battleship$7195$ - definitie. Wat is battleship$7195$
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Wat (wie) is battleship$7195$ - definitie

FIVE SHIPS PLANNED FOR USE BY THE FRENCH NAVY IN WORLD WAR I BUT NEVER COMPLETED
Normandie class battleship; French battleship Normandie; French battleship Languedoc; French battleship Flandre; French battleship Gascogne (1914)
  • Armor plate for ''Normandie'' being manufactured in [[Saint-Etienne]], 1916
  • Right elevation and plan drawing of the ''Normandie'' class' final design
  • Illustration of the twin and quadruple turret variant, which was eventually not adopted
  • ''Normandie'' under construction

Reşadiye-class battleship         
  • HMS ''Erin'' in 1918
  • Line-drawing of the British ''Iron Duke'' class; ''Reşadiye'' was very similar to this design
  • ''Reşadiye'' at her launching
  • 2}}, purchased in 1910 and renamed ''Barbaros Hayreddin''
1914 CLASS OF BRITISH DREADNOUGHT BATTLESHIPS
Turkish battleship Reshad-I-Hamiss; Turkish battleship Fatih; Ottoman battleship Reshad-I-Hamiss; Ottoman battleship Fatih; Reshadieh class battleship; Reshadieh-class battleship; Ottoman battleship Fâtih Sultân Mehmed; Resadiye-class battleship
The Reşadiye class was a group of two dreadnought battleships ordered by the Ottoman Empire from Britain in the 1910s. The design for the ships was based on the British battleships, although it incorporated several significant improvements.
Liberté-class battleship         
  • ''Vérité'' at anchor
  • King Edward VII}}, one of the foreign battleships that prompted the redesign of the latter four ''République''s
  • ''Justice'' at the [[Hudson–Fulton Celebration]] in September 1909
  • Right elevation and deck plan as depicted in ''[[Brassey's Naval Annual]]''
  • 4}}, the direct progenitors of the ''Liberté'' design
  • ''Vérité'' in the United States in 1909, showing the arrangement of the forward main battery turret and the secondary turret and casemate guns
CLASS OF FRENCH PRE-DREADNOUGHTS
Liberte class battleship; Liberté class battleship; Liberte-class battleship; Libertè-class battleship
The Liberté class consisted of four pre-dreadnought battleships built for the French Navy in the early 1900s. The class comprised , , , and .
French battleship Vérité         
  • Map of the western Mediterranean, where ''Vérité'' spent the majority of her peacetime career
  • ''Vérité'' at anchor
  • Line-drawing of the ''Liberté'' class
  • 2}} under fire from the French fleet at the [[Battle of Antivari]]
LIBERTÉ-CLASS BATTLESHIP
French battleship Verite (1907); French battleship Vérité (1907)
Vérité was a pre-dreadnought battleship built for the French Navy in the mid-1900s. She was the second member of the , which included three other vessels and was a derivative of the preceding , with the primary difference being the inclusion of a heavier secondary battery.

Wikipedia

Normandie-class battleship

The Normandie class consisted of five dreadnought battleships ordered for the French Navy in 1912–1913. It comprised Normandie, the lead ship, Flandre, Gascogne, Languedoc, and Béarn. The design incorporated a radical arrangement for the twelve 340 mm (13.4 in) main battery guns: three quadruple-gun turrets, the first of their kind, as opposed to the twin-gun turrets used by most other navies. The first four ships were also equipped with an unusual hybrid propulsion system that used both steam turbines and triple-expansion steam engines to increase fuel efficiency.

The ships were never completed due to shifting production requirements and a shortage of labor after the beginning of World War I in 1914. The first four ships were sufficiently advanced in construction to permit their launching to clear the slipways for other, more important work. Many of the guns built for the ships were converted for use by the Army. After the war, the French Navy considered several proposals to complete the ships, either as originally designed or modernized to account for lessons from the war. The weak French post-war economy forestalled these plans and the first four ships were broken up.

The last ship, Béarn, which was not significantly advanced at the time work halted, was converted into an aircraft carrier in the 1920s. She remained in service in various capacities until the 1960s and was ultimately scrapped in 1967.