Ottoman ironclad Mahmudiye

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Mahmudiye in Istanbul
History
Ottoman Empire
NameMahmudiye
NamesakeMahmud II
Builder
Thames Iron Works
Laid down1863
Launched13 December 1864
Commissioned1866
Decommissioned31 July 1909
Out of service1913
FateBroken up, 1913
General characteristics
Class and typeOsmaniye class
Displacement6,400 metric tons (6,300 long tons; 7,100 short tons)
Length91.4 m (299 ft 10 in) (loa)
Beam16.9 m (55 ft 5 in)
Draft7.9 m (25 ft 11 in)
Installed power6 ×
box boilers
Propulsion
Speed13.5 knots (25.0 km/h; 15.5 mph)
Complement
  • 26 officers
  • 335 enlisted men
Armament
  • 1 × 229 mm (9 in) RML Armstrong gun
  • 14 × 203 mm (8 in) RML Armstrong guns
  • 10 × 36-pounder Armstrong guns
Armor
  • Belt: 140 mm (5.5 in)
  • Battery: 127 mm (5 in)

Mahmudiye, named for Sultan

launching in 1864. A broadside ironclad, Mahmudiye carried a battery of fourteen 203 mm (8 in) RML Armstrong guns and ten 36-pounder Armstrongs in a traditional broadside arrangement, with a single 229 mm (9 in) RML as a chase gun. Among the more powerful of Ottoman ironclads, the Navy decided to keep the ship safely in the Mediterranean Sea during the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–1878 to preserve the vessel. She spent the 1880s out of service, though she was heavily rebuilt in the early 1890s and converted into a more modern barbette ship. She was nevertheless in poor condition by the time of the Greco-Turkish War in 1897, as a result saw no action, and was disarmed after the war. She saw no further active service, being used briefly as a barracks ship from 1909 to 1913, when she was sold to ship breakers
and dismantled.

Design

Profile drawing of the Osmaniye class

Mahmudiye was 91.4 m (299 ft 10 in)

BOM. She had a crew of 26 officers and 335 enlisted men as completed, but only 250 after 1894.[1][2]

The ship was powered by a single horizontal

barque rig with three masts was also fitted.[1][2]

The ship was armed with a battery of one 229 mm (9 in) rifled muzzle-loading (RML) Armstrong gun and fourteen 203 mm (8 in) RML Armstrongs. These were supplemented with ten 36-pounder guns, also manufactured by Armstrong. The 229 mm gun was placed on the upper deck, forward, and the rest of the guns were mounted on each broadside. The ship's wrought iron armored belt was 140 mm (5.5 in) thick, and was capped with 76 mm (3 in) thick transverse bulkhead at either end. Above the belt were strakes of armor 127 mm (5 in) thick that protected the battery, transverse bulkheads 114 mm (4.5 in) connected the battery armor.[1][2]

Service history

Mahmudiye, named for Sultan

launched on 13 December 1864.[1] She was completed for sea trials in 1865 and commissioned into the Ottoman fleet the following year.[3] Early in the ship's career, the Ottoman ironclad fleet was activated every summer for short cruises from the Golden Horn to the Bosporus to ensure their propulsion systems were in operable condition.[4]

The Ottoman fleet began mobilizing in September 1876 to prepare for a conflict with Russia, as tensions with the country had been growing for several years,

declared war on the Ottoman Empire in July 1876. At the start of 1877, the ship was assigned to the 1st Division of the Mediterranean Fleet, based in Volo, along with the ironclad Asar-i Şevket. The Russo-Turkish War began on 24 April 1877 with a Russian declaration of war, but unlike many of the other, smaller Ottoman ironclads, Mahmudiye and her sister ships remained in the Mediterranean Fleet.[5] The Navy feared losing the largest ships of its fleet, and so kept them primarily in port for the duration of the conflict.[6] The wooden warships of the Mediterranean Fleet sortied in April 1877 to patrol the coast of Albania, but Mahmudiye and the rest of the ironclads remained in Souda Bay.[7]

After the conclusion of the war in 1878, Mahmudiye was

naval attache to the Ottoman Empire at the time estimated that the Imperial Arsenal would take six months to get just five of the ironclads ready to go to sea. During this period, the ship's crew was limited to about one-third the normal figure.[8] In 1884, the 36-pounder gun were removed and a light battery of four 47 mm (1.9 in) quick-firing (QF) Hotchkiss guns and two 4-barreled 25.4 mm (1 in) Nordenfelt guns were added.[2] During a period of tension with Greece in 1886, the fleet was brought to full crews and the ships were prepared to go to sea, but none actually left the Golden Horn, and they were quickly laid up again. By that time, most of the ships were capable of little more than 4 to 6 knots (7.4 to 11.1 km/h; 4.6 to 6.9 mph).[9]

She was again refitted at the Imperial Arsenal from 1892 to 1894. The nature of the refit is unclear; according to Bernd Langensiepen and Ahmet Güleryüz, the alterations were extensive. They state that she received two vertical

240 mm (9.4 in) K L/35 guns were added in individual barbettes, one forward and one aft. Eight 150 mm (5.9 in) L/25 Krupp guns and six 105 mm (4.1 in) L/25 Krupp guns were installed on the broadside. Two of the 47 mm guns were removed and three more Nordenfelt guns were added.[2] But Ian Sturton reports less significant alterations, noting that half of the original main battery guns were removed and six sponsons for light guns were added to the upper deck, three per side. He notes that the reconstruction described by Langensiepen and Güleryüz was only definitively carried out to Osmaniye and Aziziye, but that "details of [Mahmudiye's] reconstruction are obscure."[10]

With the outbreak of the

Greek Navy, which possessed the three modern Hydra-class ironclads.[11][12] Despite the fact that Mahmudiye and her sisters had been refit just three years previously, the inspectors discovered that many of the pistons on their Krupp guns were bent, rendering the guns useless. Through April and May, the Ottoman fleet made several sorties into the Aegean Sea in an attempt to raise morale among the ships' crews, though the Ottomans had no intention of attacking Greek forces. With no possibility left to use the fleet in an active way, the Navy withdrew Mahmudiye from service and removed her guns at Çanakkale.[13]

The condition of the Ottoman fleet could not be concealed from foreign observers, particularly the British

AG Vulcan, were to rebuild the ships, but after having surveyed the ships, withdrew from the project in December 1897 owing to the impracticality of modernizing the ships and the inability of the Ottoman government to pay for the work due to its weak finances. Following a lengthy process of negotiations, Krupp received the contract to rebuild Mahmudiye on 11 August 1900, along with several other warships. By December 1902, however, Krupp withdrew from the deal, and Mahmudiye was ultimately not reconstructed. In 1904, the ship was towed to Constantinople, and she was decommissioned there on 31 July 1909. She was thereafter used as a barracks ship in Kasımpaşa until 1913, when she was broken up.[14]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Lyon, p. 389.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Langensiepen & Güleryüz, p. 133.
  3. ^ Langensiepen & Güleryüz, pp. 133, 198.
  4. ^ Sturton, p. 138.
  5. ^ Langensiepen & Güleryüz, pp. 5, 194.
  6. ^ Sondhaus, p. 90.
  7. ^ Langensiepen & Güleryüz, p. 6.
  8. ^ Sturton, pp. 138, 144.
  9. ^ Sturton, p. 144.
  10. ^ Sturton, pp. 138, 144–145.
  11. ^ Langensiepen & Güleryüz, p. 8.
  12. ^ Lyon, p. 387.
  13. ^ Langensiepen & Güleryüz, pp. 8–9, 133.
  14. ^ Langensiepen & Güleryüz, pp. 9–10, 133.

References

  • Caruana, Joseph; Freivogel, Zvonimir; Macmillan, Don; Smith, Warren & Viglietti, Brian (2007). "Question 38/43: Loss of Ottoman Gunboat Intibah". Warship International. XLIV (4): 326–329.
    ISSN 0043-0374
    .
  • Langensiepen, Bernd & Güleryüz, Ahmet (1995). The Ottoman Steam Navy 1828–1923. London: Conway Maritime Press. .
  • Lyon, Hugh (1979). "Turkey". In Gardiner, Robert (ed.). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. London: Conway Maritime Press. pp. 388–394. .
  • Sondhaus, Lawrence (2014). Navies of Europe. London: Routledge. .
  • Sturton, Ian. "Through British Eyes: Constantinople Dockyard, the Ottoman Navy, and the Last Ironclad, 1876–1909". Warship International. 57 (2). Toledo: International Naval Research Organization. .