Italian battleship Vittorio Veneto

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Vittorio Veneto official picture
Career (Italy) Kingdom of Italy
Laid down: 28 October 1934
Launched: 25 July 1937
Commissioned: 28 April 1940
Struck: 1 February 1948
Status: Scrapped
General Characteristics
Displacement: 43,624 tons standard, 45,752 tons full load
Length: 224.5–237.8 m
Beam: 32.9 m
Draught: 10.5 m
Propulsion: 8 boilers, 4 shafts, 140,000 hp
Speed: 31.45 knots (56 km/h)
Range: 3,920 miles at 20 knots
Complement: 1,830 (1,910 as flagship)
Armament: 3 × 3 381 mm / 50 caliber
4 × 3 155 mm / 55 caliber
12 × 90 mm / 50 caliber AA
20 × 37 mm / 50 caliber
30 × 20 mm / 65 caliber
Armour: max 350 mm (vertical)
220 mm (horizontal)
Aircraft carried: 3

Vittorio Veneto was an Italian Vittorio Veneto class battleship, that served in the Regia Marina during the World War II. She was named after the Italian victory at Vittorio Veneto, during World War I.

Vittorio Veneto's keel was laid in 1934 at Cantieri Riuniti dell'Adriatico, Trieste; she was launched on 25 July 1937, and her construction was completed in 1940, after Italy had entered in war against France and United Kingdom. After the war she was taken by the United Kingdom as war compensation, but was scrapped in 1948.

Vittorio Veneto was designed by general Umberto Pugliese, and was the first battleship which overran the limits of the Washington Treaty (35,000 tons of displacement). In 1942, Vittorio Veneto was the first Italian battleship to be equipped with a radar device, a "Gufo" E.C. 4.

Vittorio Veneto took part in the battle of Cape Teulada (27 November 1940), where her firepower (19 shells in 7 salvos from long range) caused the seven-cruiser British squadron to withdraw.

During 26 March29 March 1941 mission, Vittorio Veneto participated in the dramatic events of the battle of Cape Matapan, fought along the Peloponnesus coast, where, after scaring off a squadron of British cruisers near the island of Gavdos and inflicting minor damage on them, she was hit by a torpedo-bomber and obliged to return to Italy; the Italian fleet adopted an exceptional formation on five lines to protect the Vittorio Veneto, but a second aircraft attack, and a subsequent night battle, caused the sinking of 3 heavy cruisers and 2 destroyers to British battleship gunfire.

Despite embarking 4,000 tons of water due to the extensive torpedo damage, the battleship was able to reach Taranto, but remained about five months out of service.

Vittorio Veneto during the battle of Cape Teulada
Vittorio Veneto during the battle of Cape Teulada

During the war in the Mediterranean Sea, Vittorio Veneto took part in 56 war missions, eleven of which had as their mission the hunting of enemy ships.

1940

1941

1942

1943

After the armistice of 8 September 1943, Vittorio Veneto was sent to Egypt, and was interned in the Great Bitter Lake, in the Suez Canal; a proposal to allow the battleship to fight side-by-side with the Allies in southern France and in the Pacific Ocean was dismissed because of political and operational considerations.

After the end of World War II, Vittorio Veneto was returned to Italy where she was dismantled.


Vittorio Veneto-class battleship
Vittorio Veneto | Littorio | Impero | Roma

List of battleships of the Regia Marina
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