

In 1917, she was replaced as the fleet flagship by the new battleship Baden. She went on to become a replacement for the obsolete coastal defense ship Ersatz Heimdall as a replacement to the Baltic Sea Sea Sea Exercises in the 1920s and 1930s. She has been named after the German Princess of Freiherr von Goltz, who gave a speech before the christening of her sister ships in 1910. She is also known as the “Queen of the Baltic” for her role in the Baltic exercises and the “Duke of Württemberg” of the 1930s and 1940s. Her name was changed to “Friedrich der Kiel” in honor of the Duke of Wurth, who was the first German king to rule over the Baltic from 1803 to 1838. She also served as a training ship for the Royal Navy, and as the flagship for the German Navy during the First World War. The battleship was named after her sister ship, the “König” (later the “Kaiser”), who was also a training vessel for the Imperial Navy in the 1910s and 1920s. The name was later changed to the “Fritz” (after the German Empress of the Würth) for the second time, and she was commissioned into the fleet on 15 October 1912. Her hull was launched on 10 June 1911. She had a beam of 29 m and a draft of 9. 10 m forward and 8. 80 m aft. She displaced a maximum of 27,000 metric tons at full load.