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German cruiser Nürnberg

Nurnberg
History
Name: Nürnberg
Ordered: 1933
Laid down: 1934
Launched: 6 December 1934
Commissioned: 2 November 1935
Fate: Surrendered 1945. Assigned as a war prize to the Soviet Navy
Name: Admiral Makarov (Адмирал Макаров)
Acquired: 19 December 1945
Reclassified: Training cruiser, 1954
Fate: Scrapped 1960
General characteristics
Class and type: Leipzig-class cruiser
Displacement: 9,040 metric tons (8,900 long tons; 9,960 short tons)
Length: 181.3 m (595 ft)
Beam: 16.3 m (53 ft)
Draft: 5.74 m (18.8 ft)
Propulsion:
  • Steam turbines and Diesels
  • 3 shafts (Diesels on center shaft)
  • 60,000 shp (45 MW) turbines + 12,400 hp (9.3 MW) diesels
Speed: 32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph)
Range: 3,900 nautical miles (7,200 km; 4,500 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph)
Complement:
  • 25 officers
  • 648 enlisted men
Sensors and
processing systems:
FuMO 63 Hohentwiel
Armament:
Armor:
Aircraft carried: 2 × Arado 196 floatplanes

Nürnberg was a German light cruiser of the Leipzig class built for the Kriegsmarine. She was named after the city of Nuremberg and had one sister ship, Leipzig. Nürnberg was laid down in 1934, launched in December of that year, and completed in November 1935. She was armed with a main battery of nine 15 cm (5.9 in) guns in three triple turrets and could steam at a speed of 32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph). Nürnberg was the longest-serving major warship of the Kriegsmarine, and the only one to see active service after the end of World War II, though not in a German navy.

In the late 1930s, Nürnberg took part in the non-intervention patrols during the Spanish Civil War without major incident. After the outbreak of World War II in September 1939, she was used to lay defensive minefields off the German coast. She was thereafter used to escort offensive mine-layers in the North Sea until she was torpedoed by a British submarine in December 1939. She was thereafter used as a training ship in the Baltic Sea for most of the rest of the war, apart from a short deployment to Norway from November 1942 to April 1943. In January 1945, she was assigned to mine-laying duties in the Skaggerak, but severe shortages of fuel permitted only one such operation.

After the end of the war, Nürnberg was seized by the Royal Navy and ultimately awarded to the Soviet Union as war reparations. In December 1945, a Soviet crew took over the ship, and the following month took her to Tallinn, where she was renamed Admiral Makarov. She served in the Soviet Navy, first in the 8th Fleet, then as a training cruiser based in Kronstadt. By 1960, she had been broken up for scrap.


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