SMS Sebenico was a torpedo cruiser of the Austro-Hungarian Navy, the third member of the Zara class, though built to a slightly different design to her two half-sister ships in an unsuccessful attempt to improve her speed. She was laid down in July 1880, launched in February 1882, and commissioned in December that year. Too slow to be used in her intended roles as a fleet scout and a flotilla leader, she saw little active service. She took part in an international naval demonstration off Crete in 1897, where she sank a Greek ship trying to break the blockade. Sebenico served as a training ship for the rest of her career, including with the artillery school from 1903 to 1915, and with the torpedo school until the end of World War I in 1918. Ceded to Italy as a war prize in 1920, she was then broken up for scrap.
Sebenico was 64.91 meters (213ft)long overall, with a beam of 8.24m (27ft) and a draft of 4.2m (13ft 9in). She displaced882.6 long tons (896.8t). The ship's propulsion system consisted of a pair of two-cylinder vertical compoundsteam engines, with steam provided by five cylindrical fire-tube boilers. On trials, Sebenico reached a speed of 12.81 knots (23.72km/h; 14.74mph) from 1,598 metric horsepower (1,576ihp). Her crew numbered 13officers and 135enlisted men.[1][2]
The ship's gun armament consisted of four 9-centimeter (3.5in) 24-caliber (cal.) Breech-loading guns in single mounts, along with one 7cm (2.8in) 15-cal. breech-loading gun and two 25mm (0.98in)Nordenfelt guns. She was also armed with a single torpedo tube in the bow mounted below the waterline. Sebenico was protected with a thin 19mm (0.75in) armored deck.[1]
Service history
The keel for Sebenico was laid down on 20 July 1880. Chief Engineer Josef von Romako, the designer of the ships, decided to slightly lengthen Sebenico in an attempt to improve her speed over her sister shipsZara and Spalato, which had failed to reach their design speed of 15 knots (28km/h; 17mph). This would give Sebenico finer hull lines and thus produce a better hydrodynamic shape. On 22 February 1882, she was launched, after which her machinery was installed. Initial sea trials were conducted on 23 and 24 November, followed by additional trials from 9 to 11 December, after which she was formally commissioned into the fleet. During the latter tests, Sebenico reached a speed of 12.91 knots (23.91km/h; 14.86mph) at maximum power, slightly faster than Spalato but still well under the designed speed. Completion of the ship had been delayed by the redesign of the hull, which did not solve the speed problem. In early 1883, her propulsion system was rebuilt in another attempt to improve her speed, but on trials conducted on 28 July, she only made 12.81 knots (23.72km/h; 14.74mph) at full power and could manage an average of just 12.41 knots (22.98km/h; 14.28mph) for extended steaming.[3]
On 2 January 1884, Sebenico was assigned to the main Austro-Hungarian squadron. She went to Greece on 23 January and returned to Pola on 14 May, where she was decommissioned. She spent the next nine years in reserve, during which time she had four 47mm (1.9in) 33-cal. quick-firing guns installed, two on each broadside. She was reactivated on 31 August 1893 for service with the training squadron, which lasted from 1 September to 31 December. This duty consisted solely of training engine-room personnel. She repeated this service from 1 May to 7 August 1894, and she went on a cruise with the training squadron to the island of Tenedos from 1 October to 3 February 1895. From 26 September, she returned to engine-room training, though this was interrupted in November with an assignment to serve as the station ship in Constantinople, the capital of the Ottoman Empire. She served in this role until 7 May 1896, followed by a return to the training squadron from 22 October to the end of the year. In January 1897, she was sent to Piraeus, Greece.[4]
Herr Victor Ritter Bless von Sambuchi, commander of the Austrian gunboat Sebenico drew this sketch of the action of 17 March 1898. The Sebenico affair
From 1898 to 1901, the ship remained out of service for re-boilering. She conducted trials on 20 May 1901 and reached a speed of 11.76 knots (21.78km/h; 13.53mph). She served as a boiler-room training ship from then to September, and in 1902 became a station ship in Cattaro Bay. Sebenico was converted into a tender for the artillery school in 1903.[4] For this role, she had her armament revised, to include one 12cm (4.7in) gun, one 15cm (5.9in) gun, one 10cm (3.9in) gun, one 6.6cm (2.6in) gun, eight 47mm guns, and two 37mm (1.5in) guns.[6] On 13 January 1904, she assisted the Norddeutscher Lloyd steamship SSCalipso that had run aground off Medolino. Sebenico served with the artillery school until May 1915. During this period, after World War I broke out in July 1914, Sebenico was stationed as a guard ship in her namesake city.[6] She was then assigned to the torpedo school in 1918, and served in that capacity to the end of the war. With Austria-Hungary's defeat, the Allies seized most of the Austro-Hungarian fleet as war prizes, and Sebenico was allocated to Italy in 1920, which scrapped her that year.[4][6]
Bilzer, Franz F. (1990). Die Torpedoschiffe und Zerstörer der k.u.k. Kriegsmarine 1867–1918[The Torpedo Ships and Destroyers of the Austro-Hungarian Navy 1867–1918] (in German). Graz: H. Weishaupt. ISBN978-3-900310-66-0.
Greger, René (1976). Austro-Hungarian Warships of World War I. London: Ian Allan. ISBN978-0-7110-0623-2.