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Battle of Imbros

Battle of Imbros
Part of Mediterranean Theater of World War I
A black and white image of a warship that has become beached. It is listing to starboard. A caption is written in white ink in German over the top of the image.
Yavûz Sultân Selîm beached in the Dardanelles after the Battle of Imbros
Date 20 January 1918
Location off Imbros and the Dardanelles, Aegean Sea
Result Strategic Allied victory
Belligerents
 United Kingdom
Kingdom of Greece Greece
 Ottoman Empire
 German Empire
Commanders and leaders
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Henry Kitchener German Empire Hubert von Rebeur-Paschwitz
Strength
2 monitors
2 destroyers
12 aircraft
1 battlecruiser
1 cruiser
1 light cruiser
4 destroyers
10 aircraft
shore batteries
Casualties and losses
2 monitors sunk
1 aircraft destroyed
1 aircraft damaged
139 dead
1 light cruiser sunk
1 battlecruiser disabled
1 destroyer damaged
3 aircraft destroyed
330 dead
172 captured

The Battle of Imbros was a naval action that took place during the First World War. The battle occurred on 20 January 1918 when an Ottoman squadron engaged a flotilla of the British Royal Navy off the island of Imbros in the Aegean Sea. A lack of heavy Allied warships in the area allowed the Ottoman battlecruiser Yavûz Sultân Selîm and light cruiser Midilli to sortie into the Mediterranean and attack the British monitors and destroyers at Imbros before assaulting the naval base at Mudros.

Although the Ottoman forces managed to complete their objective of destroying the British monitors at Imbros, the battle turned sour for them as they sailed through a minefield while withdrawing. Midilli was sunk and Yavûz Sultân Selîm heavily damaged. Although Yavûz Sultân Selîm managed to beach herself within the Dardanelles, she was subjected to days of air attacks until she was towed to safety. With the most modern cruiser of the Ottoman Navy sunk and her only battlecruiser out of action, the battle effectively curtailed the Ottoman Navy's offensive capability until the end of the war.

By January 1918, the situation for the Ottoman Army in Palestine had begun to falter. The new German commander of the Ottoman Black Sea fleet, Rebeur Paschwitz, decided to try to relieve Allied naval pressure on Palestine by making a sortie out of the Dardanelles. Several British naval elements of the Aegean Squadron had been taking refuge in Kusu Bay off the islands of Imbros, and they were a prime target for an Ottoman raid. After raiding what shipping could be found at Imbros, Rebeur-Paschwitz would then turn to Mudros and attack the British naval base there. The Allied force guarding the Dardanelles consisted of a few heavy British and French units as well as several monitors tasked with coastal bombardment. Escorting the monitors were several British destroyers. The pre-dreadnought battleships HMS Agamemnon and HMS Lord Nelson were also tasked with guarding the area, but the Lord Nelson had been tasked with ferrying the squadron's admiral to a conference at Salonika. Taking advantage of the absence of the British battleship, the Germans and Ottomans decided to dispatch the battlecruiser Yavûz Sultân Selîm (ex-SMS Goeben) and the light cruiser Midilli (ex-SMS Breslau) to attack the area. The Allied forces at Imbros on 20 January consisted of the monitors HMS Raglan and HMS M28 as well as the Acheron-class destroyers HMS Tigress and HMS Lizard.Agamemnon was nearby at Mudros, but she was much too slow to chase down the Ottoman ships if they wanted to avoid engaging her.


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