释义 |
- Imperial Japanese Navy Russo-Japanese War World War I The Second Sino-Japanese War World War II
- Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force Standard Destroyer Guided Missile Destroyer Helicopter Destroyer Escort Destroyer
- References
The following is a list of destroyers of Japan grouped by battle in which they were used. In naval terminology, a destroyer is a fast and maneuverable yet long-endurance warship intended to escort larger vessels in a fleet, convoy or battle group and defend them against smaller, powerful, short-range attackers. The Japanese torpedo boat[1] {{ship|Japanese torpedo boat|Kotaka||2}} of 1885 was "the forerunner of torpedo boat destroyers that appeared a decade later".[2] They were designed to Japanese specifications and ordered from the London Yarrow shipyards in 1885. The Yarrow shipyards, builder of the parts for the Kotaka, "considered Japan to have effectively invented the destroyer".[3] Imperial Japanese Navy Russo-Japanese War- {{sclass-|Ikazuchi|destroyer|4}} — 5 ships
- {{sclass-|Murakumo|destroyer|4}} — 5 ships
- {{sclass-|Shirakumo|destroyer|4}} — 2 ships
- Akatsuki class — 4 ships
- {{sclass-|Harusame|destroyer|4}} — 7 ships
World War I- Kamikaze class — 32 ships
- {{sclass-|Umikaze|destroyer|4}} — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Sakura|destroyer|4}} — 3 ships
- {{sclass-|Kaba|destroyer|4}} — 10 ships
- {{sclass-|Momo|destroyer|4}} — 4 ships
- {{sclass-|Acorn|destroyer|4}}/Kanran class — 2 ships loaned from the Royal Navy
The Second Sino-Japanese War- {{sclass-|Enoki|destroyer|4}} — 6 ships
- {{sclass-|Isokaze|destroyer|4}} — 4 ships
- {{sclass-|Kawakaze|destroyer|4}} — 2 ships
World War II- {{sclass-|Urakaze|destroyer|4}} — 2 ships (1 served in war. Kawakaze sold to Italy in 1915)
- {{sclass-|Minekaze|destroyer|4}} — 15 ships
- {{sclass-|Momi|destroyer|4}} — 21 ships (17 served in war. {{ship|Japanese destroyer|Momi|1919|2}}, {{ship|Japanese destroyer|Kaya|1919|2}} and {{ship|Japanese destroyer|Nashi|1919|2}} scrapped by 1940, {{ship|Japanese destroyer|Warabi|1921|2}} lost in 1927)
- {{sclass-|Wakatake|destroyer|4}} — 8 ships (7 served in war. {{ship|Japanese destroyer|Sawarabi||2}} lost in 1932)
- Kamikaze class — 9 ships
- {{sclass-|Mutsuki|destroyer|4}} — 12 ships
- {{sclass-|Fubuki|destroyer|4}} — 20 ships (19 served in war. {{ship|Japanese destroyer|Miyuki||2}} lost in 1934)
- Akatsuki class — 4 ships
- {{sclass-|Hatsuharu|destroyer|4}} — 6 ships
- {{sclass-|Shiratsuyu|destroyer|4}} — 10 ships
- {{sclass-|Asashio|destroyer|4}} — 10 ships
- {{sclass-|Kagerō|destroyer|4}} — 19 ships
- Akizuki class — 12 ships
- {{sclass-|Yūgumo|destroyer|4}} — 19 ships
- Shimakaze class — 1 ships
- {{sclass-|Matsu|destroyer|4}} — 18 ships
- {{sclass-|Tachibana|destroyer|4}} (Matsu Flight B) — 23 ships
Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force Standard Destroyer - {{sclass-|Asakaze|destroyer|4}} (DD) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Ariake|destroyer|4}} (DD) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Harukaze|destroyer|4}} (DD) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Ayanami|destroyer|4}} (DDK) — 7 ships
- Murasame class (1958) (DDA) — 3 ships
- Akizuki class (1959) (DD) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Yamagumo|destroyer|4}} (DDK) — 6 ships
- {{sclass-|Takatsuki|destroyer|4}} (DDA) — 4 ships
- {{sclass-|Minegumo|destroyer|4}} (DDK) — 3 ships
- {{sclass-|Hatsuyuki|destroyer|4}} (DD) — 11 ships
- {{sclass-|Asagiri|destroyer|4}} (DD) — 8 ships
- Murasame class (1994) (DD) — 9 ships
- {{sclass-|Takanami|destroyer|4}} (DD) — 5 ships
- Akizuki class (2010) (DD) — 4 ships
- Asahi class (DD) — 2 ships
Guided Missile Destroyer - {{JDS|Amatsukaze|DDG-163|2}} (DDG) — 1 ship
- {{sclass-|Tachikaze|destroyer|4}} (DDG) — 3 ships
- {{sclass-|Hatakaze|destroyer|4}} (DDG) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Kongō|destroyer|4}} (DDG) — 4 ships
- {{sclass-|Atago|destroyer|4}} (DDG) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Maya|destroyer|4}} (DDG) — 2 ships
Helicopter Destroyer - {{sclass-|Haruna|destroyer|4}} (DDH) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Shirane|destroyer|4}} (DDH) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Hyūga|helicopter destroyer|4}} (DDH) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Izumo|helicopter destroyer|4}} (DDH) — 2 ships
Escort Destroyer - Tachibana class — 1 ship
- {{sclass-|Cannon|destroyer escort|4}} (DE) — 2 ships
- {{JDS|Akebono|DE-201|6}} (DE)
- {{sclass-|Ikazuchi|destroyer escort|4}} (DE) — 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Isuzu|destroyer escort|4}} (DE)— 4 ships
- {{sclass-|Chikugo|destroyer escort|4}} (DE)— 11 ships
- {{JDS|Ishikari|DE-226|6}} (DE)
- {{sclass-|Yubari|destroyer escort|4}} (DE)— 2 ships
- {{sclass-|Abukuma|destroyer escort|4}} (DE)— 6 ships
References1. ^Jentschura p. 132 (Akatsuki built by Yarrow & Co. in 1902; 224' long, displaced 415 tons, two 18" Torpedoes, two 3" guns, four 57mm Quick Firing Guns, complement 60 officers/men. Sunk by mine at Port Arthur on 17 May 1904) 2. ^{{cite book |last=Evans and Peattie |first=David C. and Mark R. |title=Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887–1941 |year=1997 |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis, Maryland |isbn=0-87021-192-7}} 3. ^{{cite book |last=Howe |first=Christopher |title=The Origins of Japanese Trade Supremacy: Development and Technology in Asia from 1540 to the Pacific War |year=1996 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |location=Chicago, Illinois |isbn=0-226-35485-7}}
3 : Destroyers of Japan|Lists of destroyers|Lists of ships of Japan |