Italian cruiser Scipione Africano

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Scipione Africano surrendering at Malta on 9 September 1943
History
Italy
NameScipione Africano
NamesakeScipio Africanus
Ordered1937[1]
BuilderO.T.O., Livorno
Laid down28 September 1939
Launched12 January 1941
Commissioned23 April 1943
Decommissioned8 August 1948
FateCeded to France as war reparations, 1948
France
NameGuichen
Namesake
Luc Urbain de Bouëxic, comte de Guichen
Acquired15 August 1948
CommissionedAugust 1948
Decommissioned1961
Stricken1 June 1976
FateScrapped, 1982
General characteristics
Class and typeCapitani Romani-class cruiser
Displacement
  • 3,750 long tons (3,810 t) standard
  • 5,420 long tons (5,510 t) full load
Length142.2 m (466 ft 6 in) overall
Beam14.4 m (47 ft 3 in)
Draught4.1 m (13 ft 5 in)
Propulsion
  • 2 shaft geared turbines
  • 4 boilers
  • 110,000 
    kW
    )
Speed41 knots (76 km/h; 47 mph)[2]
Range4,350 nmi (8,060 km; 5,010 mi) at 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph)
Complement418
Sensors and
processing systems
EC-3/ter Gufo radar
Armament
Armour

Scipione Africano was an Italian

Marine Nationale as Guichen, after briefly being known as S.7.[3]

Scipione Africano was named after Publius Cornelius

Luc Urbain de Bouëxic, comte de Guichen
.

Design

The Capitani Romani-class were originally designed as scout cruisers for ocean operations ("ocean scout", esploratori oceanici), although some authors consider them to have been heavy destroyers.[4] After the war the two units still in service were reclassified as flotilla leaders (caccia conduttori).

The design was fundamentally a light, almost unarmoured hull with a large power plant and cruiser style armament. The original design was modified to sustain the prime requirements of speed and firepower. Given their machinery development of 93,210 kW (125,000 hp), equivalent to that of the 17,000-ton cruisers of the

135 mm (5 in) guns, with a rate of fire of eight rounds per minute and a range of 19,500 m (21,300 yd). They also carried eight 533 mm (21 in) torpedo tubes. The wartime load dropped the operational speed by one to five knots (1.9 to 9.3 km/h; 1.2 to 5.8 mph), depending on the source.[6][7]

History

Regia Marina service

Ordered under the 1938 naval program, Scipione Africano was the tenth member of her class, laid down at the Odero-Terni-Orlando (OTO) shipyard in Livorno on 28 September 1939. Due to shortages of high strength steel caused by sanctions imposed on Italy by France and Britain, work progressed slowly and the cruiser was launched on 12 January 1941. Once again, material shortages led to a drawn out fitting-out, so it was not until 23 April 1943 that Scipione Africano was completed and commissioned into the Regia Marina.

Scipione Africano was assigned to the Fleet Destroyer Group upon her entry into service, and took part in the large exercises of May 1943. In July, it was decided to send the cruiser to reinforce the squadron at Taranto, as the Allied powers had invaded Sicily and it was only a matter of time before the Straits of Messina were closed. The movement was known as Operazione Scilla (Operation Scylla).

Operation Scylla

Equipped with the Italian-developed

Reggio di Calabria and Pellaro.[10][11][12] The engagement lasted no more than three minutes.[9] Scipione Africano suffered minor damage and two injuries among its crew when German and Italian artillery batteries deployed along the Italian coast opened fire in the aftermath. The cruiser had been ordered from La Spezia to Taranto
, which she eventually reached at 9:46 AM. Her high speed was decisive to the outcome of the battle.

Taranto to the armistice

After her eventful passage into the Ionian Sea, Scipione Africano was assigned to the Taranto light cruiser group (Gruppo Incrociatori Leggeri) alongside her sister Pompeo Magno and the light cruiser Luigi Cadorna. As part of operations to discourage Allied interventions on the evacuation of Sicily, she laid down four minefields in the Gulf of Taranto and the Gulf of Squillace from 4 to 17 August, together with Luigi Cadorna.[13]

On 8 September 1943, the

King Vittorio Emanuele III and his family, at 0700 the next day, and escorted it to Brindisi, driving off a Luftwaffe air attack along the way.[14]

On 29 September 1943, Scipione Africano departed Brindisi for Malta, carrying aboard her Marshal Badoglio, the effective head of government. Arriving at Valletta the same day, Badoglio signed the terms of the ‘long armistice’ aboard the British battleship Nelson, which confirmed the Italian surrender and made official its entry into the war on the side of the Allies as a co-belligerent power.[14]

Co-belligerent and post-war service

Scipione Africano spent the remainder of the war still active in the Regia Marina, fighting alongside the Allied ships, collecting an additional 146 missions and 56,637 nmi (104,892 km; 65,177 mi) steamed.[3] After the war, she was moved to La Spezia in preparation of the post-war treaties, which were to strip the Regia Marina – which became the Marina Militare in 1946 – of many of its ships as war reparations. Scipione Africano was assigned to France, along with her sister Attilio Regolo, by the Paris Peace Treaty of 1947, and was duly decommissioned from the Marina Militare on 8 August 1948. Renamed ‘S.7’, she sailed for Toulon, and there was officially sold to France on 15 August.[3]

Marine Nationale service

S.7 was commissioned into the Marine Nationale as the light cruiser Guichen and was assigned to the 2nd Light Cruiser Division on 7 September. She took part in operations to transport the French gold reserves back to France in 1949, and in March 1951 was re-classified as a ‘destroyer-escorteur de 1re classe' (1st class destroyer escort). On 14 July 1951 Guichen began a massive reconstruction at the La Seyne dockyard intended to modernize her and better integrate her into the French fleet, fitting her with new weaponry and sensor systems. Work completed in 1953, and she was returned to service in 1955 as an 'Escorteur d'Escadre' (Fleet Escort) with the following characteristics:[15]

  • Displacement (full): 5,500 tonnes
  • Length: 141.8 metres (465 ft)
  • Beam: 14.4 metres (47 ft)
  • Draught: 4.1 metres (13 ft)
  • Machinery - unchanged
  • Armament:
    • 3x2 – 10.5 cm/65 SK C/37 guns (formerly German)
    • 5x2 –
      Bofors 57 mm/60
      Me 1951 autocannons
    • 4x3 – 550 mm Mle KT 50 torpedo tubes
  • Sensors:
    • Surveillance Radars: DRBV 20A, DRBV 11
    • Navigation Radar: DRBN 31
    • Fire Control Radars: 1x DRBC 11 (10.5 cm), 2x DRBC 30 (57mm)
    • Sonar: DUBVA 1A/B
  • Crew: 353
D606 Chateaurenault, the former Attilio Regolo

The refit reduced the stability of the ship, caused the maximum speed to fall to 39 kn (72 km/h; 45 mph), and the operational range to 3,600 nmi (6,700 km; 4,100 mi) at 18 knots. However, the sensor suite was much more complete, and the ship had a much more powerful anti-aircraft and anti-submarine warfare capability than it did before. Upon re-commissioning Guichen gained the NATO hull pennant D 607, and was assigned to the 2nd Division out of Bizerte. In 1957 Guichen was refit once more, in order to make her a command ship, which removed one of her aft 10.5 cm (4.1 in) mounts and a pair of torpedo banks in exchange for better radar and command facilities, and subsequently became the flagship of the Atlantic Light Fleet. Guichen was replaced in this role by her sister Châteaurenault on 16 April 1961, and subsequently placed in reserve.[5] She was disarmed in June 1963, and used as a floating platform for the Lanvéoc Poulmic naval school. She was struck from the French naval register on 1 June 1976, given the serial number Q 554, and was finally sold for demolition in January 1982.[15]

Citations

  1. ^ "Pompeo Magno—Incrociatore leggero". Almanacco storico navale. Marina Militare.
  2. ^ a b c d e Giorgerini, Giorgio (1971). Gli Incrociatori Italiani 1861-1970. Roma: Ufficio Storico della Marina Militare. p. 656.
  3. ^ Sadkovich, p. 132
  4. ^ a b Bishop (2002), p. 489.
  5. ^ Gardiner & Brown (2004), p. 65.
  6. ^ Whitley, p. 142
  7. ^ Ando, Part 1, p. 155
  8. ^ a b De Pellegrini Dai Coi, Maurizio (January 2012). "Scipione: posto di combattimento". Rivista Marittima (in Italian). Marina Militare: 28–40.
  9. .
  10. ^ Fioravanzo, Giuseppe (1970). Le azioni navali in Mediterraneo dal 1° aprile 1941 all'8 settembre 1943 (in Italian). Ufficio Storico della Marina Militare. pp. 468–469.
  11. .
  12. ^ Cocchia, Aldo (1966). La Marina italiana nella seconda guerra mondiale, volume 18. Ufficio Storico della Marina Militare. p. 397.
  13. ^ a b Ando, Elio (1978). "Capitani Romani: Operational History (Part 2)". Warship. II (8): 251–255.
  14. ^ .

References

External links