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词条 Liuzzi-class submarine
释义

  1. Ships

     Console Generale Liuzzi  Alpino Attilio Bagnolini  Reginaldo Giuliani  Capitano Raffaele Tarantini 

  2. See also

  3. References

     Notes  Bibliography 
{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=Ship caption=The launch of Console Generale Liuzzi in 1939
}}{{Infobox ship class overview
Name=Builders=Tosi TarantoKingdom of Italy}}
  • {{navy|Nazi Germany}}
Class before=Class after=Subclasses=Cost=Built range=1939–1940In service range=1939–1944In commission range=1939–1944Total ships completed=4Total ships lost=4Total ships scrapped=Total ships preserved=
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header=Header caption=Ship class=Ship type= Submarine1,030|LT|t|abbr=on}} surfaced
  • {{convert|1,484|LT|t|abbr=on}} submerged
253|ft|m|abbr=on}}25|ft|m|abbr=on}}Ship height=14|ft|m|abbr=on}}Ship depth=Ship propulsion=*Diesel-electric
  • 2 × 1750 HP Tosi diesel engines
  • 2 × electric motors
18|kn|lk=in}} surfaced
  • {{convert|8|kn|lk=in}} submerged
Ship range=Ship endurance=Ship test depth=Ship complement=50Ship sensors=533|mm|in|0|abbr=on}} torpedo tubes
  • 2 × {{convert|100|mm|in|abbr=on|0}} / 47 caliber guns
  • 4 × {{convert|13.2|mm|in|abbr=on}} machine guns
Ship notes=[1]
}}

The Liuzzi class was a class of four submarines built by Tosi in Taranto for the Royal Italian Navy ({{lang-it|Regia Marina}}). The submarines were built in 1939 and began their Second World War service in the Mediterranean Sea, where Liuzzi was sunk. The three surviving boats were transferred to the BETASOM Atlantic submarine base at Bordeaux in 1940. After Tarantini was sunk, Bagnolini and Giuliani were selected for conversion to "transport submarines" in order to exchange rare or irreplaceable trade goods with Japan. Cargo capacity of 160 tons reduced reserve buoyancy from 20–25% to 3.5–6%; and armament was reduced to defensive machine guns.[2]

Ships

Console Generale Liuzzi

{{ship|Italian submarine|Console Generale Liuzzi||2}} was launched 17 September 1939.[1] Two weeks after the Italian declaration of war, Liuzzi was sunk by Royal Navy destroyers south of Crete on 27 June 1940.

Alpino Attilio Bagnolini

Bagnolini (pennant number BI) was launched 28 October 1939[1] and completed on 22 December 1939. Bagnolini was at sea when Italy declared war, and torpedoed the cruiser {{HMS|Calypso|D61|6}} south of Crete on 12 June 1940. A second Mediterranean war patrol was unsuccessful. Bagnolini sailed on 9 September 1940 and passed the Strait of Gibraltar on 13 September for an Atlantic patrol to Bordeaux on 30 September. En route Bagnolini torpedoed the neutral Spanish freighter Gabo Tortosa. Bagnolini sank a single ship on its first BETASOM patrol before being damaged by anti-submarine patrols. A July 1941 patrol off Gibraltar and a patrol off the Azores from 18 January to 22 February 1942 were unsuccessful; and three patrols to the South Atlantic from 24 April to 28 June, from 15 September to 7 November 1942, and from 14 February to 13 April 1943 were similarly unproductive.[3] After conversion to a German transport submarine, Bagnolini sailed as UIT-22 on 26 January 1944 and was sunk off the Cape of Good Hope by No. 262 Squadron RAF Consolidated PBY Catalinas on 11 March.[4]
Ships sunk by Bagnolini[3]
Patrol Date Ship Flag Tonnage Notes
1st 12 June 1940Calypso|D61|6}}United Kingdom|naval}} 4,120 tons displacement light cruiser; 39 killed
4th 11 December 1940 AmicusUnited Kingdom|civil}} 3,360 gross register tons (GRT) freighter of convoy SC 15
Total:7,478 GRT

Reginaldo Giuliani

Giuliani (pennant number GN) was launched 3 December 1939.[1] After two unsuccessful Mediterranean war patrols, Giuliani sailed on 29 August 1940 and passed the Strait of Gibraltar on 10 September for an Atlantic patrol to Bordeaux on 30 September. After an unsuccessful BETASOM patrol in November, Giuliani sailed on 16 March 1941 to serve as a training submarine at Gdynia to instruct Italian officers in attack techniques and methodologies employed by the Germans. From April 1941 to April 1942 training courses of two to five weeks including Baltic Sea cruises of ten to twenty days were completed by seven Italian crews. Giuliani returned to Bordeaux on 23 May 1942. Giuliani sank three ships during a patrol off the Cape Verde Islands from 24 June to 3 September 1942. Giuliani remained in the Spanish port of Santander, Cantabria until 8 November 1942 repairing damage inflicted by Short Sunderlands on 2 September.[5] After return to France and conversion to a transport submarine, Giuliani sailed on 16 May 1943 with 130 tonnes of mercury and reached Singapore on 1 August 1943.[6] When Italy surrendered on 8 September 1943 Giuliani was seized by Germany in Singapore and renamed UIT-23. UIT-23 sailed for France on 15 February 1944 with 135 tonnes of rubber and 70 tonnes of tin, and was torpedoed three days later by {{HMS|Tally-Ho|P317|6}}.[4] There were 14 survivors from the crew of forty.[5]
Ships sunk by Giuliani[5]
Patrol Date Ship Flag Tonnage Notes
7th 10 August 1942 MedonUnited Kingdom|civil}} 5,444 GRT freighter; no casualties
7th 13 August 1942 CaliforniaUnited States}} 5,441 GRT freighter; one killed from crew of 36
7th 14 August 1942 Sylvia de LarrinagaUnited Kingdom|civil}} 5,218 GRT freighter; three killed from crew of 53
Total:16,103 GRT

Capitano Raffaele Tarantini

Tarantini (pennant number TT) was launched 7 January 1940[1] and was on patrol in the Mediterranean when Italy declared war. Tarantini sank one ship on its second Mediterranean war patrol, but then had two unsuccessful patrols. Tarantini sailed on 31 August 1940 and passed the Strait of Gibraltar on 10 September for an Atlantic patrol to Bordeaux on 5 October. Tarantini began its first BETASOM patrol on 11 November and was torpedoed by {{HMS|Thunderbolt|N25|6}} in the Gironde estuary while returning to base on 15 December 1940. Five of the crew were rescued.[7]
Ships sunk by Tarantini[7]
Patrol Date Ship Flag Tonnage Notes
2nd 11 July 1940 BemePanama}} 3,040 GRT freighter
Total:3,040 GRT

See also

  • Italian submarines of World War II

References

Notes

1. ^Kafka & Pepperburg p. 790
2. ^Brice pp. 129, 131
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.regiamarina.net/detail_text_with_list.asp?nid=84&lid=1&cid=7|title=Regia Marina Italiana|publisher=Cristiano D'Adamo|accessdate=2012-08-10}}
4. ^Brice pp. 145–149
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.regiamarina.net/detail_text_with_list.asp?nid=84&lid=1&cid=55|title=Regia Marina Italiana|publisher=Cristiano D'Adamo|accessdate=2012-08-10}}
6. ^Brice pp. 131–133
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.regiamarina.net/detail_text_with_list.asp?nid=84&lid=1&cid=41|title=Regia Marina Italiana|publisher=Cristiano D'Adamo|accessdate=2012-08-10}}

Bibliography

  • Brice, Martin Axis Blockade Runners of World War II (1981) Naval Institute Press {{ISBN|0-87021-908-1}}
  • Erminio Bagnasco, Submarines of World War Two, Cassell & Co, London. 1977 {{ISBN|1-85409-532-3}}
  • Kafka, Roger & Pepperburg, Roy L. Warships of the World Cornell Maritime Press (1946)
{{Liuzzi class submarines}}{{WWIIItalianShips}}

4 : Submarine classes|1930s ships|Liuzzi-class submarines|Ships built by Cantieri navali Tosi di Taranto

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