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'''Naval warfare''' considers the miltary history of the organized navies of the world from 300 BC to the present.
{{subpages}}
'''Naval warfare''' considers the military history of the organized navies of the world from 300 BC to the present.
==Ancient==
==Medieval==
==Early modern==
 
In 17th-century Europe, maritime war was subordinate to land warfare. Few theorists paid attention to naval strategy or tactics. However, French writers began to produce works on naval doctrine, focusing on the defense of coasts and the defense of and attacks on maritime traffic. The English Admiralty meanwhile began to develop tactical fighting instructions for fleet actions, but not on strategies fleet actions would support. Late-17th-century maritime wars thus demonstrated the centrality of French doctrine, in which major naval campaigns were concerned with coastal defense and attacks on individual or small groups of ships. Maritime activity was therefore extended in pursuit of these campaigns and was only periodically punctuated by concentrated fleet battles.
 
The [[Spanish Armada]] was a failed seaborne invasion of England by Spain in 1588. The Armada included 130 large ships of 57,900 tons mounting 2,500 cannons and manned by 30,700 crewmen. The English fleet consisted of 197 vessels of 29,800 tons manned by 15,800 men. The problems of logistics, and the prevailing winds and currents in the English Channel, proved devastating for the Spanish, whose basic strategy was inherently flawed. A Spanish victory was highly improbable. There were six naval encounters, but none were decisive. What destroyed the Armada was stormy weather and disease. The defeat of the Armada was not decisive militarily but it did encourage English morale and undermine Spanish morale; it fatally weakened the Catholic League, and in reduced the respect of neutrals for Spain.
==18th century==
Rodger goes beyond battle history and fleet operations to examine the organizational superiority of the Royal Navy, especially in contrast with the French navy. He argues the British were better at ship architecture (gaining speed via bronze plating), maintenance, practical officer training, and crew care. British repair docks could handle ships of the line better than the French, who concentrated on construction rather than maintenance.  Much credit goes to the Admiralty, under the direction of civilian [[Samuel Pepys]] as secretary and chief administrative officer.<ref> N. A. M. Rodger, ''The Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649-1815'' (2006)</ref>
 
==19th century==
At the beginning of the 19th century, the standard wooden warship used sail power and smoothbore broadside cannon. By the end of the century, ships had completely changed, to steel and iron hulls, using steam power and turret-mounted rifled guns.
===Napoleonic wars===
The British navy's victory, under Admiral [[Horatio Nelson]] over the French fleet in the [[Battle of the Nile]] in 1798 thwarted Napoleon's attempt to cripple Britain and represents the most complete naval triumph of the 18th century and the apogee of naval warfare in the age of sail. Nelson, who was killed in action, commanded the final [[Battle of Trafalgar]], ending any effective French naval capabiity.
 
Rodger (2005) examines the implications of victory at sea during the Napoleonic wars and the impact that British naval success had on the ultimate defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo in 1815. Naval warfare in the early 19th century was almost never decisive; military engagements on land remained the most crucial determinant of success under arms. However, success at sea could contribute to wasting an enemy's resources via the destruction of technology (complex and costly warships) and skilled manpower. Naval engagements, because they were far removed from the presence of civilians, also had the advantage of arousing little, if any, resentment from civilian populations, resentment that could be transformed into popular uprisings and insurgency. Ultimately, Britain's Royal Navy, despite a string of naval victories, was unable to counter Napoleon's hegemony on the European continent. For that, a coalition of land powers was needed. Naval contributions remained but a sideshow throughout the conflict.<ref> N. A. M. Rodger, "The Nature of Victory at Sea." ''Journal for Maritime Research'' 2005. Issn: 1469-1957 Fulltext: [http://www.jmr.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/ConJmrArticle.190 online]</ref>
===Crimean War and Privateering===
The abolition of [[privateering]] by the [[Declaration of Paris (1856)]] marks an important stage in the state monopolization of violence in the modern world.  The [[Confederate States of America]] purchased raiders from Britain, but could not sell the prizes and could not get private interests to build privateers against the U.S. merchant fleet.
===American Civil War===
From a strategic standpoint, the most important aspect of the war was the Union blockade of the Confederacy. Nevertheless, there were major tactical attacks on ports and rivers. The [[Battle of Hampton Roads]] was a two-day affair marked by a two-generation leap in technology, both rendering the wooden warship obsolete.
 
==20th century==
At the beginning of the century, the [[battleship]], in various forms, was the dominant naval vessel. [[Cruiser]]s scouted for the heavy ships.  The assumption was that battleships would fight battleships and lighter craft would stay out of their way.
 
Challenging that assumption was the first generation of [[fast attack craft]], torpedo boats, or light, fast surface vessels that could speed at battleships and launch [[torpedo]]es. Torpedoes, striking below the waterline, could do as much or more damage than the main guns of battleships; gunfire from above creates holes that let in air, while torpedo holes let in water.  Fast attack craft were generally used for coastal defense and did not need to be able to cope with open-ocean operations.
 
A class of vessel, initially called ''torpedo boat destroyers'', emerged. These were large enough to accompany battleships and cruisers across oceans, but small and nimble enough to maneuver between heavy ships and torpedo boats, attacking the latter with fast-firing medium and light guns. Eventually, the name simplified to [[destroyer]], which became the all-purpose vessel of navies.
 
==21st century==
The information age has presented to us another transformation in naval warfare. Both World Wars and the [[Falklands War]] have shown that ships built for the sole purpose of firing guns at long range are vulnerable: to air attack, [[submarine]] attack, [[missile]] attack, and close-in engagements with vessels encountered unexpectedly at night or in fog. An answer to this vulnerability has been an increased dependence on electronics and a host of weapons systems for varying roles of defense.
 
The [[cruiser]] of World War Two has been replaced by U.S. [[Ticonderoga-class]] cruisers now specializing in [[anti-air warfare]], but with significant [[anti-submarine warfare]], and [[anti-surface]]. The ex-Soviet [[Kirov-class]] and [[Slava-class]] are comparable multimission ships, although only the U.S. appears to be planning a new cruiser generation. These missions are carried out almost solely by missiles, [[torpedo]]es, and ship-based [[helicopter]]s; destroyers and light escorts also only use gunnery as a secondary system, or provide [[naval gunfire support]] to troops ashore. The only conventional gun defenses are two 5-inchers and a "last-ditch" [[Phalanx close-in weapons system]] (CIWS).  Even pure gun CIWS are being replaced or supplanted by point defense missiles such as the [[RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile]], or the Russian [[Kashtan (air defense)|Kashtan]] hybrid missile-gun CIWS. So representative of technology's multi-role place in the modern navy, these 9,000-ton fossil-fueled missile cruisers have supplanted the 58,000-ton battleships of yesterday as the navy's flagships, highlighting the fiscal advantages of a larger fleet comprised of smaller, more capable boats.
 
Ticonderogas, however, are built on the same hull as [[Burke-class]] destroyers, which are almost as capable. The cruisers have somewhat more air defense capability and also more space for additional staff personnel.
 
New classes, such as the [[Littoral Combat Ship]], are emerging as operations move from the deep ocean to coastal waters.
 
==See also==
==See also==
* [[Naval guns]]
* [[Naval guns]]
Line 5: Line 43:
* [[Military history]]
* [[Military history]]
* [[Land warfare]]
* [[Land warfare]]
* [[Marine Corps]]
* [[Naval infantry]]
* [[Alfred Thayer Mahan]]
* [[Alfred Thayer Mahan]]
* [[Sea Power]]
* [[Sea Power]]
* [[United States Navy]]
* [[United States Navy]]
* [[World War II, Pacific]]
* [[World War II in the Pacific]]
===Battles and campaigns===
===Battles and campaigns===
* [[Battle of Pearl Harbor]], 1941
* [[Battle of Salamis]] 480 B.C.
* [[Battle of Jutland]]. 1916
* [[Battle of Lepanto]]. 1571
* [[Spanish Armada]], 1588
* [[Battle of Trafalgar]], 1805
* [[Union Blockade]], U.S. Civil War 1861-65
* [[Union Blockade]], U.S. Civil War 1861-65
 
* [[Battle of Monitor and Merrimac]], 1862
==Bibliography==
* [[Battle of Tsushima]], 1905
===Surveys===
* [[Battle of Jutland]], 1916
* Potter, E. B.  ''Sea Power: A Naval History'' (1982), covers all major battled in world history
* [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack on Pearl Harbor]], 1941
* Rose, Susan. ''Medieval Naval Warfare, 1000-1500'' (2002) [http://www.questia.com/read/108049718 online edition]
* [[Battle of Midway]], 1942
* Sondhaus, Lawrence. ''Naval Warfare, 1815-1914'' (2001) [http://www.questia.com/read/109459237 online edition]
* [[Battle of Philippine Sea]], 1944
===Major nations===
* [[Battle of Leyte Gulf]], 1944
*  Howarth, Stephen. ''To Shining Sea -- A History of the United States Navy, 1775-1991'' (1991).
* [[Battle of Okinawa]], 1945[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]]
* Love, Robert W. ''History of the US Navy: 1942-1991'' (1992) [http://www.amazon.com/History-U-S-Navy-1942-1991-U/dp/0811718638/ref=sr_1_9/103-4827826-5463040?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191328523&sr=1-9  excerpt and text search]
* Love, Robert W. ''History of the US Navy: 1775-1941'' (1992) [http://www.amazon.com/History-U-S-Navy-1775-1941-Robert/dp/081171862X/ref=sr_1_10/103-4827826-5463040?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191328523&sr=1-10 excerpt and text search]
 
===Sea Power===
* Koburger Jr. Charles W. ''Sea Power in the Twenty-First Century: Projecting a Naval Revolution'' (1997) [http://www.questia.com/read/107111678 online edition]
* Mahan, Alfred Thayer. ''The Influence of Sea Power Upon History, 1660-1783'' (1890) 557 pages; perhaps the most influential history book ever written [http://books.google.com/books?id=tfQBAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA1&dq=intitle:influence+intitle:sea+inauthor:mahan&num=30&as_brr=1 Google version]
 
===Technology===
See also [[Naval guns > Bibliography|Naval guns]]
* Brown, David K. ''Eclipse of the Big Gun: The Warship 1906-45'' (1992)
* Friedman, Norman. ''U.S. Naval Weapons: Every Gun, Missile, Mine and Torpedo Used by the U.S. Navy from 1883 to the Present'' (1983), highly detailed guide 
* Greene, Jack, and Alessandro Massignani. ''Ironclads at War: The Origin and Development of the Armored Warship, 1854-1891'' (1998) [http://www.questia.com/read/100927342 online edition]
* Guilmartin, John F., Jr. ''Gunpowder and Galleys: Changing Technology and Mediterranean Warfare at Sea in the Sixteenth Century'' (2003)
* Lambert, Nicholas A. ''Sir John Fisher's Naval Revolution'' (2002) [http://www.amazon.com/Fishers-Revolution-Studies-Maritime-History/dp/1570034923/ref=sr_1_36?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1203294993&sr=1-36 excerpt and text search]
* McBride, William M. ''Technological Change and the United States Navy, 1865-1945'' (2000)  [http://www.amazon.com/Technological-1865-1945-Hopkins-Studies-Technology/dp/0801864860/ref=sr_1_4?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1203293238&sr=8-4 excerpt and text search]
* Morison, Elting E. ''Men Machines and Modern Times'' (1968) [http://www.amazon.com/Machines-Modern-Times-Elting-Morison/dp/0262630184/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1203309361&sr=1-1 excerpt and text search]
* Sumida, Jon Tetsuro. "A Matter of Timing: The Royal Navy and the Tactics of Decisive Battle, 1912–1916," ''Journal of Military History'' 67 (January 2003): 85–136 [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0899-3718(200301)67%3A1%3C85%3AAMOTTR%3E2.0.CO%3B2-C in JSTOR]
 
===Wars===
====18th century====
* Allen, Gardner W. ''A Naval History of the American Revolution'' (1913) [http://books.google.com/books?id=fuPb5uhDxUwC&pg=PA1&dq=inauthor:Allen+inauthor:Gardner&num=30&as_brr=1 online at Google]  
* Fowler, William M. ''Rebels Under Sail'' (1976), the standard scholarly history of the naval warfare during the American Revolution
* Morison, Samuel Eliot. ''John Paul Jones'' (1959), Pulitzer Prize [http://www.amazon.com/John-Paul-Jones-Biography-Bluejacket/dp/1557504105/ref=pd_bbs_sr_5/103-4827826-5463040?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191476384&sr=8-5 excerpt and text search]
* Thomas, Evan. ''John Paul Jones: Sailor, Hero, Father of the American Navy'' (2003) [http://www.amazon.com/John-Paul-Jones-Sailor-American/dp/0743258045/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/103-4827826-5463040?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191476384&sr=8-1 excerpt and text search]
====Early Modern: 1500-1790====
* Corbett, Julian S. ''Drake and the Tudor Navy: With a History of the Rise of England as a Maritime Power'' (1898) [http://www.questia.com/read/8906402  online edition vol 1]; also [http://www.questia.com/read/96227572 online edition vol 2]
====19th century====
=====Napoleonic=====
* Mahan, Alfred Thayer. ''The influence of sea power upon the War of 1812'' 2 vols (1905) [http://books.google.com/books?vid=0JnrLaBEdHaTa7aGfqMskdo&id=iS7lSwx6VQcC&printsec=toc&dq=Mahan,+Alfred+Thayer.+The+influence+of+sea+power+upon+the+War+of+1812&as_brr=1&sig=q4Kfmz767_5XfK7PR0IXDM7rrmw online edition]
*  Pope, Dudley. ''Decision at Trafalgar.'' (1960) [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=1216353 online edition]
* Roosevelt, Theodore. ''The Naval War of 1812'' (1882). [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/9104 eText at Project Gutenberg]
 
====20th century====
=====World War I=====
See also [[World War I > Bibliography]]
* Gray, Edwyn A. ''The U-Boat War, 1914-1918'' (1994)
* Halpern, Paul G. ''A Naval History of World War I''(1995)
 
=====World War II=====
See also [[World War II, Pacific > Bibliography|World War II, Pacific]]
* Blair, Clay Jr. ''Silent Victory: The U.S. Submarine War Against Japan'' (1975).
[[Image:USS West Virginia Pearl Harbor.jpg|thumb|350px|Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941]]
* Buell, Thomas. ''Master of Seapower: A Biography of Admiral Ernest J. King'' Naval Institute Press, 1976.
* Gailey, Harry A. ''The War in the Pacific: From Pearl Harbor to Tokyo Bay'' (1995) [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=94432774  online edition]
* King, Ernest J. ''U.S. Navy at War, 1941-1945: Official Reports to the Secretary of the Navy'' (1946) [http://www.questia.com/read/879281 online edition]
* Kirby, S. Woodburn.  ''The War Against Japan''. 4 vols. (1957-1965). Highly detailed official Royal Navy history.
* Morison, Samuel Eliot. ''The Two-Ocean War: A Short History of the United States Navy in the Second World War'' (1963), one-volume version of his massive 15 vol history (1947-62) of combat operations
* Potter, John D. ''Yamamoto'' 1967.
* Potter, E.B. ''Nimitz'' (1988)
* Prange, Gordon W. ''At Dawn We Slept''. 1982. Pearl Harbor
* Prange, Gordon W. ''Miracle at Midway'' (1982).
* Reynolds, Clark G. ''The Fast Carriers: Forging of an Air Navy''  (1968).
* Spector, Ronald. ''Eagle Against the Sun: The American War with Japan'' Free Press, 1985.
* Turnbull, Archibald D. and Clifford Lord. ''History of United States Naval Aviation'' (1949).
*  Willmott, H. P. ''The Barrier and the Javelin: Japanese and Allied Pacific Strategies, February to June, 1942'' (1983). 
 
====Cold war and after====
* Brasher,  Bart. ''Implosion: Downsizing the U.S. Military, 1987-2015'' (2000) [http://www.questia.com/read/25991890 online edition]
*  Duncan, Francis. ''Rickover and the Nuclear Navy'' (1990).
*  Hartmann, Frederick H. ''Naval Renaissance -- The U.S. Navy in the 1980s'' (1990).
*  Lehman, John F., Jr. ''Command of the Seas: Building the 600 Ship Navy'' (1989).
* Love, Robert W. ''History of the US Navy: 1942-1991'' (1992) [http://www.amazon.com/History-U-S-Navy-1942-1991-U/dp/0811718638/ref=sr_1_9/103-4827826-5463040?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1191328523&sr=1-9  excerpt and text search]
* Polmar, Norman. ''The American Submarine'' (1981). well-illustrated popular history
*  Ryan, Paul B. ''First Line of Defense -- The U.S. Navy Since 1945'' (1981)

Latest revision as of 11:00, 24 September 2024

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Naval warfare considers the military history of the organized navies of the world from 300 BC to the present.

Ancient

Medieval

Early modern

In 17th-century Europe, maritime war was subordinate to land warfare. Few theorists paid attention to naval strategy or tactics. However, French writers began to produce works on naval doctrine, focusing on the defense of coasts and the defense of and attacks on maritime traffic. The English Admiralty meanwhile began to develop tactical fighting instructions for fleet actions, but not on strategies fleet actions would support. Late-17th-century maritime wars thus demonstrated the centrality of French doctrine, in which major naval campaigns were concerned with coastal defense and attacks on individual or small groups of ships. Maritime activity was therefore extended in pursuit of these campaigns and was only periodically punctuated by concentrated fleet battles.

The Spanish Armada was a failed seaborne invasion of England by Spain in 1588. The Armada included 130 large ships of 57,900 tons mounting 2,500 cannons and manned by 30,700 crewmen. The English fleet consisted of 197 vessels of 29,800 tons manned by 15,800 men. The problems of logistics, and the prevailing winds and currents in the English Channel, proved devastating for the Spanish, whose basic strategy was inherently flawed. A Spanish victory was highly improbable. There were six naval encounters, but none were decisive. What destroyed the Armada was stormy weather and disease. The defeat of the Armada was not decisive militarily but it did encourage English morale and undermine Spanish morale; it fatally weakened the Catholic League, and in reduced the respect of neutrals for Spain.

18th century

Rodger goes beyond battle history and fleet operations to examine the organizational superiority of the Royal Navy, especially in contrast with the French navy. He argues the British were better at ship architecture (gaining speed via bronze plating), maintenance, practical officer training, and crew care. British repair docks could handle ships of the line better than the French, who concentrated on construction rather than maintenance. Much credit goes to the Admiralty, under the direction of civilian Samuel Pepys as secretary and chief administrative officer.[1]

19th century

At the beginning of the 19th century, the standard wooden warship used sail power and smoothbore broadside cannon. By the end of the century, ships had completely changed, to steel and iron hulls, using steam power and turret-mounted rifled guns.

Napoleonic wars

The British navy's victory, under Admiral Horatio Nelson over the French fleet in the Battle of the Nile in 1798 thwarted Napoleon's attempt to cripple Britain and represents the most complete naval triumph of the 18th century and the apogee of naval warfare in the age of sail. Nelson, who was killed in action, commanded the final Battle of Trafalgar, ending any effective French naval capabiity.

Rodger (2005) examines the implications of victory at sea during the Napoleonic wars and the impact that British naval success had on the ultimate defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo in 1815. Naval warfare in the early 19th century was almost never decisive; military engagements on land remained the most crucial determinant of success under arms. However, success at sea could contribute to wasting an enemy's resources via the destruction of technology (complex and costly warships) and skilled manpower. Naval engagements, because they were far removed from the presence of civilians, also had the advantage of arousing little, if any, resentment from civilian populations, resentment that could be transformed into popular uprisings and insurgency. Ultimately, Britain's Royal Navy, despite a string of naval victories, was unable to counter Napoleon's hegemony on the European continent. For that, a coalition of land powers was needed. Naval contributions remained but a sideshow throughout the conflict.[2]

Crimean War and Privateering

The abolition of privateering by the Declaration of Paris (1856) marks an important stage in the state monopolization of violence in the modern world. The Confederate States of America purchased raiders from Britain, but could not sell the prizes and could not get private interests to build privateers against the U.S. merchant fleet.

American Civil War

From a strategic standpoint, the most important aspect of the war was the Union blockade of the Confederacy. Nevertheless, there were major tactical attacks on ports and rivers. The Battle of Hampton Roads was a two-day affair marked by a two-generation leap in technology, both rendering the wooden warship obsolete.

20th century

At the beginning of the century, the battleship, in various forms, was the dominant naval vessel. Cruisers scouted for the heavy ships. The assumption was that battleships would fight battleships and lighter craft would stay out of their way.

Challenging that assumption was the first generation of fast attack craft, torpedo boats, or light, fast surface vessels that could speed at battleships and launch torpedoes. Torpedoes, striking below the waterline, could do as much or more damage than the main guns of battleships; gunfire from above creates holes that let in air, while torpedo holes let in water. Fast attack craft were generally used for coastal defense and did not need to be able to cope with open-ocean operations.

A class of vessel, initially called torpedo boat destroyers, emerged. These were large enough to accompany battleships and cruisers across oceans, but small and nimble enough to maneuver between heavy ships and torpedo boats, attacking the latter with fast-firing medium and light guns. Eventually, the name simplified to destroyer, which became the all-purpose vessel of navies.

21st century

The information age has presented to us another transformation in naval warfare. Both World Wars and the Falklands War have shown that ships built for the sole purpose of firing guns at long range are vulnerable: to air attack, submarine attack, missile attack, and close-in engagements with vessels encountered unexpectedly at night or in fog. An answer to this vulnerability has been an increased dependence on electronics and a host of weapons systems for varying roles of defense.

The cruiser of World War Two has been replaced by U.S. Ticonderoga-class cruisers now specializing in anti-air warfare, but with significant anti-submarine warfare, and anti-surface. The ex-Soviet Kirov-class and Slava-class are comparable multimission ships, although only the U.S. appears to be planning a new cruiser generation. These missions are carried out almost solely by missiles, torpedoes, and ship-based helicopters; destroyers and light escorts also only use gunnery as a secondary system, or provide naval gunfire support to troops ashore. The only conventional gun defenses are two 5-inchers and a "last-ditch" Phalanx close-in weapons system (CIWS). Even pure gun CIWS are being replaced or supplanted by point defense missiles such as the RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile, or the Russian Kashtan hybrid missile-gun CIWS. So representative of technology's multi-role place in the modern navy, these 9,000-ton fossil-fueled missile cruisers have supplanted the 58,000-ton battleships of yesterday as the navy's flagships, highlighting the fiscal advantages of a larger fleet comprised of smaller, more capable boats.

Ticonderogas, however, are built on the same hull as Burke-class destroyers, which are almost as capable. The cruisers have somewhat more air defense capability and also more space for additional staff personnel.

New classes, such as the Littoral Combat Ship, are emerging as operations move from the deep ocean to coastal waters.

See also

Battles and campaigns

  1. N. A. M. Rodger, The Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649-1815 (2006)
  2. N. A. M. Rodger, "The Nature of Victory at Sea." Journal for Maritime Research 2005. Issn: 1469-1957 Fulltext: online