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Austrohungarian Battleships 191418 Ryan K Noppen Paul Wright Illustrator

  • SKU: BELL-4543866
Austrohungarian Battleships 191418 Ryan K Noppen Paul Wright Illustrator
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Austrohungarian Battleships 191418 Ryan K Noppen Paul Wright Illustrator instant download after payment.

Publisher: Osprey Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.18 MB
Pages: 48
Author: Ryan K. Noppen, Paul Wright (Illustrator)
ISBN: 9781849086882, 1849086885
Language: English
Year: 2012
Volume: 193

Product desciption

Austrohungarian Battleships 191418 Ryan K Noppen Paul Wright Illustrator by Ryan K. Noppen, Paul Wright (illustrator) 9781849086882, 1849086885 instant download after payment.

Despite imperial politics, a modern Austro-Hungarian battleship fleet was built and contested Italian dominance of the Adriatic and the Mediterranean through a series of daring naval raids that netted greater success than anything the German High Seas Fleet accomplished in the North Sea. The nineteenth century saw the assertion of Habsburg sea power over the Adriatic from the Austrian inheritance of the Venetian fleet in 1797 to Rear Admiral Wilhelm von Tegetthoff's stunning victory over a superior Italian force at the Battle of Lissa in 1866 to the gradual creation of a modern battle fleet beginning in the 1890s. Austria-Hungary did not have an overseas empire; its empire lay within its own boundaries and the primary purpose of its navy until the beginning of the twentieth century was the defense of its coastline. As its merchant marine dramatically grew in the late nineteenth century, Austro-Hungarian admirals believed that the navy should take a more proactive policy of defense, defending not only the coastline but the greater Adriatic and even the Mediterranean waters which the empire's merchant ships plied. The 1890s saw the beginning of a series of naval building programs that would create a well-balanced modern fleet. Cruisers were constructed for the protection of overseas trade and for "showing the flag" but the decisive projection of Austria-Hungary's commitment to control the Adriatic was the construction of a force of modern battleships. Compared to the British, French, Germans, and even Italians, the Austro-Hungarians were relative latecomers to the design and construction of battleships. Austro-Hungarian naval policy tended to be reactionary rather than proactive; its admirals closely followed Italian naval developments and sought appropriate countermeasures even though the two nations were tenuously bound together by the Triple Alliance pact of 1882. Despite the naval arms race throughout Europe at the time, the navy had difficulty obtaining funds for

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