Matsushima-class cruiser
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protected cruiser Protected cruisers, a type of naval cruiser of the late-19th century, gained their description because an armoured deck offered protection for vital machine-spaces from fragments caused by shells exploding above them. Protected cruisers re ...
s of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN), with three ships named after the Three Views of Japan, three most famous scenic spots in Japan (nicknamed ''Sankeikan'' (三景艦, 'three-views ships')). The ''Matsushima'' class was a highly unorthodox design among cruisers of the 1890s, as each ship had a primary armament of a single massive Canet gun, resulting in a Monitor (warship), monitor-like appearance.


Background

Forming the backbone of the Imperial Japanese Navy during the First Sino-Japanese War, First Sino–Japanese War, the ''Matsushima''-class cruisers were based on the principles of Jeune Ecole, as promoted by Foreign government advisors in Meiji Japan, French military advisor and naval architecture, naval architect Louis-Émile Bertin.Roksund, ''The Jeune École: The Strategy of the Weak''; The Japanese government did not have the resources or budget to build a large battleship navy to counter the heavier vessels of the Imperial Chinese Beiyang Fleet; instead, Japan adopted the radical theory of using smaller, faster warships, with light armor and small caliber long-range guns, coupled with a massive single main weapon. The design eventually proved impractical, as the recoil from the huge cannon was too much for vessels of such small displacement, and reloading time on the cannon was impractically long; however, the ''Matsushima''-class cruisers served their purpose well against the poorly equipped and poorly led Imperial Chinese Beiyang Fleet. There were originally plans to build a fourth vessel in this class, and its cancellation due to concerns over the design was one of the factors that led to Bertin's resignation and return to France.


Design

The ''Matsushima''-class vessels had steel hulls with 94 frames constructed of mild steel, and a double bottom, divided into waterproof compartments, with the area between the bulkheads and armor filled with copra. The bow was reinforced with a naval ram. The vital equipment, including boilers and Magazine (artillery), ammunition magazines, were protected by hardened steel armor, as were the gun shields. The main battery, main armament consisted of one breech-loading Canet gun mounted in the bow (ship), bow of the ship (in the stern in the case of ''Matsushima''), which could fire armor-piercing or explosive shells at an effective range of . The maximum rate of fire was two rounds per hour, and the ship carried 60 rounds. Secondary armament consisted of QF 4.7 inch Gun Mk I–IV Armstrong guns, with a maximum range of and maximum rate of fire of 12 rounds/minute. Ten were mounted on the gun deck, five to each side, with the 11th gun located on the upper deck of the Fantail (ship), fantail on ''Itsukushima'' and ''Hashidate'', whereas ''Matsushima'' has a 12th gun on the fantail. Each gun was equipped with 120 rounds. Tertiary protection was by QF 6 pounder Hotchkiss mounted in sponsons on the upper deck, with a maximum range of and rate of fire of 20 rounds/minute. Each gun had 300 rounds. In addition, QF 3 pounder Hotchkiss were mounted at various locations, with range of , rate of fire of 32 rounds/minute, and 800 rounds per gun. Each ship in the class also had four 356-mm torpedo tubes, three in the bow and one in the stern, with a total of 20 torpedoes carried on board.Chesneau, '' Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905''. Propulsion was by two triple expansion steam engines with six boilers, driving two shafts at a rated power of . Theoretical speed was , which was seldom realistic in actual service.


Ships in class

; (厳島) Built by the Société Nouvelle des Forges et Chantiers de la Méditerranée naval shipyards in France; launched on 18 July 1889; completed on 3 September 1891. Struck on 12 March 1926 and scrapped.Jentsura, ''Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy''; ; (松島) Built by the Société Nouvelle des Forges et Chantiers de la Méditerranée naval shipyards in France; launched on 22 January 1890; completed on 5 April 1892. ''Matsushima'' differed from her two sister ships in that the Canet gun was mounted abaft the superstructure, rather than forward. Sunk on 30 April 1908 after an accidental explosion while at anchor in the Penghu, Pescadores islands off Taiwan, with the loss of 207 of her 350 crewmembers. ; (橋立) The only ship of the class built in Japan, by the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal; launched on 24 March 1891; completed on 26 June 1894. Struck on 1 April 1922 and scrapped in 1927.


Service life

All three ships of the ''Matsushima'' class were completed just prior to the start of the First Sino-Japanese War, and saw combat in the Battle of the Yalu River (1894), Battle of the Yalu River and the subsequent Battle of Weihaiwei. During the Russo-Japanese War the three ships of the ''Matsushima'' class, by then hopelessly obsolete, were assigned to the 5th squadron of the reserve 3rd Fleet (Imperial Japanese Navy), IJN 3rd Fleet, together with the equally outdated ironclad warship, ironclad battleship , under the command of Admiral Shichiro Kataoka. All were present at the blockade of Lüshunkou, Port Arthur, the Battle of the Yellow Sea, and the final Battle of Tsushima. Later assigned to the 4th Fleet (Imperial Japanese Navy), IJN 4th Fleet, all were part of the flotilla that provided protection for the Japanese invasion of Sakhalin.


See also

* – originally planned as the fourth ''Matsushima''-class cruiser, but eventually built to a different design


Notes


References

* * * * * * * *


External links

*
The Canet gun
{{WWI Japanese ships Matsushima-class cruisers, Naval ships of Japan First Sino-Japanese War cruisers of Japan Russo-Japanese War cruisers of Japan