List of torpedo cruisers of Italy explained

Between the 1870s and 1890s, the Italian Italian: [[Regia Marina]] (Royal Navy) built a series of torpedo cruisers, as part of a program intended to strengthen the fleet during a period of limited naval budgets. A total of six different classes comprising eighteen vessels were constructed. The first vessel,, was laid down in 1875, and was one of the first torpedo cruisers built by any navy. She proved to be a disappointment in service, being too slow to be an effective warship. Italian: Pietro Micca was followed by the more successful design,, which provided the basis for the four s and the eight-vessel . The four Italian: Goitos were built on an experimental basis, with being used as the basis for the Italian: Partenopes. While those vessels were being built, a pair of smaller vessels—the —were ordered. The final class, which comprised and, was built in the late 1890s to be fleet scouts. Like Italian: Pietro Micca, the Italian: Agordat class was too slow for its intended role.

Most of the Italian torpedo cruisers served during the relatively uneventful 1880s, 1890s, and 1900s, and as a result, saw little activity outside of routine training operations. By the early 1900s, many of the cruisers had been reduced to subsidiary roles or had been discarded outright. A handful of vessels, specifically of the Italian: Partenope and Italian: Agordat classes, were still in front-line service by the time of the Italo-Turkish War in 1911–1912, and they saw action primarily as coastal bombardment vessels supporting Italian forces operating in North Africa. The surviving vessels still in service during World War I saw no offensive operations, though four—Italian: Tripoli,,, and —that had been converted into minelayers, were employed to help blockade the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the Adriatic Sea. Italian: Partenope was torpedoed and sunk by a German U-boat in March 1918, the only Italian torpedo cruiser to be lost to hostile action. Long since obsolete by the early 1920s, the remaining torpedo cruisers were then sold for scrap. Their place in the fleet's reconnaissance force was taken by a group of German and Austro-Hungarian light cruisers that were acquired as war reparations.

Key
ArmamentThe number and type of the primary armament
ArmorThe maximum thickness of the deck armor
DisplacementShip displacement at full combat load
PropulsionNumber of shafts, type of propulsion system, and top speed generated
ServiceThe dates work began and finished on the ship and its ultimate fate
Laid downThe date the keel assembly commenced
CommissionedThe date the ship was commissioned
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Italian: Pietro Micca

See main article: Italian cruiser Pietro Micca.

In the aftermath of the Italian fleet's defeat at the Battle of Lissa in 1866, the Italian parliament drastically reduced naval budgets. By the 1870s, the small budgets precluded the acquisition of a large battle fleet centered on new ironclads like the then under construction, and so Admiral Simone Antonio Saint-Bon, then the Italian Minister of the Navy, ordered a small, fast vessel that was armed with torpedoes. The experimental vessel was to provide the basis for further such ships, which would increase the combat power of the Italian: Regia Marina at a fraction of the cost of a new ironclad. The new vessel was one of the first torpedo cruisers to be built by any navy. Her flat-bottomed hull prevented her from reaching her intended speed, which meant that she would be unable to catch the ironclads she was intended to destroy. She spent little time in active service as a result, and the Italian navy did not build another torpedo cruiser for almost another decade. In November 1893, the navy sold the vessel and she was subsequently broken up.

Italian: Tripoli

See main article: Italian cruiser Tripoli.

By the mid-1880s, Engineering Inspector Benedetto Brin—the designer of the Italian: Duilio and s—had begun to experiment with the ideas of the French: [[Jeune École]], which emphasized small, fast, torpedo-armed vessels that could damage or destroy the much larger battleships at a fraction of the cost. His first experiment was a new torpedo cruiser that was to correct the defects of Italian: Pietro Micca, most importantly her slow speed. The new vessel, Italian: Tripoli, was nearly 5kn faster than Italian: Pietro Micca, and she carried five torpedo tubes to Italian: Pietro Miccas single tube, significantly increasing her offensive power. She was so successful that she proved to be the basis for twelve more similar vessels of the and es built over the following decade.

Italian: Tripoli served with the Italian fleet until 1910, during which time she participated in extensive fleet training exercises that helped to develop Italian naval doctrine and tactics. She was modernized in 1897–1898, receiving new boilers and a modified bow, among other changes. In 1910, she was converted into a minelayer. She served in this capacity during the Italo-Turkish War of 1911–1912 but she saw no action during the conflict. She remained in service through World War I, during which the Italian fleet made extensive use of minefields to keep the Austro-Hungarian Navy contained in the narrow waters of the Adriatic Sea. Italian: Tripoli remained in the fleet's inventory until 1923, when she was discarded and broken up for scrap. By that time, she was the last Italian torpedo cruiser, having served for more than thirty-six years.

Italian: Goito class

See main article: Goito-class cruiser.

Brin continued his experimentation with the Italian: Goito class, adopting different hull forms, propulsion systems, and light gun batteries to determine the most effective configuration for the new warship type. He was joined in this task by Engineering Director Giacinto Pullino, who prepared the design for . Despite their variations, all were broadly similar to Italian: Tripoli, upon which their designs were based. The follow-on Italian: Partenope class adopted the two-shaft engine arrangement that had been used in Italian: Confienza, along with her gun armament suite, which included a single 4.7inches gun; she was the only member of the class to carry a medium-caliber gun.

Like Italian: Tripoli, the four Italian: Goitos served with the fleet and participated in training exercises. These exercises frequently gamed the problem of a French naval attack on various Italian ports, France then being Italy's most likely adversary, owing to Italy's membership in the Triple Alliance with Germany and Austria-Hungary. When not conducting maneuvers, the ships were frequently placed in reserve to reduce operational costs. By the late 1890s, the ships began to be withdrawn from frontline service, with Italian: Goito being converted into a minelayer in 1897, Italian: Montebello becoming a training ship in 1898; Italian: Monzambano and Italian: Confienza were simply stricken from the register in 1901 and sold for scrap. During World War I, Italian: Goito supported the minelaying operations against Austria-Hungary, and she and Italian: Montebello were both discarded after the war in 1920.

Summary of the Italian: Goito class
ShipArmamentArmorDisplacementPropulsionService
Laid downCommissionedFate
5 × 14 in torpedo tubes1.5 in955LT974LT3 shafts, double-expansion steam engines, 18knSeptember 188516 February 1888Broken up, 1920
25 September 188514 March 1888Broken up, 1920
3 shafts, triple-expansion steam engines, 18 kn25 August 188514 March 1888Broken up, 1901
5 × 14 in torpedo tubes
1 × 4.7 in gun
2 shafts, double-expansion steam engines, 17knSeptember 188711 April 1890Broken up, 1901

Italian: Folgore class

See main article: Folgore-class cruiser.

The next class of torpedo cruisers built for the Italian fleet, the Italian: Folgore class, marked further experimentation on the part of Brin. These two ships were significantly smaller than the other torpedo cruisers Brin designed, though they still carried an armament of three torpedo tubes, and they were nearly as fast as the Italian: Goitos. They were not particularly successful vessels and their design was not repeated in future torpedo cruisers. The ships had uneventful careers, though this was in part due to the fact that Italian: Folgore was badly damaged in a collision with the protected cruiser early in her career, and she could not be repaired to her original configuration. Italian: Saetta was frequently placed in reserve, and in 1897 she became a gunnery training ship. Italian: Folgore was broken up in 1900, and Italian: Saetta was dismantled in 1908.

Summary of the Italian: Folgore class
ShipArmamentArmorDisplacementPropulsionService
Laid downCommissionedFate
3 × 14 in torpedo tubes364LT2 shafts, double-expansion steam engines, 17 knUnknown16 February 1887Broken up, 1900
394LT16 February 1888Broken up, 1908

Italian: Partenope class

See main article: Partenope-class cruiser.

Design work on the Italian: Partenope class began in 1887, with Italian: Tripoli as the basis; the Italian: Goito-class cruisers had not yet entered service at that point, and so the navy had not gained any experience from the variations in their arrangements. Nevertheless, the design staff decided to standardize on the two-shaft arrangement adopted for Italian: Confienza, since it was a simpler and cheaper solution if it did not match the speed of the three-shaft systems. And with more powerful engines, the Italian: Partenope-class cruisers were faster than the three-shaft Italian: Goitos, reaching speeds as high as . For their gun armament, the Italian: Partenopes also adopted the battery installed on Italian: Confienza, since the medium-caliber significantly increased her combat power. The designers conducted further tests with the ships' armaments, and Italian: Caprera received a second 4.7-inch gun.

Like the other Italian torpedo cruisers, the Italian: Partenope class spent much of its career with the fleet conducting training exercises. In the 1890s, Italian: Partenope and Italian: Euridice participated in naval demonstrations off Crete in attempts by the Great Powers to prevent conflicts between Greece and the Ottoman Empire over control of the island. By the mid-1900s, the class began to be withdrawn from front-line service. Italian: Partenope and Italian: Minerva were converted into minelayers in 1906–1908 and 1909–1910, respectively, and Italian: Calatafimi and Italian: Euridice were sold for scrap in 1907. Several members of the class saw action during the Italo-Turkish War, primarily shelling Ottoman positions in North Africa. Italian: Aretusa briefly engaged the Ottoman torpedo cruiser in the Red Sea.

After the war, the navy discarded Italian: Aretusa, Italian: Urania, and Italian: Caprera. The three surviving members of the class, Italian: Partenope, Italian: Minerva, and Italian: Iride, continued in service during World War I, but they saw limited activity due to the cautious strategy adopted by the Italian fleet. The two minelayers were tasked with laying defensive minefields in the Adriatic, and on 24 March 1918, the German U-boat UC-67 torpedoed and sank Italian: Partenope off Bizerte. Italian: Minerva and Italian: Iride were both scrapped in the early 1920s.

Summary of the Italian: Partenope class
ShipArmamentArmorDisplacementPropulsionService
Laid downCommissionedFate
5 × 17.7inches torpedo tubes
1 × 4.7 in gun
1.6inches821LT931LT2 shafts, triple-expansion steam engines, 18.1kn20.8kn8 June 188811 September 1890Sunk, 24 March 1918
6 × 17.7 in torpedo tubes
1 × 4.7 in gun
1 February 188920 August 1892Broken up, 1921
14 February 18891 May 1891Broken up, 1907
16 February 188921 July 1893Broken up, 1912
21 February 18891 November 1892Broken up, 1920
1 June 18891 September 1892Broken up, 1912
5 × 17.7 in torpedo tubes
2 × 4.7 in guns
27 July 189112 December 1895Broken up, 1913
6 × 17.7 in torpedo tubes
1 × 4.7 in gun
15 September 189116 January 1894Broken up, 1907

Italian: Agordat class

See main article: Agordat-class cruiser.

The design for the Italian: Agordat class was prepared in the mid-1890s, with work beginning on the two new cruisers in early 1897. The two new cruisers were significantly larger than previous designs, though they discarded the medium-caliber guns that had been adopted in the Italian: Partenope design. The thickness of armor protection and the number of torpedo tubes were reduced as well. Intended to be scouts for the main battle fleet, Italian: Agordat and Italian: Coatit nevertheless proved to be too slow in service to be usable in that role. As a result, their careers were limited. They saw action during the Italo-Turkish War, where they provided gunfire support to Italian troops in North Africa. Neither ship saw combat during World War I, and after the war, they were withdrawn from fleet service. The Italian fleet received a group of former German and Austro-Hungarian light cruisers as war reparations, and these vessels replaced the torpedo and protected cruisers in the fleet's reconnaissance forces in the 1920s. Italian: Coatit became a minelayer, while Italian: Agordat was reclassified as a gunboat, in 1919 and 1920, respectively. Neither ship remained in service for very long, with Italian: Coatit being sold for scrap a year after her conversion, and Italian: Agordat joining her in 1923.

Summary of the Italian: Agordat class
ShipArmamentArmorDisplacementPropulsionService
Laid downCommissionedFate
2 × 17.7 in torpedo tubes0.8inches1292LT1340LT2 shafts, triple-expansion steam engines, 18 February 189726 September 1900Broken up, 1923
8 April 18971 October 1900Broken up, 1920

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