Mogami-class cruiser
Contents
Description
The Mogami-class were four cruisers built for the Imperial Japanese Navy during the 1930s. All were named after Japanese rivers.
They were initially built and classified as light cruisers to comply with the London Naval Treaty. After Japan refused to comply any longer with that agreement, all four ships were rearmed with larger guns and were reclassified as heavy cruisers.
Vehicles
Rank V
Vehicles are listed in order of refit year, not build year
History
Name | Builder | Laid down | Launched | Completed | Fate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mogami
(最上) |
Kure Naval Arsenal | 27 October
1931 |
14 Mar
1934 |
28 July
1935 |
Scuttled after massive battle damage during
the Battle of Surigao Strait, 25 Oct 1944 |
Mikuma
(三隈) |
Mitsubishi Shipyard,
Nagasaki |
24 December
1931 |
31 May
1934 |
29 August
1935 |
Sunk during the Battle of Midway, 5 Jun 1942 |
Suzuya
(鈴谷) |
Yokosuka Naval Arsenal | 11 December
1933 |
20 November
1934 |
31 October
1937 |
Sunk during the Battle off Samar, 25 Oct 1944 |
Kumano
(熊野) |
Kawasaki Shipyard,
Kobe |
5 April
1934 |
15 October
1936 |
31 October
1937 |
Sunk by American aircraft during
the Philippine campaign, 25 Nov 1944 |
Japan light cruisers | |
---|---|
Kuma-class | IJN Tama |
IJN Yubari* | |
Nagara-class | IJN Isuzu |
Sendai-class | IJN Sendai |
Agano-class | IJN Agano |
Mogami-class | IJN Mikuma · IJN Suzuya |
* Unique ship |
Japan heavy cruisers | |
---|---|
Furutaka-class | IJN Furutaka · IJN Kako |
Aoba-class | IJN Aoba |
Myōkō-class | IJN Myoko · IJN Haguro |
Mogami-class | IJN Mogami |
Tone-class | IJN Tone |