Difference between revisions of "Condottieri (Family)"

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Latest revision as of 13:35, 7 September 2024

Description

The Condottieri class was a group of 12 light cruisers built for the Regia Marina during World War II. These 12 light cruisers were divided into subvariants:

  • Alberto di Giussano class (4 units)
  • Luigi Cadorna class (2 units)
  • Raimondo Montecuccoli class (2 units)
  • Duca d'Aosta class (2 units)
  • Duca degli Abruzzi class (2 units)

Vehicles

Rank III

Alberto da Giussano class

Rank IV

Raimondo Montecuccoli class
Duca d'Aosta class

Rank V

Duca degli Abruzzi class

Vehicles are listed in order of refit year, not build year

History

The Condottieri class was a grouping of 5 classes of Italian light cruisers, each class being different from the other in which technological development could be seen from the oldest Alberto di Giussano class to the new Duca degli Abbruzzi class.

Each class is named after the first ship in the group, and the classes are divided into:

  1. Alberto di Giussano-class
  2. Luigi Cadorna-class
  3. Raimondo Montecuccoli-class
  4. Duca D'Aosta-class
  5. Duca degli Abruzzi-class

Alberto di Giussano-class

The Condottieri class cruisers of the Alberto di Giussano type, designed and built for exploration missions and hunting enemy destroyers, were initially classified as 'Large Explorers', then as Light Cruisers.

Since this type of cruiser was designed to explore vast areas of sea and hunt down french destroyers, they were modified to have good speed at sea, but this made them less armoured, in fact, during test sailings and battles the hull suffered much damage; during World War II the hull was reinforced, but in the same war all cruisers of this type were lost.

Instead of building more cruisers of this type, the design was revised with new and better ones, which led to the creation of the Luigi Cadorna type.

Ship name Builder Laid down Launch Commissioning Fate
RN Alberto di Giussano Ansaldo 29 March 1928 27 March 1930 5 February 1931 13 December 1941 Sunk by 2 torpedoes of HMS Maori
RN Alberico da Barbiano Ansaldo 16 April 1928 23 August

1930

9 June 1931 13 December 1941 Sunk by HMS Sikh, HMS Legion and HMS Maori
RN Bartolomeo Colleoni Ansaldo 21 June 1928 21 December

1930

10 February 1932 19 July 1940 Sunk by various British Destroyers and HMAS Sydney
RN Giovanni delle Bande Nere Castellammare di Stabia 31 October 1928 27 April 1930 1 January 1931 1 April 1942 Sunk by HMS Urge (N17)

Luigi Cadorna-class

During construction, it became evident that the first four light cruisers (Alberto di Giussano-class) were too fragile, so the Regia Marina began to design an improved version that was named Luigi Cadorna, whose improvements were hull stability and strength, and a new catapult for aircraft.

The main armament still consisted of eight 152/53 cannons but these belonged to the new 1929 model and were installed on larger towers than the previous ones.

The secondary armament consisted of 6 pieces of 100/47 positioned between the 2 funnels in 3 twin installations, while the anti-aircraft armament at the outbreak of war had 8 single 20mm and 4 twin 13.2mm emplacements and at the end still retained 2 twin torpedo launchers and could carry between 84 and 138 naval mines, depending on the model.

In particular, the Cadorna was modified in 1943, with an aircraft catapult with 2 twin 20mm emplacements; the following year the torpedoes were removed

Ship name Builder Laid down Launch Commissioning Fate
RN Luigi Cadorna C.R.D.A. 19 September 1930 30 September 1931 11 August 1933 1951 Broken up in 1953
RN Armando Diaz O.T.O. 28 July 1930 10 July 1932 29 April 1933 25 February 1941 Sunk by HMS Upright (N89)

Raimondo Montecuccoli-class

Ship name Builder Laid down Launch Commissioning Fate
RN Raimondo Montecuccoli Ansaldo 1 October 1931 2 August 1934 30 June 1935 31 May 1964 Broken up in 1972
RN Muzio Attendolo C.R.D.A. 10 April 1933 9 September 1934 7 August 1935 2 December 1942 Sunk by U.S. bombers, wreck broken up in 18 October 1946

Duca D'Aosta-class

Ship name Builder Laid down Launch Commissioning Fate
RN Emanuele Filiberto Duca d'Aosta /

Z-15 Kerch

O.T.O. 29 October 1932 22 April 1934 13 July 1935 2 March 1949 War repatriation to Soviet Navy. Decommissioned on 20 February 1959 and broken up in 1961.
RN Eugenio di Savoia /

C-24 Elli II

Ansaldo 6 July 1933 16 March 1935 16 January 1936 26 June 1951 War repatriation to Hellenic Navy (Greece). Broken up in 1973.

Duca degli Abruzzi-class

Ship name Builder Laid down Launch Commissioning Fate
RN Luigi di Savoia Duca degli Abbruzzi O.T.O. 28 December 1933 21 April 1936 1 December 1937 1961 Broken up in 1965
RN Giuseppe Garibaldi C.R.D.A. 28 December 1933 21 April 1936 20 December 1937 16 November 1976 Broken up in September 1978

Sources


Italy light cruisers
Condottieri-class  RN Bartolomeo Colleoni · RN Raimondo Montecuccoli · RN Eugenio di Savoia · RN Duca degli Abruzzi
Capitani Romani-class  RN Attilio Regolo
Etna-class  RN Etna

USSR light cruisers
  Imperial Russia
Svetlana-class  Krasny Krym* · Krasny Kavkaz*
  * Laid down by Imperial Russian Navy; Finished and renamed by the USSR
Project  Soviet Union
Pr.26  Kirov · Voroshilov · Maxim Gorky
Pr.68  Chapayev · Zheleznyakov
Pr.68-bis  Sverdlov · Mikhail Kutuzov
Pr.68-bis-ZiF  Shcherbakov
Trophies  Italy
Condottieri-class  Kerch