Reichsmarine
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The Template:Lang (Template:Literally) was the name of the German Navy during the Weimar Republic and first two years of Nazi Germany. It was the naval branch of the Template:Lang, existing from 1919 to 1935. In 1935, it became known as the Kriegsmarine (War Navy), a branch of the Wehrmacht; a change implemented by Adolf Hitler. Many of the administrative and organizational tenets of the Template:Lang were then carried over into the organization of the Kriegsmarine.
Vorläufige Reichsmarine
[edit]The Template:Lang (Template:Literally) was formed after the end of World War I from the Imperial German Navy.
The provisions of the Treaty of Versailles restricted the German Navy to 15,000 men and no submarines, while the fleet was limited to six pre-dreadnought battleships, six light cruisers, twelve destroyers, and twelve torpedo boats. Replacements for the outdated battleships were restricted to a maximum size of 10,000 tons.
Reichsmarine
[edit]The Template:Lang was considered the armed naval force of the Template:Lang (Ministry of the Reichswehr) which was headed by a civilian minister appointed by the Weimar government. The senior most naval officer was known until 1920 as the Template:Lang (Chief of the Admiralty), after which the title changed to Template:Lang (Chief of the Naval Command).<ref>Naval department of Germany, "Rangliste der deutschen Reichsmarine", University of Michigan Library (2010), p. 34</ref>
Naval headquarters
[edit]The naval commander oversaw a headquarters office known as the Template:Lang which was headquartered in Berlin. The Naval Command also maintained a headquarters intelligence office Template:Lang) and a naval archives. Internal to the naval headquarters five offices known as the:
- Template:Lang (A) – Operations
- Template:Lang (B) – General Administration
- Template:Lang (C) – Personnel and Administration
- Template:Lang (MWa) – Naval Weapons Department
- Template:Lang (K) – Naval Construction Office
The following officers served as head of the Template:Lang from 1918 to 1935
Chief of the Admiralty (Chef der Admiralität)
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Heads of the Naval Command (Chefs der Marineleitung)
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Fleet command
[edit]The fleet command of the Template:Lang (Template:Lang) was headquartered at Kiel and consisted of a flag staff and fleet commander embarked on board the flagship of the German fleet. During the 1920s, the German flagship was the battleship Template:SMS with two naval officers serving as fleet commander, Template:Lang Hans Zenker and Konrad Mommsen, between 1923 and 1927. The fleet commander position was then left vacant, but the flag staff remained.
The purpose of the fleet command was to oversee the four major type commanders of German naval vessels. These commands were in turn responsible for the administration of various German ship classes to include equipment development, vessel deployments, and personnel assignment. Once at sea, operational control of the vessels switched to the commanders of the two main Naval Sea Stations. The four type commands were:
- Template:Lang – Commander of Ships of the Line, headquartered at Kiel, flagship in 1933 was the cruiser Template:Ship
- Template:Lang – Commander of Reconnaissance Craft, flagship was the cruiser Template:Ship headquartered at Kiel
- Template:Lang – Leader of Torpedo-boats, headquartered at Swinemünde overseeing four flotillas of torpedo boats
- Template:Lang – Leader of Minesweepers, headquartered at Kiel commanding two minesweeper flotillas and one Template:Lang ("R boat") mine auxiliary unit.
Naval sea stations
[edit]The Template:Lang did not maintain traditional at-sea fleets, but instead assigned two geographical areas (known as Template:Lang) which oversaw all vessels operationally deployed in the North and Baltic Seas. Each naval station maintained a headquarters staff, general naval inspectorate, training department, artillery arsenal inspector, as well as a medical command unit. The naval stations also served as a senior officer for the commanders of the various German navy ports.<ref>Waldeyer-Hartz, H. Ein Mann: Das Leben des Admirals Ludwig v. Schröder. Vieweg+Teubner Verlag (1934), pg. 47</ref>
Naval stations of the Reichsmarine
[edit]- Template:Lang (North Sea naval station) – headquartered at Wilhelmshaven, overseeing the ports of Cuxhaven and Borkum
- Template:Lang (Baltic Sea naval station) – headquartered at Kiel, overseeing the ports of Swinemünde and Pillau
Ships and equipment
[edit]The Treaty of Versailles limited the size and armament of the Template:Lang and prevented it from introducing new technologies. The restrictions were intended to prevent the German Navy from becoming a threat to the Allied powers. On the other hand, the Allies had made certain that the Template:Lang would be in the foreseeable future the strongest power in the Baltic Sea, in order to serve as a counterweight against the new Soviet Union, which was viewed with distrust by the Allies.
Germany was only allowed six pre-dreadnought battleships (plus two in reserve), six cruisers (plus two in reserve), twelve destroyers (plus four in reserve), and twelve torpedo boats (plus four in reserve). The Template:Lang tried to meet the arms restrictions with secret armament and technical innovations such as the introduction of the pocket battleship.
List of Reichsmarine ships
[edit]- Template:Sclasss
- Template:SMS (1907–1944)
- Template:SMS (1908–1945)
- Template:SMS (1908–1944)
- Template:Sclasss
- Template:SMS (1904–1932)
- Template:SMS (1904–1936)
- Template:SMS (1905–1960)
- Template:SMS (1905–1931)
- Template:SMS (1906–1931)
- Template:Sclasss
- Template:SMS (1904–1927)
- Template:SMS (1906–1929)
- Template:Sclasss (3,033 tons, 10 × 105 mm guns)
- Template:SMS (1900–1925)
- Template:SMS (1900–1931)
- Template:SMS (1901–1929)
- Template:SMS (1901–1931)
- Template:SMS (1901–1945)
- Template:SMS (1903–1945)
- Emden-class cruiser (6,000 tons, 8 × 150 mm guns)
- Template:Ship (1925–1945)
- Template:Sclass cruisers (7,200 tons, 9 × 150 mm guns)
- Template:Ship (1929–1940)
- Template:Ship (1929–1940)
- Template:Ship (1930–1945)
- Template:Sclasss (8,000 tons, 9 × 150 mm guns)
- Template:Ship (1931–1946)
- Template:Ship (1935–1945)
- Template:Sclasss (10,800 tons, 6 × 280 mm guns)
- Template:Ship (1933–1948)
- Template:Ship (1934–1945)
- Template:Ship (1936–1939)
- Type 23 torpedo boats (923 tons, 3 × 105 mm guns)
- Template:Ship (1926–1944)
- Template:Ship (1928–1944)
- Template:Ship (1927–1944)
- Template:Ship (1928–1944)
- Template:Ship (1928–1940)
- Template:Ship (1927–1942)
- Type 24 torpedo boats (933 tons, 3 × 105 mm guns)
- Template:Ship (1928–1941)
- Template:Ship (1928–1942)
- Template:Ship (1929–1944)
- Template:Ship (1929–1940)
- Template:Ship (1929–1940)
- Template:Ship (1929–1939)
- Type 1934 Destroyers (2,223 tons, 5 x 127 mm guns)
- Z1 Leberrecht Maass (1937-1940)
- Z2 Georg Thiele (1937-1940)
- Z3 Max Schultz (1937-1940)
- Z4 Richard Beitzen (1937-1949)
- Survey ship
- Template:Ship (1924–1945)
- Radio-controlled target ship
- Template:Ship (1902–1945)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]<references />
External links
[edit]- Pages with broken file links
- 1920s in Germany
- 1930s in Germany
- 1919 establishments in Germany
- 1935 disestablishments in Germany
- Military of Nazi Germany
- Military of the Weimar Republic
- Military units and formations established in 1919
- Military units and formations disestablished in 1935
- Naval history of Germany
- Reichsmarine