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{{Short description|Kriegsmarine merchant raider of World War II}} {{Redirect|Kormoran}} {{Use Oxford spelling |date=November 2024}} {{Use dmy dates|date=March 2017}} {| {{Infobox ship begin}} {{Infobox ship image | Ship image=Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1985-074-27, Hilfskreuzer Kormoran.jpg | Ship caption=Auxiliary cruiser ''Kormoran'' meets a German U-boat at sea }} {{Infobox ship career | Ship country=[[Nazi Germany|Germany]] | Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Nazi Germany|civil}} | Ship name=''Steiermark'' | Ship namesake=[[Styria]] | Ship owner= | Ship operator=[[Hamburg America Line]] | Ship registry= | Ship route=East Asia (intended) | Ship ordered= | Ship awarded= | Ship builder=[[Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft]], Kiel, Germany | Ship original cost= | Ship yard number= | Ship way number= | Ship laid down= | Ship launched=15 September 1938 | Ship completed= | Ship fate=Requisitioned by Kriegsmarine | Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship career | Ship country=[[Nazi Germany|Germany]] | Ship flag={{shipboxflag|Nazi Germany|naval}} | Ship name=''Kormoran'' | Ship namesake={{SMS|Cormoran|1914|6}} and the [[Cormorant]] | Ship commissioned=9 October 1940 | Ship reclassified=[[Merchant raider]] (1940-41) | Ship identification={{bulleted list |HSK-8{{efn |name="meaning"}} |{{langx |de|Schiff{{nbsp}}41 |label=none |italic=no}} (German administrative designation) |Raider G (British designation for tracking) }} | Ship motto= | Ship fate=[[Scuttling|Scuttled]] following battle on 19 November 1941 | Ship badge= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics | Header caption=as ''Kormoran'' | Ship type={{lang |de |Handelsstörkreuzer}} ({{lit |trade disruption cruiser}}, meaning [[commerce raider]]) | Ship tonnage={{GRT|8736}} | Ship displacement={{cvt|19900|t|LT}} | Ship length={{cvt|164|m|ftin}} | Ship beam={{cvt|20.20|m|ftin}} | Ship draught={{cvt|8.50|m|ftin}} | Ship propulsion=4 × 9-cylinder diesel motors | Ship speed={{cvt|18|kn}} | Ship endurance= | Ship boats=1 × LS-3 minelaying boat | Ship complement=25 officers, 375 enlisted | Ship sensors= | Ship armament={{bulleted list |6 × [[15 cm SK L/45|{{Convert|15|cm|in|abbr=on}} SK L/45 C]] guns |2 × [[3.7 cm Pak 36|{{convert|3.7|cm|in|2|abbr=on}} PaK 36]] anti-tank guns |5 × [[2 cm FlaK 30/38/Flakvierling|{{convert|2|cm|in|abbr=on}} FlaK 30]] anti-aircraft guns |6 × [[torpedo tube]]s (2 twin deck mounts; 2 single, aft-angled submerged tubes) |24 × {{convert|53.3|cm|in|abbr=on}} [[torpedo]]es |360 EMC + 30 TMB [[naval mine]]s<!-- How many mines? --> }} | Ship aircraft=2 × [[Arado 196]] seaplanes | Ship notes= }} |} The German [[auxiliary cruiser]] '''''Kormoran'' (HSK-8)'''{{efn |name="meaning" |HSK is short for {{langx |de |Handelsstörkreuzer |lit=trade disruption cruiser |label=none}}.}} was a {{lang |de |[[Kriegsmarine]]}} (German navy) [[merchant raider]] of [[World War II]]. Originally the merchant vessel '''{{lang |de |Steiermark}}''' ({{lit |[[Styria]]}}), the ship was acquired by the navy following the outbreak of war for conversion into a raider. Administered under the designation {{lang |de |Schiff 41}} ({{lit |Ship{{nbsp}}41}}), to the [[Allies of World War II|Allied]] navies she was known as ''Raider G''. The largest merchant raider operated by Germany during World War II, ''Kormoran'' ({{lit |[[cormorant]]}}) was responsible for the destruction of 10 merchant vessels and the capture of an 11th during her year-long career in the Atlantic and Indian oceans. She is also known for sinking the Australian light cruiser {{HMAS|Sydney|D48|6}} during a [[Sinking of HMAS Sydney|mutually destructive battle]] off [[Western Australia]] on 19 November 1941. Damage sustained during the battle prompted the [[scuttling]] of ''Kormoran''. While 318 of the 399 aboard the German ship were rescued{{efn |Two lifeboats carrying 103 persons had reached the Australian mainland when they were found.<ref name="bat23"/>}} and placed in [[prisoner of war]] camps for the remainder of World War II, and then for almost two further years after the war with Germany had ended, there were no survivors from the 645 aboard the Australian cruiser. The wreck of ''Kormoran'' was rediscovered on 12 March 2008, four days before that of her adversary. ''Kormoran''{{'}}s success against HMAS ''Sydney'' is commonly attributed to the proximity of the two ships during the engagement, and the raider's advantages of surprise and rapid, accurate fire. Prior to the discovery of the wrecks in 2008, the cruiser's loss with all hands compared to the survival of most of the German crew [[Sinking of HMAS Sydney#Controversy|created controversy and spawned numerous conspiracy theories]]; some alleged that the German commander, [[Theodor Detmers]], used illegal ruses to lure ''Sydney'' into range, others that a Japanese submarine was involved, or that details of the battle were concealed through a wide-ranging [[coverup]]. None of these claims have ever been substantiated by any evidence. == Construction and conversion == The merchant vessel {{lang|de|Steiermark}} was constructed by [[Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft]] in [[Kiel]] for the [[Hamburg-Amerika Line]]. Launched in 1938, the ship was to operate on the East Asia run, but had completed only [[sea trial]]s when war was declared.<ref name=Frame45>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=45}}</ref> Following World War I, German naval power had limits placed upon it by the [[Treaty of Versailles]], which were later eased by the 1935 [[Anglo-German Naval Agreement]].<ref name=Frame41.4>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=41-4}}</ref> By the 1930s, the discrepancy between the conventional warship strength of Germany and that of other nations led the German military to recognize that [[auxiliary cruiser]]s engaged in [[commerce raiding]] could play a significant role in future wars, as they had during World War I.<ref name=Frame41.4/> Merchant ships that could be converted into raiders were identified, and were to be taken up by the {{lang|de|Kriegsmarine}} for conversion following a declaration of war.<ref name=Frame44>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=44}}</ref> {{lang|de|Steiermark}} was one of these ships.<ref name=Frame45/> Receiving the designation {{lang |de|Schiff{{nbsp}}41}} ({{lit |Ship 41}}) for administrative purposes, she was taken into dockyard hands following the outbreak of [[World War II]].<ref name=Frame45/><ref name=Winter13/> Conversion of the merchant ship commenced in early 1940, and was prioritized as second only to work on the [[U-boat]] fleet.<ref name=Frame47/> The conversion work included installation of camouflaged weapons, fitting of bunks for the sailors, creation of internal passageways leading to their stations.<ref name=Frame47/> Prisoner accommodation, consisting of an open area for hammocks and facilities to keep [[Captain (nautical)|ship's masters]] and women separate from the general population, were constructed.<ref name=Frame47/> The raider was also provided with equipment with which to modify her appearance and allow her to masquerade as other merchant vessels.<ref name=Frame47/> While the ship was being refitted, her future crew underwent training aboard the [[blockade runner]] ''Monte Pascoal''.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=23, 25}}</ref> {{lang|de|[[Korvettenkapitän]]}} (Lieutenant Commander) [[Theodor Detmers]] was selected to command {{lang |de|Schiff{{nbsp}}41}} in July 1940; the 37-year-old was the youngest man to command a German merchant raider.<ref name=Winter13/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=141}}</ref> Detmers named the ship ''Kormoran'', inspired by {{SMS|Cormoran|1914|6}} (a Russian merchant ship captured by the Germans during World War I and operated as a raider) and the [[cormorant]] (with Detmers comparing the seabird's [[Cormorant fishing|use in fishing]] to his ship's attempts in catching Allied vessels).<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=47-8}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=19–20}}</ref> After a successful trials cruise in September 1940, ''Kormoran'' was commissioned on 9 October.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=50-1}}</ref> == Design == ''Kormoran'' was one of nine{{efn |Other sources state that eleven auxiliary cruisers were operated by the {{lang |de |Kriegsmarine}} during World War II: two were reclassified for other uses before leaving German waters.<ref name=Frame275.7/>}} civilian ships taken up by the German Navy for conversion into merchant raiders; they were referred to alternately as {{lang |de |Hilfskreuzer}} ([[auxiliary cruiser]]s) and {{lang |de |Handelsstörkreuzer}} ({{lit |trade disruption cruisers}}).<ref name=Frame275.7>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=275-7}}</ref> She was the largest of the raiders, and the most recently constructed when she was taken up for modification.<ref name=Winter13>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=13}}</ref> After modification, ''Kormoran'' was {{convert|164|m|ftin}} long and {{convert|20.20|m|ftin}} wide, with a [[gross register tonnage]] of 8,736.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=277}}</ref> She was propelled by four 9-cylinder diesel engines driving electric motors, which could propel the ship at {{convert|18|kn}}.<ref>{{harvp |Cole |2009 |pp=100–101}}</ref> [[File:Bud-Ergankystfort-HH-08.JPG|thumb|A [[15 cm SK L/45|{{convert|15|cm|in|adj=on}} SK L/45]] gun at [[Bud, Norway]]]] The raider was fitted with six [[15 cm SK L/45|{{convert|15|cm|in|adj=on}} SK L/45]] guns as primary armament: two each within the forecastle ("1" and "2") and quarterdeck ("5" and "6"), and one each fore and aft ("3" and "4" respectively) on the centreline.<ref name=Frame46>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=46}}</ref> These guns were {{nowrap|World War I-vintage}}; gun "3" had been removed from the battlecruiser {{SMS|Seydlitz||6}} in 1916.<ref name=Frame46/> The forecastle and quarterdeck guns were hidden behind counter-weighted false hull plates, while each centreline gun was concealed by fake cargo hatch walls.<ref name=Frame46/> The secondary armament consisted of five {{convert|2|cm|in|adj=on}} anti-aircraft guns:<ref name=Frame46/> two on the forecastle, two on the after funnel deck, and the fifth in the quarterdeck.<ref name=Frame46/> All five were hidden by the structure of the ship until they were raised clear on hydraulic platforms.<ref name=Frame46/> There were plans to fit four {{convert|3.7|cm|in|adj=on}} anti-aircraft guns, but only two ex-army anti-tank guns could be scrounged; these were installed on ''Kormoran''{{'}}s superstructure, hidden by sheet metal panels.<ref name=Frame46/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=22}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' was also equipped with six [[torpedo tube]]s: two dual launchers on the upper deck, and a single underwater tube on each side.<ref name=Frame46/> The underwater tubes were amidships, angled at 135° from the bow, and could only be fired if the raider was travelling at less than {{convert|3|kn}}.<ref name=Frame46/> ''Kormoran'' carried a payload of [[naval mine|mines]], with an LS-3 fast boat carried inside{{Clarify|date=November 2011}}<!-- Where? Attached to the hatch? Not, presumably, between the inner & outer skins... --> No. 6 cargo hatch for minelaying.<ref name=Frame47/> The raider carried two [[Arado Ar 196]] floatplanes for reconnaissance.<ref name=Frame47>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=47}}</ref><ref name=Winter27>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=27}}</ref> Although Detmers wanted a [[aircraft catapult|catapult]], such equipment would have spoiled any merchant ship disguise used by ''Kormoran''; instead, the planes were stored inside No. 5 cargo hatch, and were launched and recovered from the water with hoists.<ref name=Frame47/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=27, 37}}</ref> Mechanical problems, difficulties in moving the aircraft between the hatch and the water, plus a lack of opportunities meant that only seven flights were made during the ship's operational deployment.<ref name=Winter27/> == Operational history == === Running the blockade === The day after commissioning, ''Kormoran'' sailed to Kiel, where she was provisioned for a 12-month voyage.<ref name=Frame51>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=51}}</ref> The raider then travelled to {{langr |de |[[Gdynia|Gotenhafen]]}} and underwent further trials of the ship's weapons, aircraft, and minelaying boat.<ref name=Frame51/> Despite a range of problems and defects, Detmers elected to repair problems at sea instead of taking the ship into dock and delaying their mission.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=25–26}}</ref> [[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 146-1985-117-02A, Hilfskreuzer Kormoran.jpg|thumb|left|''Kormoran'' in 1940]] The raider departed on 3 December, and once she cleared German waters on 10 December, her disguise was changed from a [[minesweeper]] to the Soviet freighter {{lang |ru |Vyacheslav Molotov}}.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=48-55}}</ref> The [[Royal Navy]] had [[blockade]]d German waters at the start of the war, and ''Kormoran'' had to break through to reach her first patrol area.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=44, 52}}</ref> It was suggested that the raider either sail through the English Channel with support from captured French coastal batteries and the {{lang |de |[[Luftwaffe]]}}, or around the [[Faroe Islands]]. Detmers chose to travel north of Iceland and through the [[Denmark Strait]] before heading south.<ref name=Frame52.3/> The longer route was justified by its greater distance from British naval and aviation bases, and was thus less likely to be patrolled.<ref name=Frame52.3>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=52-3}}</ref> The raider reached the strait late in the evening of 12 December, passed through it under the cover of a heavy storm, and entered the Atlantic by the following midday without encountering any Allied ships.<ref name=Frame55>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=55}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=34–35}}</ref> === Atlantic Ocean === Having cleared the British blockade, ''Kormoran''{{'}}s instructions were to search the Atlantic Ocean for targets of opportunity, then move to the Indian Ocean and seek out Allied merchant shipping, with additional orders to lay mines around one or more Allied ports in India or Australia.<ref name=Winter35>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=35}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' was also expected to replenish [[U-boat]]s when ordered to do so, and carried extra torpedoes and spare parts.<ref name=Winter35/> The raider's first operational area was in the Atlantic, below latitude 40° north, which she crossed during the night of 19–20 December.<ref name=Frame55/> The German ship initially patrolled the western mid-Atlantic, outside the [[Pan-American Security Zone]].<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=44, 56}}</ref> During the first two weeks, the only ships spotted were merchant vessels flying the United States flag, which merchant raiders were forbidden to attack as they were still neutral.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=56}}</ref> By 6 January 1941, Detmers was ready to relocate to a point west of the Mediterranean because of a lack of targets, but that afternoon, ''Kormoran'' encountered the 3,729-ton Greek freighter ''Antonis''.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=56-7}}</ref><ref name=Winter38>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=38}}</ref> The raider ordered the freighter to [[Heaving to|heave to]] and not send any wireless transmissions, and sent a boarding party over.<ref name=Frame57>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=57}}</ref> ''Antonis'' was armed with three British machine guns and loaded with 4,800 tons of [[Coal industry in Wales|Welsh coal]].<ref name=Winter38/><ref name=Frame57/> Though Germany was not at war with Greece, the presence of Allied weapons and cargo allowed Detmers to sink her or take her as a [[Prize (law)|prize]].<ref name=Winter38/><ref name=Frame57/> As coal was of little use to the {{lang |de |Kriegsmarine}}, the weapons, ammunition, and 29 crew were transferred to ''Kormoran'', and the boarding party [[Scuttling|scuttled]] her at {{Coord|18|17|N|28|32|W|display=inline}}.<ref name=Frame57/><ref name=Winter39>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=39}}</ref> [[British Admiralty|Admiralty]] notifications for raider activity gave an incorrect date and location for the attack, and initially attributed it to the raider {{ship|German auxiliary cruiser|Thor||2}}.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=57-8}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' then headed southeast, avoiding the convoy routes from the Mediterranean to America and down the African coast, in order to seek vessels sailing alone and without warship escort.<ref name=Frame58>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=58}}</ref> Before sunset on 18 January, smoke was spotted on the horizon, so ''Kormoran'' accelerated and altered course to pursue.<ref name=Frame58/> The source of the smoke was a tanker flying no flags, showing no lights, and zigzagging to thwart submarine attack, leading Detmers to conclude she was an Allied vessel.<ref name=Frame58/> With little time before the sun set and the likelihood the tanker would resist capture, ''Kormoran'' commenced fire at {{convert|7000|yd|m|order=flip}} in an attempt to disable the ship.<ref name=Frame58/> When the third salvo hit, the merchantman broadcast a distress call, identifying herself as ''British Union'' and saying she was under attack by an unknown vessel at {{Coord|26|24|N|30|58|W|display=inline}}.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=58-9}}</ref> Firing continued until ''British Union'' directed a light towards ''Kormoran'', which the Germans assumed was a surrender signal, but as the raider closed to {{convert|4000|yd|m|order=flip}}, four shots were fired by the tanker.<ref name=Frame59>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=59}}</ref> All four missed, and heavy retaliatory fire from the raider set the merchant ship alight and forced the crew to abandon ship.<ref name=Frame59/> The decision was made to destroy the 6,987-ton tanker with a torpedo, although two torpedoes and shells from the raider's main guns were required to sink her, while a third torpedo exploded as soon as it cleared its safety distance and armed; Detmers later stated the quantity of ammunition used during the attempted capture was excessive for the result obtained.<ref name=Winter39/><ref name=Frame59/> The tanker's master, 27 sailors, and a pet monkey were recovered from two lifeboats as the tanker sank at {{Coord|26|29|N|31|07|W|display=inline}}, and the raider fled the area.<ref name=Frame59/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=41, 43, 52}}</ref> The distress call and glow from the fires attracted the attention of the armed merchant cruiser {{HMS|Arawa|F12|6}}, which passed through the engagement site around midnight in pursuit, but failed to locate ''Kormoran'', and returned that morning to collect a third lifeboat carrying seven survivors.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=59-60}}</ref><ref name=Winter41>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=41}}</ref> These sailors stated their attacker had fired on the other two lifeboats, a claim not made by those rescued by the Germans.<ref name=Winter42>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=42}}</ref> The Allies initially assumed that {{ship|German cruiser|Admiral Scheer||6|up=yes}} was responsible, but after this was disproven, the Admiralty was unable to determine the identity of the attacker.<ref name=Frame60>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=60}}</ref> Just after 1{{nbsp}}pm on 29 January, ''Kormoran'' encountered a large merchantman which altered course on sighting the raider, but returned to her original heading after ''Kormoran'' made no aggressive moves.<ref name=Frame60/> Detmers instead waited until the distance between the ships had decreased before the raider altered course to intercept, dropped her camouflage, and ordered the merchantman to stop.<ref name=Frame60/> The ship did not comply, and after a warning shot elicited no response, ''Kormoran'' [[Fire for effect|fired for effect]].<ref name=Frame60/> A distress signal was transmitted but jammed by the raider, and after unsuccessfully trying to break away from the faster German ship, the merchant vessel came to a stop and ceased attempts to transmit.<ref name=Frame60/> The crew was ordered by signals from ''Kormoran'' to abandon ship, but the merchant sailors did not comply until after the raider resumed fire, having observed an attempt to man the ship's stern gun.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=60-1}}</ref> A boarding party identified the victim as the 11,900-ton refrigerator ship ''Afric Star'', carrying meat and butter to England.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=43}}</ref> The complicated configuration and damaged condition of ''Afric Star'' ruled against her capture as a prize ship; after confiscating code books and other vital documents, and recovering 76 people, including two women, attempts were made to scuttle her.<ref name=Frame61>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=61}}</ref> The merchantman refused to sink, and ''Kormoran'' had to use shells and torpedoes to send her to the bottom at {{Coord|8|44|N|24|38|W|display=inline}}.<ref name=Frame61/> Later that day, lookouts aboard the raider spotted a merchant ship sailing without lights.<ref name=Frame61/> Sneaking up on the vessel, ''Kormoran'' opened fire; her first salvo missed, but within minutes, the target was heavily damaged and aflame.<ref name=Frame61/> The ship transmitted a distress signal, which ''Kormoran'' was unable to jam completely, but this ceased as crew members started to abandon ship.<ref name=Frame61/> The raider stopped firing, but resumed when the merchantman attempted another transmission, and shore stations responded.<ref name=Frame61/> Communications intercepts and the code books taken from ''Afric Star'' earlier that day revealed the target's identity: the 5,273-ton British freighter ''Eurylochus'', with a cargo of bombers for the [[Gold Coast (British colony)|Gold Coast]].<ref name=Frame61/> These intercepts also indicated that several parties, including the [[Air Ministry]], were aware of the attack, prompting Detmers to order the torpedoing of ''Eurylochus''.<ref name=Frame61/> This was accomplished with a single torpedo, sinking the British ship and her cargo at {{Coord|8|15|N|24|04|W|display=inline}}, three and a half hours after ''Afric Star''.<ref name=Frame61/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=47}}</ref> 39 Chinese and four British crew were recovered by the German raider before she fled the area with British warships {{HMS|Norfolk|78|2}} and {{HMS|Devonshire|39|2}} in pursuit.<ref name=Frame61/> Another 28 survivors were found by the Spanish merchant ship ''Monte Tiede'' later that night, with 10 men killed during the attack or lost at sea.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=47–48}}</ref> ''Eurylochus''{{'}} master was among those rescued by the Allies, and recounted that two ships had attacked, one of them armed with {{convert|11|in|mm|adj=on|order=flip}} guns, which led British Naval Intelligence to conclude that the responsible ships were ''Thor'' and {{ship|German cruiser|Admiral Scheer||2|wl=no}}, or an unknown raider operating in concert with one of these.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=48}}</ref> Among the rescued was ship's gunner [[Frank Laskier]] who, on returning to England, was interviewed by [[BBC radio]] and proved so popular he became a figurehead for Merchant Navy enlistment propaganda for the rest of the war.<ref name=lane>{{harvp |Lane |1990 |p=55}}</ref> After evading pursuit, ''Kormoran'' made for a point off the [[Cape Verde Islands]], where she rendezvoused with the supply ship {{lang |de |[[RFA Northmark|Nordmark]]}} on 7 February.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=61-2}}</ref> During a three-day replenishment operation, ''Kormoran'' topped up ''Nordmark''{{'}}s supply of spare U-boat parts with components brought from Germany, and transferred 170 of the 174 prisoners acquired so far.<ref name=Frame62>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=62}}</ref> The four Chinese sailors from ''Eurylochus'' were hired to stay aboard the raider as laundrymen, and the ''British Union'' crew left their pet monkey aboard as thanks for their treatment while in captivity.<ref name=Frame62/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=52}}</ref> A piano was taken from ''Nordmark''{{'}}s companion ''Duquesa'', a captured coal-burning ship that was to be scuttled when her fuel ran out, but Detmers warned that if the piano caused any problems among the crew, it would be pushed overboard.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=49}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' left the rendezvous on 10 February and headed south.<ref name=Frame62/> During the transit, Detmers received a signal from Germany indicating that his ship had been awarded two First Class [[Iron Cross]]es, and 50 Second Class Iron Crosses, to be distributed as he saw fit.<ref name=Frame62/> Detmers transmitted a request on 18 February for WM-80 [[white metal]] ([[Babbitt (metal)]]), as the softer WM-10 used in bearings for two of the four diesel engines were wearing out too quickly.<ref name=Frame63>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=63}}</ref> Some metal was acquired from the raider {{ship|German auxiliary cruiser|Pinguin||2}} on 25 February, but this was not enough to replace all the bearings.<ref name=Frame63/> On 15 March, ''Kormoran'' met {{GS|U-124|1940|6}} to transfer torpedoes, provisions, and spare parts, but rough seas forced the two vessels to head south, where they met {{ship|German cruiser|Admiral Scheer||2|wl=no}} a day later.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=63–64}}</ref> The raider's broken radar and a sailor with an eye injury were transferred to {{ship|German cruiser|Admiral Scheer||2|wl=no}}, but attempts to replenish the U-boat were again interrupted by bad weather, forcing the two vessels to relocate again.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=64}}</ref> The equipment transfer and refueling took another three days, during which crewmen from ''U-124'' enjoyed the relatively luxurious facilities aboard ''Kormoran'', and a sick sailor from the submarine was traded for a healthy man from the raider.<ref> {{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=64–65}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' sailed north to the [[Freetown]]-South America shipping route, and began to patrol near where it intersected the border of the Pan-American Security Zone.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=65}}</ref><ref name=Frame64/> On the morning of 22 March, the raider encountered a tanker, which identified herself as the British vessel ''Agnita''.<ref name=Frame64>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=64}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' instructed her to stop and maintain wireless silence or be fired upon.<ref name=Frame64/> The tanker instead broke away and began to transmit a distress signal, which was jammed as ''Kormoran'' opened fire.<ref name=Frame64/> ''Agnita'' signaled surrender after two salvoes; 12 British and 25 Chinese sailors were captured, along with maps of the minefields surrounding Freetown Harbour.<ref name=Frame65>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=65}}</ref> Efforts to scuttle the tanker failed, and ''Kormoran'' had to waste another torpedo to sink the ship at {{Coord|3|20|S|23|40|W|display=inline}}.<ref name=Frame65/> Against usual practice, Detmers decided to return to the site of the action three days later, where another tanker was spotted.<ref name=Frame65/> ''Kormoran'' revealed her weapons and fired a warning shot at the tanker, which initially attempted to flee but then chose to surrender when the morning mist lifted and revealed the nature of her attacker.<ref name=Frame65/> The 11,309-ton (German-built) Canadian tanker {{ship||Canadolite||2}} was taken as a prize ship, with a German crew taking the ship and her 44 sailors to [[Bordeaux]], France, while the four officers were imprisoned aboard ''Kormoran''.<ref name=Frame65/><ref name=Winter66>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=66}}</ref> After the captured tanker left, it was realised recognition signals to avoid {{lang |de |[[Luftwaffe]]}} attack had not been supplied, and ''Kormoran'' raced to meet the tanker when she rendezvoused with the supply ship ''Nordmark''.<ref name=Winter66/> The raider met the supply ship on 27 March, but it appeared ''Canadolite'' had enough fuel to reach France and had chosen to sail straight there.<ref name=Winter67>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=67}}</ref> Two U-boats were scheduled to reach the rendezvous point for resupply; Detmers suggested he meet {{GS|U-105|1940|2}}, which was carrying more white metal for ''Kormoran''{{'}}s engines, while ''Nordmark'' focused on {{GS|U-106|1940|2}}.<ref name=Winter67/> The commanding officer of ''U-105'' agreed to transmit a warning to Germany regarding ''Canadolite'' once the U-boat had left the rendezvous point, which did not occur until six days later because of equipment problems delaying the replenishment.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=67–68}}</ref> The tanker arrived safely on 13 April, was renamed {{lang |de |Sudetenland}}, and remained operational until her sinking by the [[Royal Air Force]] in 1944.<ref name=Winter73/><ref name="Manitoba" /> ''Kormoran'' was due to rendezvous with the tanker {{lang |de |Rudolf Albrecht}} on 4 April, and had no opportunity to search for new targets.<ref name=Frame66>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=66}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=68}}</ref> The 42 prisoners from ''Kormoran'' were transferred to the ''Rudolf Albrecht'', but as she was a civilian vessel, her master was sworn in by Detmers as a naval officer, and an armed guard had to be supplied.<ref name=Winter68.9>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp = 68–69}}</ref> Detmers ordered the transfer of four men from ''Nordmark'' to ''Rudolf Albrecht'' as guards, along with a fifth to ''Kormoran'' in exchange for the sick sailor taken from ''U-124'' two weeks before.<ref name=Winter69/> The supply ship's commander attempted to obstruct the transfers, and then demanded replacements; one came from ''Kormoran'', while three of the tanker's sailors were drafted.<ref name=Winter69>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=69}}</ref> Food, mail, and newspapers were received from ''Rudolf Albrecht'', along with news that another three First Class Iron Crosses and 50 Second Class Iron Crosses had been awarded to ''Kormoran''.<ref name=Winter68.9/> Having returned to the waters off Freetown, ''Kormoran'' encountered a merchant ship at dawn on 9 April.<ref name=Frame66/> As the ship was behind ''Kormoran'' and on a similar course, the raider slowed until the merchantman was abeam of the raider and {{convert|5000|yd|m|order=flip}} to port.<ref name=Frame66/> The German ship dropped her camouflage, increased speed, and ordered the freighter to stop or be fired upon.<ref name=Frame66/> In response, the merchantman attempted to transmit a distress call (which was jammed by ''Kormoran'') and tried to man her stern gun, prompting the Germans to open fire.<ref name=Frame66/> The freighter took heavy damage, as every time Detmers ordered or was about to order a cease-fire, the target ship attempted to escape or transmit another distress signal.<ref name=Frame66/><ref name=Winter70>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=70}}</ref> Eventually, the 46 survivors of the crew (five were killed in the attack) abandoned their burning vessel, and boarding parties were sent from the raider.<ref name=Frame66/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=70–71}}</ref> She was identified as the 8,022-ton British freighter ''Craftsman'', carrying an anti-submarine net for [[Singapore]], which was to be delivered after a stop in [[Cape Town]].<ref name=Frame66/> After scuttling charges failed to sink ''Craftsman'', she was torpedoed at {{Coord|0|32|N|23|37|W|display=inline}}.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=66-7}}</ref> {| class="wikitable collapsible" style="float:right;" |- |+ Ships attacked in the Atlantic Ocean<ref> {{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=38–39, 41, 43, 47, 66, 73}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=61, 65-7}}</ref> |- !Date !Name !Tons (GRT) !Nationality !Location |- | 13 January 1941 | ''Antonis'' | 3,729 | {{flag|Kingdom of Greece}} | {{Coord|18|17|N|28|32|W|display=inline}} |- | 18 January 1941 | ''British Union'' | 6,987 | {{flag|United Kingdom}} | {{Coord|26|29|N|31|07|W|display=inline}} |- | 29 January 1941 | ''Afric Star'' | 11,900 | {{flag|United Kingdom}} | {{Coord|8|44|N|24|38|W|display=inline}} |- | 29 January 1941 | ''Eurylochus'' | 5,273 | {{flag|Kingdom of Greece}} | {{Coord|8|15|N|24|04|W|display=inline}} |- | 22 March 1941 | ''Agnita'' | 3,552<ref name="wh21" /> | {{flag|United Kingdom}} | {{Coord|3|20|S|23|40|W|display=inline}} |- | 25 March 1941 | ''[[Canadolite]]'' | 11,309 | {{flag|Canada|1921}} | {{Coord|2|30|N|23|48|W}}<ref name=Manitoba/> (captured) |- | 9 April 1941 | ''Craftsman'' | 8,022 | {{flag|United Kingdom}} | {{Coord|0|32|N|23|37|W|display=inline}} |- | 12 April 1941 | ''Nicolaos D. L.'' | 5,486 | {{flag|Kingdom of Greece}} | {{Coord|1|54|S|22|12|W|display=inline}} |} After fleeing the scene, ''Kormoran'' headed south, and early on 12 April encountered another ship.<ref name=Frame67>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=67}}</ref> After slowly closing on the merchantman over three hours, ''Kormoran'' de-camouflaged and fired several warning shots.<ref name=Frame67/> The freighter turned away and sent a distress signal; wireless operators aboard ''Kormoran'' were unable to jam it, but there was little concern as the transmission was an [[SOS]] instead of the more specific QQQ or RRR for a raider attack, while also giving the wrong coordinates.<ref name=Frame67/> ''Kormoran'' fired for effect, but it was not until the merchant ship's bridge was destroyed that her 35 crew abandoned ship.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=72-3}}</ref> A boarding party identified the ship as the 5,486-ton Greek freighter ''Nicholas D.L.'', carrying Canadian timber.<ref name=Frame67/> Because of her buoyant cargo, the scuttling charges failed to have major effect, but after firing some shells into ''Nicholas D.L.'', Detmers chose to leave the ship to sink slowly at {{Coord|1|54|S|22|12|W|display=inline}}.<ref name=Winter73>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=73}}</ref> Until 1943, the Admiralty accepted the SOS location, 18° further north, as fact, while attributing the sinking to the raider {{ship|German auxiliary cruiser|Atlantis||2}}.<ref name=Winter73/> On 17 April, ''Kormoran'' sighted a passenger ship, but was unable to lure her into range before the vessel disappeared into a rain squall.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=75}}</ref> Two days later, ''Kormoran'' met ''Atlantis'' and the blockade runner ''Dresden''.<ref name=Frame67/> An expected shipment of white metal for ''Kormoran'' had been supplied to a different blockade runner, which was delayed.<ref name=Frame67/> Several supply ships arrived at the rendezvous point over the next few days and transferred provisions, ammunition, and fuel to the raider.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=68}}</ref> Prisoners from ''Kormoran'' were handed over to the other ships, and the raider received new sailors to make up numbers.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=77}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' departed on 22 April, and spent two days changing her disguise to the Japanese freighter {{ship||Sakito Maru||2}} before sailing into the Indian Ocean.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=68-9}}</ref> === Indian Ocean === On reaching the Indian Ocean, ''Kormoran'' was immediately diverted to refuel the whaling ship ''Adjutant'' and supply ship {{ship|MV|Alstertor||2}}; refuelling was carried out between 13 and 17 May.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=80-1}}</ref> Although originally confined to waters northeast of latitude 20°S and longitude 80°E, the raider's area of operations expanded on 1 June to encompass the entire ocean.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=70}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=59}}</ref> The ship's disguise was altered again on 5 June, with ''Kormoran'' taking the identity of the Japanese merchant ship ''Kinka Maru'', as the owners of ''Sakito Maru'' rarely operated in the western Indian.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=70-1}}</ref> After patrolling around the Maldives without success, ''Kormoran'' sailed towards the [[Bay of Bengal]] with plans to lay mines in the approaches to [[Chennai|Madras]] and [[Kolkata|Calcutta]].<ref name=Frame71>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=71}}</ref> Although a target was spotted en route on 15 June, the raider's smoke generator malfunctioned and started to produce thick, black smoke, which scared off the merchantman.<ref name=Frame71/> On 24 June, while approaching Madras, the raider was spotted and shadowed by what the Germans assumed was a British auxiliary cruiser.<ref name=Frame71/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=92}}</ref> The suspicious ship later resumed her original course without incident, but Detmers decided to postpone the mine-laying operation and leave the area, as Allied forces would become suspicious when the "Japanese" ship failed to reach port.<ref name=Frame71/> During the early morning of 26 June, a darkened merchant ship was spotted.<ref name=Frame72>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=72}}</ref> Signals were sent to the ship without response, and after the merchantman appeared to ignore a warning shot, ''Kormoran'' opened fire and caused massive damage.<ref name=Frame72/> Nine men, identifying themselves as crew from the 4,153-ton Yugoslavian cargo ship ''Velebit'', were recovered from a lifeboat; the lack of response was attributed to the actions of inexperienced Indian sailors taken on in [[Mumbai|Bombay]].<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=93-4}}</ref> The ship was left to sink, but another eight sailors remained on board, and kept ''Velebit'' afloat until she ran aground on the reefs surrounding the [[Andaman Islands]].<ref name=Frame72/> That afternoon, smoke from another ship was spotted by ''Kormoran''.<ref name=Frame72/> Maintaining a steady course away from the merchantman until a rain squall enveloped the raider, ''Kormoran'' then altered onto a converging course, and closed to within {{convert|600|yd|m|order=flip}} before crossing the merchantman's bow to reach a favorable firing position and revealing her identity.<ref name=Frame72/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=94-6}}</ref> Orders to stop were ignored, and the raider opened fire after a distress call was sent.<ref name=Frame72/> Within 30 seconds, shells from the raider destroyed the merchantman's wireless room and forecastle, damaged the engine room, and started several fires.<ref name=Frame72/><ref name=Winter96>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=96}}</ref> Some 48 sailors from the 3,472-ton Australian vessel ''Mareeba'' were recovered by ''Kormoran'', and although a boarding party attempted to save the ship for use as a mine-layer, the severity of damage made this impossible.<ref name=Frame72/><ref name=Winter96/> The Australian ship was scuttled, and sank quickly at {{Coord|8|15|N|88|06|E|display=inline}}.<ref name=Winter96/> After retreating to open waters, a 15-day overhaul of the engines was carried out.<ref name=Frame73>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=73}}</ref> While working on one of the seaplanes, a sailor was killed by electrocution.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=97}}</ref> ''Kormoran''{{'}}s disguise was changed to the Dutch freighter {{lang |nl |Straat Malakka}}, and notice was received of a further 100 Second Class Iron Crosses and five First Class Iron Crosses awarded to the ship.<ref name=Frame73/> On completion, Detmers set course for the Bay of Bengal intending to lay a second mine field, but aborted this on 30 July when he learned the aircraft carrier {{HMS|Hermes|95|6}} would be in the area.<ref name=Frame74>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=74}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' then took to patrolling the shipping routes from [[Fremantle]] to [[Colombo]] or [[Lombok]].<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=101-2}}</ref> A merchant ship was spotted near sunset on 13 August, but the ship's actions (which included heading directly for ''Kormoran'' on spotting her, broadcasting a raider distress call without coordinates, and repeatedly broadcasting homing signals) caused Detmers to think the target was either an Allied auxiliary cruiser or was attempting to lure ''Kormoran'' into range of an Allied warship.<ref name=Frame74/><ref name=Winter102.3>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=102-3}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' broke off pursuit and retreated.<ref name=Winter102.3/> The raider continued to search for ships without success.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=104}}</ref> On 25 August, the lookout spotted a strange object on the horizon; this was worked out to be the peak of {{clarify span |text=Boea Boea Mountain |explain=Is this the correct spelling of the name? |date=December 2024}} on [[Enggano Island]], and the first sighting of land in 258 days.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=75}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' then moved to waters south of [[Sri Lanka|Ceylon]], and around midday on 1 September, a large vessel, which Detmers determined to be an unaccompanied troopship, was spotted.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=75-6}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=105}}</ref> Plans were made to attack that night, but the transport disappeared over the horizon during the afternoon and could not be relocated.<ref name=Frame76>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=76}}</ref> Two days later, Detmers was informed that ''Kormoran'' would be replaced by {{ship|German auxiliary cruiser|Thor||2}} at the end of December, and that he would be resupplied by the supply ship {{ship||Kulmerland|ship|2}}, which had come from Japan and would wait for the raider at a predetermined rendezvous point from 12 October.<ref name=Frame76/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=106}}</ref> Late on 23 September, the navigational lights for a ship were sighted.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=76-7}}</ref> After signalling the merchant ship for her name and nationality, which identified her as the 3,941-ton Greek freighter ''Stamatios G. Embiricus'', the raider shone searchlights on her and ordered her to stop and accept a boarding party.<ref name=Winter106.7>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=106-7}}</ref><ref name=Frame77>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=77}}</ref> Those aboard the Greek ship assumed they were being pulled up by a British warship for not observing blackout regulations, and it was not until the armed Germans arrived on the ship that the nature of the ''Kormoran'' was revealed.<ref name=Winter106.7/> Although captured intact, ''Stamantios G. Embiricus'' was a coal-fuelled ship, and did not have enough fuel to reach any destination other than her intended port, Colombo.<ref name=Winter107>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=107}}</ref> The ship was scuttled at {{Coord|0|01|S|64|30|E|display=inline}}, but while a lifeboat carrying the ship's master and five crew rowed to ''Kormoran'', a second lifeboat carrying the other 24 avoided capture in the dark.<ref name=Frame77/><ref name=Winter107/> A search using one of the Arado seaplanes found them late the next morning.<ref name=Frame77/> {| class="wikitable collapsible" style="float:right;" |- |+ Ships attacked in the Indian Ocean.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=93, 96, 107}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=72, 77}}</ref> |- !Date !Name !Tons (GRT) !Nationality !Location |- | 26 June 1941 | ''Velebit'' | 4,153 | {{flag|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}} | {{Verify source|date=December 2009}} |- | 26 June 1941 | ''[[SS Mareeba|Mareeba]]'' | 3,472 | {{flag|Australia}} | {{Coord|8|15|N|88|06|E|display=inline}} |- | 26 September 1941 | ''Stamatios G. Embirikos'' | 3,941 | {{flag|Kingdom of Greece}} | {{Coord|0|01|S|64|30|E|display=inline}} |} A few days later, ''Kormoran''{{'}}s wireless operators intercepted transmissions between the Norwegian tanker ''Thelma'' and a shore station{{snd}}initially in a new code, then repeated in a recently expired code.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=107-8}}</ref> This allowed the Germans to identify where the merchant ship was heading to, and make some progress on breaking the new code.<ref name=Winter108>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=108}}</ref> However, the tanker could have taken several routes to her Cape Town destination, and ''Kormoran'' did not encounter her during four days of searching.<ref name=Winter108/> The raider then headed south, and met the supply ship ''Kulmerland'' on 16 October.<ref name=Frame77/> Supplies and parts were transferred to ''Kormoran'', while the raider's prisoners were moved to ''Kulmerland'', along with documents captured from ships and five slightly ill German sailors to serve as guards.<ref name=Frame77/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=113}}</ref> After leaving on 24 October, maintenance and repairs were carried out.<ref name=Frame77/> Plans were made to sail up the coast of [[Western Australia]]; the original intention was to mine shipping routes near [[Cape Leeuwin]] and Fremantle, but after wireless signals were detected from a warship (Australian heavy cruiser {{HMAS|Canberra|D33|6}}) escorting a convoy in the area, Detmers decided to sail further north and mine [[Shark Bay]], then proceed to the [[East Indies]] before looping back west to the Bay of Bengal.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=123, 125}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=77-9}}</ref> == Final battle and loss == {{Main|Sinking of HMAS Sydney}} : ''Note: All times in this section are [[UTC+7]].''<!-- because that was shipboard time for ''Kormoran'', and their account is the only one to survive --> On 19 November 1941, shortly before 4:00{{nbsp}}pm, ''Kormoran'' was {{convert|150|nmi}} south-west of [[Carnarvon, Western Australia|Carnarvon]].<ref name=Gill453>{{harvp |Gill |1957 |p=453}}</ref> The raider was sailing northwards (heading 025°) at {{convert|11|kn}}.<ref name=Gill453/><ref name=Hore78>{{harvp |Hore |2005 |p=78}}</ref> At 3:55{{nbsp}}pm, what was initially thought to be a [[tall ship]] sail was sighted off the port bow, although the sighting was quickly determined to be the masts of a cruiser, {{HMAS|Sydney|D48|6}}.<ref name=Hore78/> Detmers ordered ''Kormoran'' to alter course into the sun (heading 260°)<!-- {{Clarify|date=November 2011|reason=true? relative?|answer=Order is quoted in Mearns as "Turn port 260 draw away full speed ahead"}} --> at maximum achievable speed (which quickly dropped from {{convert|15|to|14|kn}} because of problems in one of her diesels), while setting the ship to [[General quarters|action stations]].<ref name=Hore78/> ''Sydney'' spotted the German ship around the same time, and altered from her southward heading to intercept at {{convert|25|kn}}.<ref name=Gill453/><ref name=Hore78/> [[File:HMAS Sydney (AWM 301473).jpg|thumb|left|Australian cruiser HMAS ''Sydney'' in 1940]] As the cruiser closed from astern, she began to send searchlight signals.<ref name=Olson178>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=178}}</ref> The first was not answered because the Germans did not understand the coded [[Morse code|Morse]].<ref name=Olson178/><ref name=Frame104>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=104}}</ref> ''Sydney'' repeated for half an hour, but then began to send, "You should hoist your signal letters", both by [[Plain language (cryptography)|plain-language]] Morse and [[signal flag]].<ref name=Frame104/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=178–9}}</ref> After another delay, ''Kormoran'' raised flags reading "PKQI"{{snd}}the callsign for her disguise, the Dutch merchant ship {{lang |nl |Straat Malakka}}{{snd}}on the [[triatic stay]] and hoisted a Dutch civil ensign.<ref name=Gill453/> As the cruiser was on ''Kormoran''{{'}}s starboard quarter at {{convert|15000|m|yd}}, the flags were obscured by the raider's funnel; German accounts vary as to if this was done deliberately to make the ship seem civilian, a ruse to lure ''Sydney'' closer, or the signaller's honest mistake.<ref name=Olson179>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=179}}</ref><ref name=Mearns28>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |p=28}}</ref> After receiving an instruction from the cruiser to make the flags visible, the signals officer aboard ''Kormoran'' did so by lengthening the [[halyard]] and swinging it around to the starboard side.<ref name=Gill453/><ref name=Olson179/> By 4:35{{nbsp}}pm, with ''Sydney'' {{convert|8000|m|yd}} away, the malfunctioning engine aboard ''Kormoran'' was repaired, but Detmers chose to keep it in reserve and maintain speed.<ref name=Mearns28/><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=130}}</ref> Further flag signals were exchanged, with ''Sydney'' asking the raider's destination and cargo.<ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=180–1}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Gill |1957 |pp=453-4}}</ref> At around 5:00{{nbsp}}pm, Detmers instructed his wireless operators to send a distress signal indicating {{lang |nl |Straat Malakka}} was being approached by a suspicious ship.<ref name=Gill453/> Transmitted at 5:03{{nbsp}}pm and repeated at 5:05{{nbsp}}pm, it contained the distress call for a merchantman under attack from a raider, rather than a warship (QQQQ as opposed to RRRR), the latitude and longitude of the transmitting ship, the time per [[Greenwich Mean Time]] instead of local time (a deliberate error to let the {{lang |de |Kriegsmarine}} know a raider was likely about to be lost), and her name.<ref>{{harvp |Cole |2009 |pp=317–318 |loc=volume 2}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=186–9}}</ref> This message was partially received by the tugboat ''Uco'' ("QQQQ [unintelligible] 1000 GMT") and a shore station at [[Geraldton]] ("[unintelligible] 7C 11115E 1000 GMT").<ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=186}}</ref> The Geraldton station broadcast a message to all ships asking if there was anything to report, which was interpreted by the Germans as acknowledgement of their signal.<ref name=Hore78/> During the exchanges and distress signal, ''Sydney'' positioned herself off the raider's starboard beam on a parallel course, approximately {{convert|1300|m|yd}} from ''Kormoran''.<ref name=Gill454>{{harvp |Gill |1957 |p=454}}</ref> Her main guns and torpedoes trained on the raider, but secondary weapons did not appear to be manned, personnel were standing on the upper deck, and although the cruiser's seaplane had been readied for launch, it was soon stowed away.<ref name=Gill454/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=195, 219–21}}</ref> During her manoeuvre, ''Sydney'' signalled "IK", which made no sense from the Germans' perspective, as that combination was shorthand for "You should prepare for a cyclone, hurricane, or typhoon".<ref name=Frame104/><ref name=Colev2p9/> However, those two letters were part of the real {{lang |nl |Straat Malakka}}{{'}}s secret secondary callsign, and ''Sydney'' was expecting the ship to confirm her identity by responding with the callsign's other two letters.<ref name=Frame104/><ref name=Colev2p9>{{harvp |Cole |2009 |p=9 |loc=volume 2}}</ref> Fifteen minutes later, the cruiser signalled, "Show your secret sign".<ref name=Gill454/> Detmers knew there was no chance of fooling ''Sydney'' for much longer, so ordered ''Kormoran''{{'}}s disguise dropped, the German battle ensign raised, and for all weapons to commence firing.<ref name=Gill454/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=195}}</ref> The raider's opening salvo bracketed the ship, while the next four salvoes destroyed ''Sydney''{{'}}s bridge, gun direction tower, forward turrets, and aircraft.<ref name=Gill454/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=248–9}}</ref> Two torpedoes were launched simultaneously with the raider's attack, and the close proximity of the target allowed the use of lighter weapons to rake ''Sydney''{{'}}s flank and interfere with attempts to man the cruiser's secondary weapons.<ref name=Gill454/><ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |p=35}}</ref> In contrast, ''Sydney'' was only able to fire a single full salvo before her forward turrets were knocked out, shells from which punched through ''Kormoran''{{'}}s exhaust funnel and wireless room, and caused shrapnel wounds to two sailors.<ref name=Olson216.8>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=216–8}}</ref> ''Kormoran''{{'}}s gunners shifted their aim to ''Sydney''{{'}}s waterline with their next three salvoes.<ref name=Olson249/> ''Sydney'' responded from her aft turrets: one damaged the raider's machinery spaces and started a fire in an oil tank, while the other fired only a few ineffective shells.<ref name=Gill454/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=234–5}}</ref> Around the time of the eighth or ninth German salvo, one of ''Kormoran''{{'}}s torpedoes struck ''Sydney'' forward of "A" turret, ripping a hole in her side and causing her to settle by the bow.<ref name=Olson249>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=249}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=37, 205}}</ref> After the torpedo hit, ''Sydney'' turned hard to port in what the Germans assumed was an attempt to ram, but the cruiser passed harmlessly aft.<ref name=Gill454/><ref name=Olson234>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=234}}</ref> By 5:35{{nbsp}}pm, the cruiser was heading south, heavily damaged, on fire, and losing speed, with her main guns destroyed or jammed facing away from their target and her secondary weapons out of range.<ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=249–50, 268}}</ref> ''Kormoran'' maintained her course and speed, but discontinued salvo firing; her stern guns continued to score hits as ''Sydney'' passed through their firing arcs.<ref name=Gill456>{{harvp |Gill |1957 |p=456}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=250}}</ref> The cruiser fired torpedoes at ''Kormoran'', but as the raider was turning to bring her port broadside to bear, these passed harmlessly astern.<ref name=Gill456/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=258–9}}</ref> After completing the turn, battle damage caused ''Kormoran''{{'}}s engines to fail completely, leaving the raider dead in the water while ''Sydney'' continued to limp southwards.<ref name=Gill456/> Despite being immobilised, ''Kormoran'' continued to fire at a high rate{{snd}}some of the German sailors reported that up to 450 shells were used during the second phase of the battle{{snd}}and scored hits on the cruiser, although misses would have increased as the range grew.<ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=259–60}}</ref> The raider fired her guns for the last time around 5:50{{nbsp}}pm, with the range at {{convert|6600|yd|m|order=flip}}, and a torpedo was fired at 6:00{{nbsp}}pm, but missed.<ref name=Gill456/> By the end of the half-hour engagement, the ships were about {{convert|10000|m|yd}} apart, with both heavily damaged and on fire.<ref name=Gill456/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=237}}</ref> Damage to ''Kormoran''{{'}}s engine room had knocked out the fire-fighting systems, and as it was only a matter of time until the oil fire reached the [[Magazine (artillery)|magazine]]s or mine hold, Detmers ordered "abandon ship" at 6:25{{nbsp}}pm.<ref name=Gill456/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=263}}</ref> All boats and rafts were launched by 9:00{{nbsp}}pm, during which a skeleton crew kept the weapons manned while their colleagues evacuated and the officers made preparations for scuttling.<ref name=Gill456/> During all this, ''Sydney'' was seen to proceed south-southeast at low speed; she disappeared over the horizon shortly after the engagement, but the glow of the burning ship was seen on the horizon consistently until 10:00{{nbsp}}pm, and sporadically until midnight.<ref name=Gill456/> ''Kormoran'' was abandoned and scuttled at midnight; she sank slowly until the mine hold exploded half an hour later.<ref name=Gill456/> The German survivors were in five boats and two rafts: one cutter carrying 46 men, two battle-damaged steel life rafts with 57 and 62 aboard (the latter carrying Detmers and towing several small floats), one workboat carrying 72, one boat with 31 aboard, and two rafts, each bearing 26.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=3–5}}</ref> During the evacuation, a rubber liferaft carrying 60, mostly wounded, sank without warning; the three survivors were placed in other boats.<ref name=Frame95>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=95}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=142}}</ref> Total German casualties were six officers, 75 German sailors, and one Chinese sailor.<ref name=Cassells151>{{harvp |Cassells |2000 |p=151}}</ref><ref name=Winter183>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=183}}</ref> === Rescue === {{Main|Sinking of HMAS Sydney#Search and rescue}} [[File:Kormoran survivors.jpg|thumb|left|upright|alt=Photograph looking down on two lifeboats crammed with people in naval uniforms. A third lifeboat of a different design can be seen behind the first two.|Survivors from ''Kormoran'' under tow in two of [[AHS Centaur|''Centaur''{{'}}s]] lifeboats. The German lifeboat can be seen behind them.]] The first life raft of German survivors, carrying 26 men, was recovered by the troopship [[RMS Aquitania|''Aquitania'']] early on 23 November, but as the ship's master believed a raider was still in the area, he maintained wireless silence and did not report his discovery until three days later.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=4, 6–7}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=39}}</ref> The lifeboat carrying Detmers saw the troopship but did not make their presence known, as the German officer hoped to be picked up by a [[Neutral powers during World War II|neutral]] merchant ship.<ref name=Frame4>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=4}}</ref> Attempts to locate ''Sydney'', which was several days overdue in returning to port, commenced on 23 November.<ref name=Gill451>{{harvp |Gill |1957 |p=451}}</ref><ref name=Olson34>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=34}}</ref> However, it was not until the afternoon of the next day, after the British tanker ''Trocas'' reported finding the second ''Kormoran'' life raft with 25 men (one having perished) a full-scale search was begun.<ref name=Frame5>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=5}}</ref><ref name=Gill452>{{harvp |Gill |1957 |p=452}}</ref> Several German lifeboats were spotted on 25 November during the air search off Western Australia: the 46-man cutter had come ashore at [[17-Mile Well, Western Australia|17-Mile Well]],<ref name="bat23" /> the 57-man lifeboat was nearing [[Red Bluff, Western Australia|Red Bluff]],<ref name="bat23" /> and a third lifeboat was further off the coast.<ref name=Frame6>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=6}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=40}}</ref> That afternoon, the staff of [[Quobba]] Station rounded up the two groups that had made landfall, who did not resist capture.<ref name=Frame6/> The 31-man boat was recovered by the passenger ship {{ship||Koolinda||2}} just before sunset on 26 November.<ref name=Frame7>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=7}}</ref> The passenger-freighter {{ship|AHS|Centaur||2}}, which had been instructed to make landfall at Carnarvon to collect the Germans captured so far and transport them to Fremantle, encountered Detmers' lifeboat that night at 10:00{{nbsp}}pm and took it in tow, as they were unwilling to let 62 enemy naval personnel aboard, but did not want to leave them to their fate.<ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=52}}</ref><ref name=Mill18.20>{{harvp |Milligan |Foley |2003 |pp=18–20}}</ref> During the voyage to Carnarvon, the damaged and overloaded German lifeboat was swamped, and the ''Kormoran'' survivors were transferred into two of ''Centaur''{{'}}s lifeboats.<ref name=Mill18.20/> Arriving in Carnarvon on the afternoon of 27 November, the Germans were relocated from the boats to ''Centaur''{{'}}s number one cargo hold, where they were joined by the sailors from the two lifeboats that had reached shore and 40 [[Australian Army]] guards.<ref name=Mill18.20/> The last boat, carrying 70 Germans and two Chinese, was spotted from the air during the late morning of 27 November, and was recovered shortly afterward by {{HMAS|Yandra}}.<ref name=Frame8>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=8}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=56–7}}</ref> The next day, {{HMAS|Wyrallah}} recovered a German lifebelt and two four-man liferafts, one of which was carrying a deceased German sailor, who was [[buried at sea]].<ref name=Frame8/> The search was terminated at sunset on 29 November.<ref name=Frame8/> By this point, all of the German lifeboats were accounted for, and 318{{efn |name=survivors |Other sources state that 317 survived, including two Chinese.<ref name=Gill452/> The third Chinese sailor was aboard the lifeboat found by ''Centaur'': as ''Eurylochus'' was owned by the [[Blue Funnel Line]], while ''Centaur'' belonged to the [[subsidiary]] Ocean Steamship Company, the laundryman was integrated into ''Centaur''{{'}}s crew instead of being handed with the Germans.<ref name=Winter183/>}} of ''Kormoran''{{'}}s 399 personnel (including three of the four Chinese laundry workers) had survived.<ref name=Winter183/><ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=308}}</ref> During searches in late 1941, none of the 645-strong ship's company from ''Sydney'' was found; the only confirmed remains found were a damaged [[carley float]] and a lifebelt.<ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=72}}</ref> In February 1942, a carley float carrying a then-unidentifiable body reached [[Christmas Island]]. In 2021, [[familial DNA]] research verified that the remains were those of Able Seaman [[Thomas Welsby Clark]], an [[ASDIC]] (sonar) operator on ''Sydney''. {{Location map many|Australia Shark Bay|float=right |width=300 |border= |alt= | caption=Recovery of survivors off the coast of Western Australia | coordinates1={{coord|24|35|S|110|57|E}}|position1=bottom|label1=''Aquitania'' | coordinates2={{coord|24|06|S|111|40|E}}|position2=left|label2=''Trocas'' | coordinates3={{coord|24|07|S|112|46|E}}|position3=top|label3=''Koolinda'' | coordinates4={{coord|24|39|S|112|15|E}}|position4=bottom|label4=''Centaur'' | coordinates5={{coord|24|04|S|112|04|E}}|position5=top|label5=''Yandra'' | coordinates6={{coord|24|09|42|S|113|27|09|E}}|position6=bottom|label6=17-Mile Well | coordinates7={{coord|24|03|S|113|27|E}}|position7=right|label7=Red Bluff<!-- location needs to be verified --> | mark8=Cyan pog.svg|coordinates8={{coord|24|53|S|113|39|E}}|position8=bottom|label8=Carnarvon }} === Aftermath === {{Main|Sinking of HMAS Sydney#Aftermath}} In Germany, information about the battle was assembled from communications intercepts during the search for survivors, then combined with Allied news articles and published in early 1943 for internal consumption by German officials.<ref>{{harvp |Hore |2005 |p=84}}</ref> A member of ''Kormoran''{{'}}s crew sent home in a [[prisoner exchange]] later that year confirmed the details of the battle, and accounts were published by the German media in December 1943.<ref>{{harvp |Hore |2005 |pp=77-8}}</ref> Most of the German survivors were taken to Fremantle and [[Sinking of HMAS Sydney#Interrogation of survivors|interrogated]].<ref name=Frame80>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=80}}</ref> Attempts to learn what had happened were hampered by the German officers instructing their sailors to obfuscate the enemy with false answers, people describing events they did not witness but heard of later, and difficulty in keeping groups separated in order to check their stories against each other.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=80, 140}}</ref> Despite this, Australian authorities were able to piece together the broad details of the battle, which was verified by German sailors recovered by ''Aquitania'' who had been taken to Sydney instead. Their interviews showed similar commonalities and inconsistencies as those in Fremantle, and the interrogators concluded that the true story was being recounted.<ref name=Frame106>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=106}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Cole |2009 |p=393 |loc=volume 1}}</ref> Initially, the sailors were imprisoned at [[Harvey, Western Australia|Harvey]] while the officers were imprisoned at [[Campbell Barracks (Australia)|Swanbourne Barracks]], but after interrogations were concluded in December, they were all relocated to [[prisoner-of-war]] camps near [[Murchison, Victoria]].<ref name=Frame80.1>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=80-1}}</ref><ref name=Olson111>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=111}}</ref> Sailors were interned in No. 13 Prisoner of War Camp, which already hosted 1,200 soldiers of the {{lang |de |[[Afrika Korps]]}}, and their shipmates rescued by ''Aquitania'', while officers were sent to the [[HM Prison Dhurringile|Dhurringile homestead]].<ref name=Olson111/><ref name=Frame83>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=83}}</ref> One sailor died in captivity on 24 March 1942 from lung cancer, and was buried in the [[Tatura, Victoria|Tatura]] war cemetery.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=199-200}}</ref> On 11 January 1945, Detmers and nineteen other Axis officers broke out from Dhurringile through a tunnel excavated during the previous seven months, although all were recaptured within days of escaping.<ref name=Frame108>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=108}}</ref> Detmers was found with a German-English dictionary which included two accounts of the battle (a deck log or action report, and an engineering log) encrypted within using a [[Vigenère cipher]], although these accounts provided little new information.<ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |pp=190, 193}}</ref> Shortly after returning to the camp, Detmers suffered a stroke, and spent over three months at the military hospital in [[Heidelberg, Victoria]].<ref name=Frame108/> The German officers and sailors were repatriated almost two years after the war with Germany had ended, departing from [[Port Phillip]] with other Axis prisoners aboard the steamer {{ship|SS|Orontes||2}} on 21 February 1947.<ref name=Frame109>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=109}}</ref> Ironically, tied up to the opposite pier was the real {{lang |de |Straat Malakka}}.<ref name=Frame109/> On arrival in [[Cuxhaven]], the prisoners were searched before leaving the ship, and while several written reports were gathered, none provided new information.<ref>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |pp=109–10}}</ref> == Search and rediscovery == {{Main|Search for HMAS Sydney and German auxiliary cruiser Kormoran}} Despite the approximate last position of ''Kormoran'' being known (most German accounts giving the battle coordinates as {{Coord|26|S|111|E|display=inline}}), efforts to find ''Kormoran'' and ''Sydney'' were hampered by the size of the search area indicated by such broad coordinates, and claims by Australians that the Germans had lied about the coordinates (among [[Sinking of HMAS Sydney#Controversy|other aspects of the fight]]) and the ships would be found further south and closer inshore.<ref>{{harvp |Olson |2000 |p=47}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=80, 90-2, 96-7}}</ref><ref name=McCarthy5>{{harvp |McCarthy |2008 |p=5}}</ref> Several searches were made by the Australian military in the years following the war, but these were primarily concerned with finding the Australian cruiser, technologically restricted to shallow waters, and made to verify or prove false civilian claims that ''Sydney'' or ''Kormoran'' was at a particular location.<ref name=JCFADT139>{{harvp |Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade |1999 |p=139}}</ref><ref>{{harvp |McCarthy |2008 |pp=2-3}}</ref> In 1990, [[Robert Ballard]] and the [[Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]] were approached to lead a search for the ships, which he agreed to on the condition that the search area be narrowed down considerably.<ref>{{harvp |McCarthy |2008 |p=3-4}}</ref> A forum in 1991 unsuccessfully attempted to do this, and Ballard withdrew his offer.<ref>{{harvp |McCarthy |2008 |p=4}}</ref> A 1999 Australian government report recommended that a seminar be organised to identify the most likely search area for the warships, but again, participants were still split between the battle location given by the Germans (referred to as the "northern position") or a point off the [[Houtman Abrolhos|Abrolhos Islands]] (the area for the battle advocated by supporters of the "southern position").<ref>{{harvp |McCarthy |2008 |pp=6-7}}</ref> American shipwreck hunter [[David Mearns]] first learned of the battle and mutual destruction of ''Sydney'' and ''Kormoran'' during a conference in 1996, and began studying the battle in 2001.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=61, 77}}</ref> With the assistance of historians and the [[Western Australian Museum]], Mearns focused on primary source documents, during which he discovered or rediscovered several archive files and diaries of ''Kormoran'' personnel believed lost; these documents led him to believe that the German accounts were truthful.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=80-93, 121}}</ref> After identifying a potential search area, the Australian government announced several million dollars of funding for the search, but German government assistance was limited to formal approval for Mearns to film ''Kormoran'' if she was found.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=104, 110-5}}</ref> Mearns' plan was to determine a 'search box' for ''Kormoran'' by plotting the possible starting points of the two rafts from the raider through a reverse drift analysis.<ref name=Mearns121.2>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=121-2}}</ref> This search box (which was calculated to be {{convert|52|by|34|nmi}} in size) would then be inspected over the course of several days with a deep-water, towed [[side-scan sonar]] mounted aboard the survey vessel SV ''Geosounder''.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=121-2, 126, 137}}</ref> Mearns chose to focus on finding ''Kormoran'' first, as locating the German ship would significantly narrow down the search area for ''Sydney''.<ref name=Mearns121.2/> After locating one or both vessels, ''Geosounder'' would return to port and replace the sonar with a [[remotely operated vehicle]] (ROV) to photograph and video the wrecks, although funding limitations meant the search and inspection of both ships had to be concluded within 45 days.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=126-7}}</ref> After problems with equipment and weather, ''Geosounder'' commenced the search, and located ''Kormoran'' during the afternoon of 12 March 2008.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=143-9}}</ref> The wreck site was {{convert|2560|m|ft}} below sea level, and consisted of two large pieces {{convert|1300|m|ft}} apart, with an oval-shaped debris field between them, centred at {{Coord|26|05|46|S|111|04|33|E|display=inline, title}}.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |p=217}}</ref> The raider's discovery was publicly announced by Australian Prime Minister [[Kevin Rudd]] on the morning of 17 March.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |p=157}}</ref> {{Location map many |Australia Shark Bay |float=right |width=300|border= |alt= |caption=Location of wrecks | mark1=Cyan pog.svg || coordinates1={{coord|24|53|S|113|39|E}}|position1=bottom|label1=[[Carnarvon, Western Australia|Carnarvon]] | mark2=Steel pog.svg|coordinates2={{coord|26|05|49.4|S|111|4|27.4|E}}|position2=top|label2=Kormoran | mark3=Steel pog.svg|coordinates3={{coord|26|14|37|S|111|13|3|E}}|position3=right|label3=Sydney }} Mearns was then able to plot a search area for ''Sydney'' based on ''Kormoran''{{'}}s location, as although there was no specific information on the cruiser's location, much more information was available concerning her last known position relative to the raider.<ref name=Mearns150.1>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=150-1}}</ref> ''Sydney'' was located on 17 March at {{Coord|26|14|31|S|111|12|48|E|display=inline}}, {{convert|11.4|nmi}} southeast of ''Kormoran''.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |p=204}}</ref> Discovery of the vessel was made only hours after the locating of ''Kormoran'' was publicly announced.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=157-8}}</ref> On discovery, both wrecks were placed under the protection of the Australian ''[[Historic Shipwrecks Act 1976]]'', which penalises anyone disturbing a protected shipwreck with a fine of up to A$10,000 or a maximum five years imprisonment.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |p=169}}</ref> Both wrecks were placed on the [[Australian National Heritage List]] on 14 March 2011.<ref>{{harvp |Australian Associated Press |2011}}</ref> After the side-scan sonar aboard ''Geosounder'' was switched out for the ROV (again delayed by technical issues and more bad weather), she returned to sea for detailed inspections of the wrecks. ''Sydney'' was filmed and documented during 3–6 April, and a sonar contact thought to be debris from the battle was visually inspected on 6 April and found to be outcrops of [[pillow lava]].<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=170-4, 189, 215-17}}</ref> Observation of the ''Kormoran'' wreck confirmed that the mine deck explosion had torn the stern half of the ship apart, with few recognisable items in the large debris field.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |pp=217-28}}</ref> The search was declared complete just before midnight on 7 April, with ''Geosounder'' returning to Geraldton.<ref>{{harvp |Mearns |2009 |p=228}}</ref> == Awards, memorials, and legacy == [[File:Marineehrenmal Laboe - australische Gedenktafel.jpg|thumb|Joint ''Sydney-Kormoran'' memorial stone at the [[Laboe Naval Memorial]]]] For sinking ''Sydney'', Detmers' [[Iron Cross]] First Class was upgraded to the [[Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross]].<ref name=Frame83/> ''Kormoran''{{'}}s executive officer, gunnery officer, and the sailor who manned the starboard {{convert|37|mm|in|adj=on}} gun were awarded the Iron Cross First Class (although for the executive officer, this was a [[medal bar|bar]] to a previous Iron Cross), while the other members of the crew were all awarded the Iron Cross Second Class.<ref name=Fram84>{{harvp |Frame |1993 |p=84}}</ref> The names of those killed aboard ''Kormoran'' are inscribed in the [[Laboe Naval Memorial]] where in 2011 a memorial stone commemorating both the ''Kormoran'' and the ''Sydney'' was inaugurated by [[Peter Tesch]] the former Australian ambassador to Germany.<ref>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |pp=247-8}}</ref><ref name="döpe21" /> The ''Kormoran'' name was carried on by the {{Ship|German fast attack craft|Kormoran|S28|6}}, a [[Seeadler class fast attack craft|''Seeadler'' class]] fast attack craft of the West German Navy commissioned in 1959.<ref name=Winter243>{{harvp |Winter |1984 |p=243}}</ref> This ''Kormoran'' operated until 1976, when she was sold to Greece.<ref name=Winter243/> East Germany also operated a ''Kormoran''; a small corvette borrowed from the Soviet Navy from 1970 to 1974.<ref name=Winter243/> == Notes == {{notelist}} == References == {{reflist |refs= <ref name="bat23">{{harvp |Bates |2023}}</ref> <ref name="döpe21">{{harvp |Döbler |Perryman |2021}}</ref> <ref name="Manitoba">{{harvp |Naval Museum of Manitoba |2004}}</ref> <ref name="wh21">{{harvp |Wehrmacht History |2021}}</ref> |3}} == Sources == ===Books=== {{refbegin |30em}} * {{cite book |last=Cassells |first=Vic |title=The Capital Ships: their battles and their badges |year=2000 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |location=East Roseville, NSW |isbn=0-7318-0941-6 |oclc=48761594}} * {{cite book |last=Frame |first=Tom |author-link=Tom Frame (bishop) |title=HMAS Sydney: Loss and Controversy |publisher=Hodder & Stoughton |location=Rydalmere, NSW |year=1993 |isbn=0-340-58468-8 |oclc=32234178}} * {{cite book |last=Gill |first=George Hermon |title=Royal Australian Navy, 1939–1942 |year=1957 |url=https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/RCDIG1070207/ |series=[[Australia in the War of 1939–1945]], Series 2, Volume I |publisher=Australian War Memorial |location=Canberra |oclc=848228 |access-date=21 August 2016 |archive-date=9 January 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160109202526/https://www.awm.gov.au/collection/RCDIG1070207/ |url-status=live }} * {{cite book |last=Hore |first=Peter |editor=Stevens, David |title=The Royal Australian Navy in World War II |year=2005 |publisher=Allen & Unwin |location=Crows Nest, NSW |isbn=1-74114-184-2 |oclc=156678255 |chapter=HMAS Sydney in World War II}} * {{cite book |last=Lane |first=Tony |title=The Merchant Seamen's War |publisher=Manchester University Press |date=1990 |isbn=9780719023972 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8IDoAAAAIAAJ }} * {{cite book |last=Mearns |first=David |author-link=David Mearns |title=The Search for the Sydney |publisher=HarperCollins Publishers |location=Pymble, NSW |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-7322-8889-1 |oclc=301679923}} * {{cite book |last1=Milligan |first1=Christopher |first2=John |last2=Foley |title=Australian Hospital Ship Centaur: the myth of immunity |year=2003 |publisher=Nairana Publications |location=Hendra, QLD |isbn=0-646-13715-8 |oclc=31291428}} * {{cite Q |Q131399419 |first=Wes |last=Olson |author-link=Wes Olson |mode=cs1}}{{sfn whitelist|CITEREFOlson2000}} * {{cite Q |Q131423643 |last=Winter |first=Barbara |mode=cs1}}{{sfn whitelist|CITEREFWinter1984}} {{refend}} ===Reports=== {{refbegin |30em}} * {{cite Q |Q131411474 |mode=cs1 |last=Cole |first=Terence RH |author-link=Terence Cole (jurist) |access-date=2024-12-09 }}{{sfn whitelist|CITEREFCole2009}} * {{cite book |author=Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade (JCFADT) |ref={{harvid|Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade|1999}} |title=Report on the Loss of HMAS Sydney |publisher=The Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia |location=Canberra |date=22 March 1999 |isbn=0-642-25872-4 |oclc=42768622 |url=http://www.aph.gov.au/house/committee/jfadt/sydney/Reportinx.htm |access-date=9 November 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091003010558/http://www.aph.gov.au/house/committee/jfadt/Sydney/Reportinx.htm |archive-date=3 October 2009 }} * {{cite report |type=Report |title=A précis of search-related events leading up to the commencement of the HMAS Sydney Search |last=McCarthy |first=Michael |year=2008 |docket=230 |department=Department of Maritime Archaeology |institution=Western Australian Museum |url=https://museum.wa.gov.au/sites/default/files/No.%20230%20Sydney%20search%20chronology.pdf |access-date=2024-12-09 |archive-date=12 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220512101812/https://museum.wa.gov.au/sites/default/files/No.%20230%20Sydney%20search%20chronology.pdf |url-status=live }} {{refend}} ===News articles and papers=== {{refbegin |30em}} * {{cite news |url=http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/journal/hmas-sydney-wreck-makes-heritage-list.htm/ |title=HMAS Sydney makes heritage list |work=Australian Geographic |date=15 March 2011 |access-date=23 March 2011 |author=Australian Associated Press |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110318070046/http://www.australiangeographic.com.au/journal/hmas-sydney-wreck-makes-heritage-list.htm |archive-date=18 March 2011 }} * {{cite news |title=After WWII battle with HMAS Sydney, German seamen landed on an outback sheep station |first=Alistair |last=Bates |date=2023-11-23 |work=ABC News |publisher=Australia Australian Broadcasting Corporation |url=https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-23/world-war-ii-german-kormoran-lifeboats-landing-at-quobba-station/104625214 |access-date=2024-11-25 |archive-date=24 November 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241124131204/https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-11-23/world-war-ii-german-kormoran-lifeboats-landing-at-quobba-station/104625214 |url-status=live }} * {{cite journal |title=Commemorating the Crews of HMAS Sydney (II) and HSK Kormoran at Home and Abroad |first1=Tim |last1=Döbler |first2=John |last2=Perryman |year=2021 |volume=2021 |issue=9, ''November'' |journal=Semaphore |publisher=Sea Power Centre, [[Royal Australian Navy]] |url=https://seapower.navy.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/Semaphore%20009%202021%20Sydney%20Kormoran.pdf |access-date=2024-12-09 |archive-date=29 May 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240529013338/https://seapower.navy.gov.au/sites/default/files/documents/Semaphore%20009%202021%20Sydney%20Kormoran.pdf |url-status=live }} {{refend}} ===Websites=== {{refbegin |30em}} * {{cite web |title=Canadian WWII Merchant Ship Losses |year=2004 |website=The Naval Museum of Manitoba |ref={{harvid|Naval Museum of Manitoba|2004}} |url=http://www.naval-museum.mb.ca/merch/mership.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120205223533/http://www.naval-museum.mb.ca/merch/mership.htm |archive-date=2012-02-05 |access-date=2024-12-09 }} * {{cite web |ref={{harvid|Wehrmacht History|2021}} |title=Kormoran HSK 8: Auxiliary Cruiser |website=Wehrmacht History |year=2021 |url=https://www.wehrmacht-history.com/kriegsmarine/auxiliary-cruisers/kormoran-hsk-8-auxiliary-cruiser.html |access-date=2024-12-09 }} {{refend}} == Further reading == {{Commons category|Kormoran (ship, 1938)}} {{refbegin |30em}} * {{cite Q |Q131399698 |mode=cs1}} * {{cite book |last=Jeans |first=Peter D. |title=Seafaring lore & legend: a miscellany of maritime myth, superstition, fable, and fact |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2TRxLhG2GiwC |publisher=McGraw-Hill |location=New York; London |year=2004 |isbn=0-07-143543-3 |oclc=56456095 }} * {{cite book |first=W. A. |last=Jones |editor-last=Taylor |editor-first=James Richard William |title=Prisoner of the Kormoran: W.A. Jones' amazing experiences on the German raider Kormoran and as a prisoner of war in Germany |year=1944 |publisher=Australasien Publishing |location=Sydney |lccn=a45002275 |ol=OL187870M |oclc=8750464 }} * {{cite book |last=Montgomery |first=Michael |title=Who Sank The Sydney? |publisher=Cassell Australia |location=North Ryde, NSW |year=1981 |isbn=0-7269-5476-4 |oclc=7925808}} * {{cite book |first=Paul |last=Schmalenbach |title=German Raiders 1895-1945 |year=1977 |location=Cambridge |publisher=Stephens |isbn=0-85059-351-4}} {{refend}} {{Sydney-Kormoran}} {{German auxiliary cruiser}} {{November 1941 shipwrecks}} {{Australian historic shipwrecks with a protected zone|state=collapsed}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Kormoran}} [[Category:World War II cruisers of Germany]] [[Category:Ships built in Kiel]] [[Category:Shipwrecks of Western Australia]] [[Category:World War II shipwrecks in the Indian Ocean]] [[Category:World War II commerce raiders]] [[Category:1938 ships]] [[Category:Australian National Heritage List]] [[Category:Auxiliary cruisers of the Kriegsmarine]] [[Category:Maritime incidents in November 1941]] [[Category:Australian Shipwrecks with protected zone]]
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German auxiliary cruiser Kormoran
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