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GOEBEN. Built at Blohm and Voss at Hamburg and launched 28th March 1911
and commissioned 2nd of July 1912, entering service on 28th August
1912. She was the only German Battleship or Battlecruiser to serve outside
the German High seas Fleet. Goeben was serving in the Mediteranean when world
war One started. Bombarding Philippeville in Algeria on the 4th |August 1914 and
fleeing the British ships to Neutral Turkey. On the 16th of August the Goeben was transferred or
"Sold" (after being pursued by Royal naval Ships into the then Neutral
Turkish waters), to the Turkish navy and became Jawuz Sultan Selim, She was still
crewed by The German Sailors, and she was the first ship to fire on
Sebastopol, which opened Russo-Turkish conflict. she was mined in the
approached to the Bosphorus but could only receive temporary repairs.. She had a
successful attack on the island of Imbros and was struck by two mines and
luckily managed to limp back to Constantinople. After the armistice, Turkey was
not permitted to keep large warships, but the Jawuz Sultan Selim was permitted
to stay with Turkey but it was in a disabled state. The ship was refitted for
Turkey by France between 1927 and 1930. The name changed again in 1936 to Yavuz
she served as the Turkish Flagship until 1950 and was finally decommissioned in
1973 and scrapped during 1974
.Displacement 22, 640 tons, and full load 25,400
tons, Speed: 25.5 knots. range: 4,100 Nautical Miles at 14
Knots. Compliment: 1,107 Armament: Ten 11 -inch
Guns (5 x 2) Twelve 5.9 inch guns. Twelve 3.4 inch guns. Four
20 inch Torpedo tubes. (one in the bow , Two in the beam and one in the
stern. all submerged) |
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Goeben, 1913.
A
large image size 10" x 7" approx, is available. Reproduced
from the original negative / photo under license from MPL, the copyright
holder. A signed numbered certificate is supplied. Price
£25. Order photograph here Order Code
XMP5482
Original
republished © MPL Photograph (Postcard Size). Price £5 Click here
to order. Order Code MP5482 |
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The Goeben after she had been transferred to the Turkish
Navy and renamed
A
reproduction of this original photo / photo-postcard size 10" x
7" approx available. Order photograph here © Walker
Archive. Order Code PGB116
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SMS Goeben. Sent in by Alan
Lloyd |
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SMS Goeben.
A
reproduction of this original photo / photo-postcard size 10" x
7" approx available. Order photograph here © Walker
Archive. Order Code PGB056 |

Goeben, 1912.
A
large image size 10" x 7" approx, is available. Reproduced
from the original negative / photo under license from MPL, the copyright
holder. A signed numbered certificate is supplied. Price
£25. Order photograph here Order Code
XMP5481
Original
republished © MPL Photograph (Postcard Size). Price £5 Click here
to order. Order Code MP5481 |
|
GOEBEN. Built at Blohm and Voss at Hamburg and launched 28th March 1911
and commissioned 2nd of July 1912, entering service on 28th August
1912. She was the only German Battleship or Battlecruiser to serve outside
the German High seas Fleet. Goeben was serving in the Mediteranean when world
war One started. On the 16th of August the Goeben was transferred or
"Sold" (after being pursued by Royal naval Ships into the then Neutral
Turkish waters), to the Turkish navy and became Jawuz Sultan Selim, She was still
crewed by The German Sailors, and she was the first ship to fire on
Sebastopol, which opened Russo-Turkish conflict. she was mined in the
approached to the Bosphorus but could only receive temporary repairs.. She had a
successful attack on the island of Imbros and was struck by two mines and
luckily managed to limp back to Constantinople. After the armistice, Turkey was
not permitted to keep large warships, but the Jawuz Sultan Selim was permitted
to stay with Turkey but it was in a disabled state. The ship was refitted for
Turkey by France between 1927 and 1930. The name changed again in 1936 to Yavuz
she served as the Turkish Flagship until 1950 and was finally decommissioned in
1973 and scrapped during 1974.
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