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The ''Eidsvold'' class was a class of coastal defence ships, two of which were built for the Royal Norwegian Navy in 1899 by Armstrong Whitworth. The class consisted of two ships, the HNoMS Eidsvold and HNoMS Norge. Locally they were referred to as ''panserskip'' (lit.: armoured ship). ==Description== Built as part of the general rearmament in the time leading up to the events in 1905, the two ships of the ''Eidsvold'' class remained, along with the slightly older ''Tordenskjold'' class, the backbone of the Norwegian Navy until the German invasion of Norway in 1940. ''Norge'' and ''Eidsvold'' were the largest vessels in the Norwegian Navy, displacing 4,233 tons and crewed by 270 men. It was intended to augment the Norwegian Panserskip fleet with the two ships of the ''Bjørgvin'' class, ordered in 1912, but both were confiscated by the British Navy at the outbreak of World War I. Obsolete by the time of the German invasion, both ''Eidsvold'' class ships were sunk during the first Battle of Narvik. The ''Eidsvold'' class carried a mixed armament, typical of coastal defense ships: * Two 21 cm (8.26 inch) guns mounted in turrets fore and aft as the main armament * Six 15 cm (5.90 inch) guns, mounted three on either side in casemates as the secondary armament * Eight 7.60 cm (3 inch) guns, four mounted in the battery (two on either side) and the remaining four mounted fore and aft * Four 4.7 cm (1.85 inch / 3-pounder) rapid-fire guns for use against torpedo boats * Two submerged torpedo tubes The ''Eidsvold'' class was armoured to withstand battle with ships of a similar class, but the underwater armour and internal partitoning were not designed to withstand torpedo hits, which caused both ships' demise: * 6 inches (15.24 cm) of Krupp cemented armour in the belt. * 9 inches (22.86 cm) of the same armour on the main gun turrets. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Eidsvold-class coastal defence ship」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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