User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
cruisers- Plural of cruiser
Extensive Definition
A cruiser is a large type of warship, which had its prime
period from the late 19th century to the end of the Cold War. The
first cruisers were intended for individual raiding and protection
missions on the seas. Over the years, the nature and role of the
cruiser has changed considerably, and today the cruiser has largely
been replaced by destroyers in its roles.
Historically a cruiser was not a type of ship but
a warship role. Cruisers were ships—often frigates or smaller
vessels—which were assigned a role largely independent from the
fleet. Typically this might involve missions such as raiding enemy
merchant shipping. In the late 19th century the term 'cruiser' came
to mean ships designed to fulfill such a role, and from the 1890s
to the 1950s a 'cruiser' was a warship larger than a destroyer but smaller than a
battleship. For much
of 19th century and the first half of the 20th, the cruiser was a
navy's long-range "force projection" weapon, while the larger ships
stayed nearer to home. Their main role was to attack enemy merchant
vessels, so much so that this task came to be called cruiser
warfare. Other roles included reconnaissance, and
cruisers were often attached to the battlefleet. In the later 20th
century, the decline of the battleship left the cruiser as the
largest and most powerful surface combatant. However, the role of
the cruiser increasingly became one of providing air defence for a
fleet, rather than independent cruiser warfare. At the beginning of
the 21st century, cruisers were the heaviest surface
combatant ships in use, with only five nations (the United
States, Russia, France, Italy and Peru) operating these
at the time. Following the Italian Navy's 2003 decommissioning of ,
only four nations currently operate cruisers.
Early history
The term "cruiser" or "cruizer" was first commonly used in the 17th century to refer to an independent warship. "Cruiser" meant the purpose or mission of a ship, rather than a category of vessel. However, the term was nonetheless used to mean a smaller, faster warship suitable for such a role. In the 17th century, the ship of the line was generally too large, inflexible and expensive to be dispatched on long-range missions (for instance, to the Americas), and too strategically important to be put at risk of fouling and foundering by continual patrol duties. The Dutch navy was noted for its cruisers in the 17th century, while the British and later French and Spanish later caught up in terms of their numbers and deployment. The British Cruizers and Convoys Acts were an attempt by mercantile interests in Parliament to focus the Navy on commerce defence and raiding with cruisers, rather than the more scarce and expensive ships of the line.During the 18th century the frigate became the pre-eminent
type of cruiser. A frigate was a small, fast, long range, lightly
armed (single gun-deck) ship used for scouting, carrying
dispatches, and disrupting enemy trade. The other principal type of
cruiser was the sloop, but
many other miscellaneous types of ship were used as 'cruisers'; at
this stage the designation meant a role rather than a type of
craft.
Steam Cruisers
During the 19th century, as steam propulsion
became the norm, fleets started to use the term 'cruiser' more
descriptively to refer to some ironclad
warships as well as a miscellany of unarmored frigates, sloops,
and corvettes, most of which had mixed steam and sail
propulsion.
The first ironclads were, because of
their single gun decks, still referred to as "frigates", even
though they were more powerful than existing ships of the line. The
French constructed a number of smaller ironclads for overseas
cruising duties, starting with the Belliqueuse,
commissioned 1865. These were the first armored cruisers. By the
1870s, many other nations had produced ironclads specifically for
fast, independent, raiding and patrol. These vessels were referred
to as armored
cruisers. Until the 1890s armoured cruisers were still built
with masts for a full sailing rig, to enable them to operate far
from friendly coaling stations.
Unarmoured cruising warships, built out of wood,
iron, steel or a combination of those materials, remained popular
until towards the end of the 19th century. The ironclad's armour
often mean that it was limited to a short range under steam, and
many ironclads were unsuited to long-range missions or for work in
distant colonies. The unarmoured cruiser - often a screw sloop
or screw
frigate - could continue in this role. Even though mid- or
late-19th century cruisers typically carried up-to-date guns firing
explosive shells, they were unable to face ironclads in combat.
This was evidenced by the clash between HMS
Shah, a modern British cruiser, and the Peruvian monitor
Huascar.
Even though the Peruvian vessel was obsolescent by the time of the
encounter, it stood up well to roughly 50 hits from British
shells.
Steel Cruisers
In the 1880s naval architects began to use
steel as a material for
construction and armament. A steel cruiser could be lighter and
faster than one built of iron or wood. The Jeune Ecole
school of naval doctrine suggested that a fleet of fast unprotected
steel cruisers were ideal for commerce
raiding, while the torpedo boat
would be able to destroy an enemy battleship fleet.
Steel also offered the cruiser a way of acquiring
the protection needed to survive in combat. Steel armour was
considerably stronger, for the same weight, than iron. By putting a
relatively thin layer of steel armour above the vital parts of the
ship, and by placing the coal bunkers where they might stop
shellfire, a useful degree of protection could be achieved without
slowing the ship too much.
The first protected cruiser was the
groundbreaking Chilean ship Esmeralda. Produced by a shipyard at
Elswick,
in Britain, owned by Armstrong, she inspired a group of protected
cruisers produced in the same yard and known as the Elswick
cruisers. Her forecastle, poop deck and
the wooden board deck had been removed, replaced with an armoured
deck. Esmeralda's armament consisted of fore and aft 10-inch (25.4
cm) guns and 6-inch (15.2 cm) guns in the midships positions. It
could reach a speed of , and was propelled by steam alone. It also
had a displacement of less than 3,000 tons. During the two
following decades, this cruiser type came to be the inspiration for
combining heavy artillery, high speed and low displacement.
Torpedo cruisers
The torpedo cruiser was a smaller unarmoured cruiser, which emerged in the 1880s-1890s. These ships could reach speed up to and were armed with medium to small calibre guns, as well as torpedoes. These ships were tasked with guard and reconnaissance duties, to repeat signals and all other duties of a fleet, which were suited for smaller vessels. These ships could also function as the flagship of a torpedo boat flotilla. After the 1900s, these ships were usually traded for faster ships with better sea going qualities.Pre-dreadnought armoured cruisers
Steel also had an impact on the construction and
role of armoured cruisers. Steel meant that new designs of
battleship, later known as pre-dreadnought
battleships, would be able to combine firepower and armour with
better endurance and speed than ever before. The armoured cruisers
of the 1890s greatly resembled the battleships of the day; they
tended to carry slightly smaller main armament (9.2-inch rather
than 12-inch) and have somewhat thinner armour in exchange for a
faster speed (perhaps 21 knots rather than 18). Because of their
similarity, the lines between battleships and armoured cruisers
became blurred.
Cruisers from 1900 to 1914
- Main articles: battlecruiser and light cruiser
Shortly after turn of the 20th century there were
difficult questions about the design of future cruisers. Modern
armoured cruisers, almost as powerful as battleships, were also
fast enough to outrun older protected and unarmoured cruisers. In
the Royal Navy, Jackie
Fisher cut back hugely on older vessels, including many
cruisers of different sorts, calling them 'a miser's hoard of
useless junk' that any modern cruiser would sweep from the
seas.
Battlecruisers
The growing size and power of the armoured
cruiser resulted in the battlecruiser, larger than
the armoured cruiser with an armament similar to the revolutionary
new dreadnought
battleship, was the brainchild of British admiral Jackie
Fisher. He believed that to ensure British naval dominance in
its overseas colonial possessions, a fleet of large, fast,
powerfully-armed vessels which would be able to hunt down and mop
up enemy cruisers and armored cruisers with overwhelming fire
superiority was needed. These vessel came to be known as the
battlecruiser, and the first were commissioned into the Royal Navy
in 1907. While, in spite of Fisher's lobbying, the concept never
came to dominate naval warfare, Britain, Germany and eventually
Japan all came to build squadrons of battlecruisers.
Light cruisers
At around the same time as the battlecruiser was developed, the distinction between the armoured and the unarmoured cruiser finally disappeared. By the British Town class cruiser (1910), it was possible for a small, fast cruiser to carry both belt and deck armour, particularly when turbine engines were adopted. These 'light armored cruisers' began to occupy the traditional cruiser role once it became clear that the battlecruiser squadrons were required to operate with the battle fleet.Flotilla leaders
Some light cruisers were built specifically to
act as the leaders of flotillas of destroyers.
Auxiliary cruisers
The auxiliary cruiser was a merchant ship hastily armed with small guns on the outbreak of war. Auxiliary cruisers were used to fill gaps in their long-range lines or provide escort for other cargo ships, although they generally proved to be useless in this role because of their low speed, feeble firepower and lack of armor. In both world wars the Germans also used small merchant ships armed with cruiser guns to surprise Allied merchant ships. Some large liners were armed in the same way. In British service these were known as Armed Merchant Cruisers (AMC). The Germans and French used them in World War I as raiders because of their high speed (around 30 knots (56 km/h)), and they were used again as raiders in World War II by the Germans and Japanese. In both the First World War and in the early part of the Second, they were used as convoy escorts by the British.World War I
Cruisers were one of the workhorse types of ship of World War I.Cruisers from 1919-1945
Naval construction in the 1920s and 1930s was limited by international treaties designed to prevent the repetition of the Dreadnought arms race of the early 20th century. The Washington Naval Treaty of 1922 placed limits on the construction of ships with a displacement of 10,000 tons or more and an armament of greater than 8 inch calibre. A number of navies commissioned classes of cruisers at the top end of this limit. The London Naval Treaty in 1930 then formalised the distinction between these 'heavy' cruisers and light cruisers: a 'heavy' cruiser was one with guns of 6.1in calibre or more. The Second London Naval Treaty attempted to reduce the tonnage of new cruisers to 8,000 or less, but this had little impact; Japan and Germany were not signatories, and navies had already begun to evade treaty limitations on warships.The German pocket battleships
The German Deutschland class was a series of three panzerschiffe ("armoured ships"), a form of heavily armed cruiser, built by the German Reichsmarine in accordance with restrictions imposed by the Treaty of Versailles. The class is named after the first ship of this class to be completed (the Deutschland). All three ships were launched between 1931 and 1934, and served with Germany's Kriegsmarine during World War II.The British
began referring to the vessels as pocket battleships, in reference
to the heavy firepower contained in the relatively small vessels;
they were considerably smaller than battleships and battlecruisers, and
although their displacement was that of a heavy
cruiser, they were armed with guns larger than the heavy
cruisers of other nations. Deutschland class ships continue to be
called pocket battleships in some circles. The ships were actually
two feet longer than the American
Pennsylvania class battleships--although the latter was
unusually stubby for a modern battleship.
Deutschland class ships were initially classified
as panzerschiffe, but the Kriegsmarine
reclassified them as heavy cruisers in February 1940.
Anti-aircraft cruisers
The development of the anti-aircraft cruiser began in the late 1920s and early 1930s when the Royal Navy re-armed several of their WWI light cruisers to provide protection against aircraft for the larger warships. As naval air power became more and more predominant during WWII, measures had to be taken in order to provide effective anti-aircraft defence. The first anti-aircraft cruisers were regular, light or heavy cruisers, which were modified to carry additional anti-aircraft artillery. The first purpose built anti-aircraft cruiser was the British Dido class cruisers, completed shortly before the beginning of WWII. Having sacrificed their medium artillery for more anti-aircraft armament, the anti-aircraft cruisers often needed protection themselves against heavier surface units.Most post-WWII cruisers were tasked with air
defense roles. In the early 1950s, advances in aviation technology
forced the move from anti-aircraft artillery to anti-aircraft
missiles. Therefore most cruisers of today are equipped with
surface-to-air missiles as their main armament. The US Navy has
operated a long line of classes of anti-aircraft cruisers (CLAA),
starting with the Atlanta
class. The modern equivalent of the anti-aircraft cruiser is
the guided missile cruiser (CAG/CLG/CG/CGN).
Later 20th century
The rise of air power during World War
II dramatically changed the nature of naval combat. Even the
fastest cruisers could not steer quickly enough to evade aerial
attack, and aircraft now had torpedoes, allowing moderate-range
standoff capabilities. This change led to the end of independent
operations by single ships or very small task groups, and for the
second half of the 20th century naval operations were based around
very large fleets able to fend off all but the largest air attacks.
This has led most navies to change to fleets designed around ships
dedicated to a single role, anti-submarine
or anti-aircraft
typically, and the large "generalist" ship has disappeared from
most forces. The United
States Navy, the Russian
Navy, and the Peruvian
Navy (with the
Almirante Grau, an ex-Dutch cruiser built shortly after World
War II) are the only remaining navies which operate cruisers.
France operates a single cruiser,
FN Jeanne d'Arc, which in the NATO pennant number system is
classified as an aircraft
carrier, but for training purposes only.
In the Soviet Navy,
cruisers formed the basis of their combat groups. In the immediate
post-war era they built a fleet of large-gun ships, but replaced
these fairly quickly with very large ships carrying huge numbers of
guided
missiles and anti aircraft missiles. The most recent ships of
this type, the four Kirovs,
were built in the 1970s and 1980s, and, with the exception of the
two newest in the class, RFS Pyotr
Velikiy and
RFS Admiral Nakhimov, are no longer in service today. Russia
also operates one Kara-class
and four Slava-class
cruisers, plus one Kuznetsov-class carrier which is officially
designated as a cruiser.
The United States Navy has centered on the
aircraft
carrier since WWII. The Ticonderoga-class
cruisers, built in the 1980s, were originally designed and
designated as a class of destroyer, intended to provide
a very powerful air-defense in these carrier-centered
fleets. The ships were later redesignated largely as a public
relations move, in order to highlight the capability of the
Aegis
combat system the ships were designed around. In the years
since the launch of USS
Ticonderoga in 1981 the class has received a number of upgrades
that have dramatically improved their capabilities for anti-submarine
and land attack (using the Tomahawk
missile). Like their Soviet counterparts, the modern
Ticonderogas can also be used as the basis for an entire battle
group. Their cruiser designation was almost certainly deserved when
first built, as their sensors and combat management systems enable
them to act as 'flagships' for a surface warship flotilla if no
carrier is present, but newer ships rated as destroyers and also
equipped with AEGIS approach them very closely in capability, and
once more blur the line between the two classes.
Aircraft cruisers
From time to time, some navies have experimented with aircraft-carrying cruisers. One example is the Swedish HMS Gotland. Another variant is the helicopter cruiser. The last example in service was the Soviet Navy's Kiev class, the last unit of which has been converted to a pure aircraft carrier and sold to India. The Russian Navy's RFS Admiral Kuznetsov is nominally designated as an aviation cruiser but otherwise resembles a standard medium aircraft carrier, albeit with an SSM battery. The Royal Navy's aircraft-carrying Invincible-class vessels were originally designated 'through-deck cruisers', but have since been designated as small aircraft carriers.Cruisers in service today
Few cruisers remain operational in the world
navies. Those that do are:
- United States Navy: 22http://www.nvr.navy.mil/nvrships/active/fleet.htm x Ticonderoga class guided missile cruisers
- Russian Navy: 2 x Kirov class large missile cruisers (sometimes referred to as battlecruisers due to their size) and 2 x Slava class missile cruisers (further 1 at reduced readiness, further 1 under construction, transferred from Ukrainian Navy to Russian Navy) and 2 x Kara Class
- French Navy: 1 x Jeanne d'Arc class helicopter cruiser (now used as a training ship)
- Peruvian Navy: 1 x De Zeven Provincien class cruiser, the world's last gun cruiser
The US Navy's "cruiser gap"
Prior to the introduction of the Ticonderogas, the US Navy used odd naming conventions that left its fleet seemingly without many cruisers, although a number of their ships were cruisers in all but name. From the 1950s to the 1970s, US Navy "cruisers" were large vessels equipped with heavy offensive missiles (including the Regulus nuclear cruise missile) for wide-ranging combat against land-based and sea-based targets. All save one—USS Long Beach—were converted from World War II Chicago, Baltimore and Cleveland class cruisers. "Frigates" under this scheme were almost as large as the cruisers and optimized for anti-aircraft warfare, although they were capable anti-surface warfare combatants as well. In the late 1960s, the US government perceived a "cruiser gap"—at the time, the US Navy possessed six ships designated as "cruisers", compared to 19 for the Soviet Union, even though the USN possessed at the time 21 "frigates" with equal or superior capabilities to the Soviet cruisers—because of this, in 1975 the Navy performed a massive redesignation of its forces:- CVA/CVAN were redesignated CV/CVN (although USS Midway (CV-41) and USS Coral Sea (CV-43) never embarked anti-submarine squadrons).
- DLG/DLGN (Frigate/Nuclear-powered Frigate) were redesignated CG/CGN (Guided Missile Cruiser/Nuclear-powered Guided Missile Cruiser).
- Farragut-class guided missile frigates (DLG), being smaller and less capable than the others, were redesignated to DDGs (USS Coontz was the first ship of this class to be re-numbered; because of this the class is sometimes called the Coontz class);
- DE/DEG (Ocean Escort/Guided Missile Ocean Escort) were redesignated to FF/FFG (Guided Missile Frigates), bringing the US "Frigate" designation into line with the rest of the world.
Also, a series of Patrol Frigates of the
Oliver Hazard Perry class, originally designated PFG, were
redesignated into the FFG line. The cruiser-destroyer-frigate
realignment and the deletion of the Ocean Escort type brought the
US Navy's ship designations into line with the rest of the world's,
eliminating confusion with foreign navies. In 1980, the Navy's
then-building DDG-47 class destroyers were redesignated as cruisers
(CG-47 Ticonderoga-class
guided missile cruiser) to emphasize the additional capability
provided by the ships' Aegis
combat systems.
See also
References
cruisers in Czech: Křižník
cruisers in Danish: Krydser
cruisers in German: Kreuzer (Schiff)
cruisers in Modern Greek (1453-):
Καταδρομικό
cruisers in Spanish: Crucero
cruisers in Estonian: Ristleja
cruisers in Persian: ناو
cruisers in Finnish: Risteilijä
cruisers in French: Croiseur
cruisers in Hebrew: סיירת (אונייה)
cruisers in Croatian: Krstarica
cruisers in Hungarian: Cirkáló
cruisers in Italian: Incrociatore
cruisers in Japanese: 巡洋艦
cruisers in Korean: 순양함
cruisers in Malay (macrolanguage):
Penjajap
cruisers in Low German: Krüzer
cruisers in Dutch: Kruiser
cruisers in Norwegian: Krysser
cruisers in Polish: Krążownik
cruisers in Portuguese: Cruzador
cruisers in Russian: Крейсер
cruisers in Serbo-Croatian: Krstarica
cruisers in Slovenian: Križarka
cruisers in Serbian: Крстарица
cruisers in Swedish: Kryssare
cruisers in Vietnamese: Tuần dương hạm
cruisers in Chinese: 巡洋舰