The Rise of the Imperial German Navy - Coast Defense to Global Offense

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024
  • Today we take a look at the origins of the Imperial German Navy, from its inception to the end of the pre-dreadnought era.
    Sources:
    www.amazon.co....
    www.amazon.co....
    www.amazon.co....
    www.amazon.co....
    Naval History books, use code 'DRACH' for 25% off - www.usni.org/p...
    Free naval photos and channel posters - www.drachinifel.co.uk
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    'Legionnaire' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.au

Komentáře • 418

  • @Drachinifel
    @Drachinifel  Před 27 dny +39

    Pinned post for Q&A :)

    • @joshthomasmoorenew
      @joshthomasmoorenew Před 27 dny +6

      What actions were the Prussian Navy doing during the Napoleonic era?

    • @WarrantOfficerWill22
      @WarrantOfficerWill22 Před 27 dny +5

      Had the Netherlands never lost its ties to the Holy Roman Empire, how would that have impacted both of them during the time period this channel covers? How would the Dutch East India Trading Company have affected/been affected by the rest of the HRE? And (assuming they subsequently join the German confederation and Germany proper), how does the Dutch’s overseas and naval success affect the German navy and colonialism? Especially during this early period.

    • @thehandoftheking3314
      @thehandoftheking3314 Před 27 dny

      What were any notable actions by the RNLI in the first and second world wars?

    • @WindHaze10
      @WindHaze10 Před 27 dny +1

      What kind of damage could German navy do if magically 1 Yamato class battleship (retrofitted with German own AA guns) + heafty supply of main and secondary gun ammo were to appear in their hands 1941.

    • @Cbabilon675
      @Cbabilon675 Před 27 dny +1

      I've noticed that all of the eighteen hundreds german shifts were quite elegant and very pleasing to the eye. In your opinion which ones did you find most elegant?

  • @kryts27
    @kryts27 Před 27 dny +331

    One of the features of the new late-nineteenth German state, were admirals with larger and more elaborate moustaches 😂

    • @GaldirEonai
      @GaldirEonai Před 27 dny +37

      The later dreadnought race would pale next to the moustache arms race.

    • @josephdedrick9337
      @josephdedrick9337 Před 27 dny +19

      ​There was a famous Japanese admiral that arguably won that race. They decided to bury the admiral and the stache separately
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nagaoka_Gaishi
      @@GaldirEonai

    • @oliversmith9200
      @oliversmith9200 Před 27 dny +4

      And what could be more excellent? The general elaboration of uniform regalia is also a historic eye popping treasure. A general's man would have to be an accomplished regalia adornment technician. Dressing might require two of such specialists to save real time, and the unquestioning cooperation of the officer. Imagine the scene. lol

    • @GaldirEonai
      @GaldirEonai Před 27 dny +10

      @@josephdedrick9337 Oh my god it's the Turn-A Gundam.

    • @rostdreadnorramus4936
      @rostdreadnorramus4936 Před 27 dny +2

      Same with Russia.

  • @DrGull1888
    @DrGull1888 Před 27 dny +311

    Aaah Schleswig, your favourite German word next to Holstein.

    • @sakkra93
      @sakkra93 Před 27 dny +32

      "Saxe-Coburg" and "Gotha" being two other wonderfully German words.

    • @Aiwendill
      @Aiwendill Před 27 dny +30

      let him pronounce "Konstantinopolitanischerdudelsackspfeifenmachersgesellschaff".

    • @kilianortmann9979
      @kilianortmann9979 Před 27 dny +27

      @@sakkra93 Drach is truly fortunate that Schmalkalden-Meiningen never got a ship named after them.

    • @Arltratlo
      @Arltratlo Před 27 dny +6

      its different, if you are born in Schleswig-Holstein!

    • @alexandermonro6768
      @alexandermonro6768 Před 27 dny +2

      ​@@Aiwendill I tried to get Google to translate that into English. It failed completely. My puny unaided brain thinks that it could be a ship type.

  • @untruelie2640
    @untruelie2640 Před 27 dny +99

    There was another, often overlooked aspect of the german imperial navy: It was the only true unified "german" military organisation, as it was organised (and paid for!) on the imperial/federal level. Its sailors and officers came from all regions of the Empire, even those far away from the sea.
    In contrast, there was no unified german army. There was the prussian army which effectively dominated everything, but also included many contingents from the smaller states, and there were the armies of Saxony and Bavaria who had managed to retain their military autonomy after 1871. This regionalism caused several problems for the german military and even contributed to the failure of the Schlieffen Plan in 1914 (with the bavarian army not retreating as planned to lure the French into a trap, because the bavarian officers didn't want to be seen as cowards while their prussian comrades/rivals won all the offensive glory). Thus, the army(ies) never captured the public imagination in quite the same way as the navy, who was the target of and profitted from waves of nationalistic favour.

    • @notshapedforsportivetricks2912
      @notshapedforsportivetricks2912 Před 26 dny +6

      I knew about some of the princely states retaining control of their own military formations, but the navy as the national armed organisation had never actually ocurred to me. Thsnk you for the insight.

    • @Sturminfantrist
      @Sturminfantrist Před 24 dny +2

      Armys, Prussian/Preussen, Sachsen , Bayern and i think if i remember well Würtemberg!

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 Před 24 dny

      @@Sturminfantrist Not Württemberg iirc.

    • @robertthweatt1900
      @robertthweatt1900 Před 24 dny +5

      IIRC, the Bavarians would have had to retreat deep into their own territory, so that the French could not easily redeploy to face the main German army advancing from Belgium, which they did.
      It was asking a lot for them to allow their own territory to be overrun, although only that would have given the Schliefflen Plan any real chance of success.

    • @JeffEbe-te2xs
      @JeffEbe-te2xs Před 23 dny +1

      That why the navy revolted in 1918

  • @mitchm4992
    @mitchm4992 Před 27 dny +561

    Starting off strong with the Drachisms this week, "the lack of existence of Germany" and "filled in and populated by industrious people in lederhosen" made me pause the video to give myself time to laugh.

    • @LuvLikeTruck
      @LuvLikeTruck Před 27 dny +44

      Admiral Yamamoto could count the number of officers on his injured hand

    • @Dohlenblick
      @Dohlenblick Před 27 dny +21

      I nearly spilled my beer on my lederhosen...

    • @SA-xf1eb
      @SA-xf1eb Před 27 dny +3

      😂

    • @sillypuppy5940
      @sillypuppy5940 Před 27 dny +5

      I wonder if they got their sea legs by imbibing at their beer fests.

    • @stanleyrogouski
      @stanleyrogouski Před 27 dny

      Prussians don't wear leaderhosen.

  • @EtuSunTzu
    @EtuSunTzu Před 27 dny +116

    I love Drach’s opening line about the existence of Germany. It is all too easy for people to forget the comparatively late formation of the German state.

    • @bingobongo1615
      @bingobongo1615 Před 23 dny +17

      And yet it’s even more complicated…
      The Holy Roman Empire was called "of the German nation“ by the 16th century and it did have central institutions like the emperor but also a court for the empire. Furthermore in times of war with very few exceptions due to the wars of religion, three Silesian wars and a brief period where Bavaria wanted to be France the empire also could call on its he individual rulers to send troops for some central kinda army…
      If any foreign power attacked a German state they could assume that most of the empire would react and not just that small state - this prevented Germany from being picked apart outside of the French stealing Alsace and Sweden briefly ruling a couple of towns in the north east…
      And Germans were very aware of their cultural proximity and already Swiss was seen as different despite similar language in the North and of course the Austrian lands were German and people living there Germans even if the Habsburger Core provinces were bigger and had many other people as well.
      Italy for example was waaaay more fractured in culture, loyalties and nationalism came much later.

    • @biglebowski5737
      @biglebowski5737 Před 23 dny

      @@bingobongo1615 Who cares? Boring!

    • @patriciusvunkempen102
      @patriciusvunkempen102 Před 21 dnem +7

      i realy dislike it bc he can't differntiate between "german" and "germanic" and the fact that a nation usualy exists prior to its nationstate.typically anglo historiography. the english are also a germanic nation, as they formed from different germanic tribes. meanwhile the german nation was split into several states.

    • @mightybluespider
      @mightybluespider Před 21 dnem +1

      Never mind the Teutons ​@@patriciusvunkempen102

    • @MilitärischeKanal-s2f
      @MilitärischeKanal-s2f Před 13 dny +1

      You must be american.

  • @Suballi4004
    @Suballi4004 Před 27 dny +68

    For those of you wondering why so many fotos of German Warships show also this particular bridge (28:00). The ships are traversing the Kiel Canal (Nord-Ostsee-Kanal) and the bridge is the Levensau High Bridge near Kiel. Still exists (sans the towers and cage on top), but is to be replaced in the next years. Its a nice spot for ship spotters and probably was one 130 years ago too.

  • @user-xb1wh5mt4l
    @user-xb1wh5mt4l Před 27 dny +81

    16:46
    Apparently the battleship/commerce raider role confusion that plagued the Kriegsmarine battleships began somewhere here.

    • @GrahamCStrouse
      @GrahamCStrouse Před 25 dny +11

      Using a battleship to hunt merchant ships makes about as much sense as a short-range tactical nuclear weapon. Oh, wait, we did that…

    • @JeffEbe-te2xs
      @JeffEbe-te2xs Před 23 dny +1

      Battleship or battle cursier

    • @dclark142002
      @dclark142002 Před 15 dny +2

      ​@@JeffEbe-te2xs, no such thing as a battle cruiser.
      Let's not get distracted by Jackie Fishers advertising campaign.

    • @generaltom6850
      @generaltom6850 Před 12 dny

      @@GrahamCStrouse Tactical nukes aren’t useless. In a ww3 they could be very useful as they require less infrastructure to move around and fire than say, a giant missile or a bomber plane. Plus the nukes will kill any communication, both in terms of radios and in terms of messengers. So having say brigade level units with they’re own nukes could be very useful.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Před 5 dny

      ​@@dclark142002 "Battle cruiser" isn't a universal navy thing. It is wholly dependent on the context of particular navies. So yes, a "battle cruiser" exists in the Royal Navy context but not on the Kaiserliche Marine context...

  • @bernhardlangers778
    @bernhardlangers778 Před 27 dny +106

    And 40,000 years into the future the empire of man still uses the same bow structure, though there is a somewhat noteworthy increase in tonnage.

    • @murielcunningham8703
      @murielcunningham8703 Před 27 dny +8

      Only somewhat though

    • @Rybo-Senpai
      @Rybo-Senpai Před 27 dny +4

      Ramming speed has also been amended tooo "FOR THE EMPEROR RAMMING SPEED" meanwhile dome Mars techpriest is binarically screeching about not getting dents in the machine.. lest the machine spirit be angered

    • @Grnhrz
      @Grnhrz Před 27 dny +4

      Fun fact: Andy Chambers, the designer of BFG was heavily inspired by the battle of Jutland when he sat down to come up with a concept for navies and naval combat in the 41st millennium: czcams.com/video/KitW8WBmz2w/video.htmlfeature=shared

    • @comrade_commissar3794
      @comrade_commissar3794 Před 26 dny +5

      @@GrnhrzWhich is odd because Warhammer ship combat has infinitely more in common with Trafalgar than Jutland

  • @williamhamblen3808
    @williamhamblen3808 Před 27 dny +25

    The "some way" William II was related to Queen Victoria is that he was her grandson.

  • @Melior_Traiano
    @Melior_Traiano Před 8 dny +5

    My grandfather (German WWII veteran; his father fought at the Battle of Verdun in WWI and was awarded the Iron Cross) told me a story of young Alfred von Tirpitz (later Grand Admiral of the Imperial German Fleet), which he had read. As a young boy, Tirpitz saw British fishing vessels encroaching on German fishing grounds and the local German fishermen couldn't do anything against them, because they were protected by the Royal Navy. Much like the Chinese are now doing to Japan and the Philippines in the South China Sea. Thats where Tirpitz got the conviction that Germany needed a strong navy as well.

  • @sven-erikviira1872
    @sven-erikviira1872 Před 27 dny +62

    Fun fact - if you make four quick taps on the first second of the video, on the right hand side of the screen, you will hear an explosion.

    • @douglasharley2440
      @douglasharley2440 Před 27 dny +14

      ...and if you just wait 30 seconds, you will also hear the same explosion.

    • @sven-erikviira1872
      @sven-erikviira1872 Před 27 dny +1

      @@douglasharley2440 I guess I just can not contain myself.

    • @douglasharley2440
      @douglasharley2440 Před 27 dny

      @@sven-erikviira1872 knowing is half the battle.

    • @MarcusAgrippa390
      @MarcusAgrippa390 Před 26 dny

      ​@@douglasharley2440
      Truer words have never been spoken Sir

  • @Vtarngpb
    @Vtarngpb Před 27 dny +41

    “You said you needed guns?” 🤑🤗😍 -Alfred Krupp

    • @Wolfeson28
      @Wolfeson28 Před 27 dny +5

      "Möchte der Sir eine 14-Zoll-Kanone dazu?"

  •  Před 26 dny +11

    Those times were quite good for my hometown of Emden in northern Germany. After hundreds of years of decline after the river Ems shifted its course, it was a time of new investment and the creation of a lot of jobs in shipbuilding and the new harbour.

    • @camilstoenescu
      @camilstoenescu Před 21 dnem +1

      hence the name of the light cruiser SMS Emden

    • @JoboGamezzz
      @JoboGamezzz Před 9 dny

      @@camilstoenescuwasn’t that the one that raided a ton in the Indian and pacific

  • @eypandabear7483
    @eypandabear7483 Před 27 dny +24

    One interesting fact about the German Imperial Navy is actually in the name: like you said, the Emperor was its supreme commander. For Germany's land forces, this was different: there was technically no "Imperial German Army". The larger states of the Empire (Prussia, Bavaria, Württemberg,...) each had their own armies, with the Prussian Royal Army being by far the biggest and de facto leader. Of course, the Prussian Royal Army's chief commander was the King of Prussia, who was also the Emperor.

    • @AndrewGivens
      @AndrewGivens Před 27 dny +5

      It is - and was - the same with the British armed forces: the Navy is Royal, but the Army is made up of discrete regiments, each with their own titles and affiliations, but brought under one general staff as a combined command. There is no British Royal Army. So the Germans were very much on trend there.

    • @generaltom6850
      @generaltom6850 Před 12 dny +2

      @@AndrewGivens Yeah, but the German states had direct control over their own armies. Bavaria, Wurrtemburg, Baden and more had their own royal armies. Completely separate in peacetime although they would be brought under unified command in wartime.

  • @729060
    @729060 Před 24 dny +41

    Fun fact, the amount of force generated by Bismarck spinning in his grave after Wilhelm II chose to take a directly antagonist approach with the British navy was enough to power all German factories for both WWI and II

    • @wolfsoldner9029
      @wolfsoldner9029 Před 22 dny +13

      Britain was antagonistic towards Germany since its unification.

    • @NicolasHaufe
      @NicolasHaufe Před 21 dnem +12

      The naval Arms Race began after the british threatened to shell the entire German baltic fleet because france broke the treaty of Madrid (1880) in the First moroccan crisis

    • @MilitärischeKanal-s2f
      @MilitärischeKanal-s2f Před 13 dny +7

      Britain could never accept that Germany might challenge her and did all she could to destroy Germany. Prussia’s existence was tolerated only because it was seen as a second-rate power until the Austro-Prussian War.

  • @SuperAlexkol
    @SuperAlexkol Před 27 dny +31

    Hey drach thx for all the great uploads .

  • @mitchm4992
    @mitchm4992 Před 27 dny +116

    Do you see Imperial German torpedo boats?

    • @AnimeSunglasses
      @AnimeSunglasses Před 27 dny +7

      Nein!

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 Před 27 dny +18

      I don't know I threw my binoculars at my repair ship when I ran out of opium laced cigarettes lol...

    • @hughgordon6435
      @hughgordon6435 Před 27 dny +12

      hello Kamchaka😅

    • @admiraloscar3320
      @admiraloscar3320 Před 27 dny +5

      Are these “topedo boats” here right now?

    • @obelic71
      @obelic71 Před 26 dny +3

      @@hughgordon6435 The best Non Imperial Japanese Navy ship serving the IJN

  • @michaeldantoni4292
    @michaeldantoni4292 Před 27 dny +13

    Very educational and informative.
    Thanks Drach.

  • @HD-mp6yy
    @HD-mp6yy Před 13 dny +2

    Leo von Caprivi the Admiral every general dreams about.

  • @mitchm4992
    @mitchm4992 Před 27 dny +44

    It's really kind of ridiculous that Wilhelm II could be so interested in and involved in the Royal Navy and not understand how threatening Great Britain would find a German fleet even nearing their level.

    • @tommihommi1
      @tommihommi1 Před 27 dny +33

      consider that even in 1914, there were big feelings of friendship between the people of both navies.
      In the week of the assassination, which was the Kiel Week festival of 1914, a bunch of British ships were visiting Kiel, the Kaiser himself boarded a British ship wearing a British admiral's uniforms, sailors of both nations were partying together, everyone was happy.

    • @battleship6177
      @battleship6177 Před 27 dny

      bro ive seen 3-5 comments now that youve made gawdamn

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Před 27 dny +8

      ​@@tommihommi1The Royal Navy and the German Imperial Navy shared the exact same uniform design. Aside from the insignia, there is no material difference between the uniforms worn by both services...

    • @drewhunter8558
      @drewhunter8558 Před 27 dny +16

      Only because the Brits were both paranoid and arrogant.

    • @FirstSpaceLord
      @FirstSpaceLord Před 27 dny +8

      Did the british understand how threatening somebody else would find the size of the Royal Navy ?

  • @BoisegangGaming
    @BoisegangGaming Před 27 dny +22

    11:25 Ah, yes, the average stellaris experience of leaders just dropping like flies in quick succession.

    • @TheEDFLegacy
      @TheEDFLegacy Před 27 dny +1

      Not to mention putting much of your output into research. 😅

    • @BoisegangGaming
      @BoisegangGaming Před 27 dny +1

      @@TheEDFLegacy As someone who primarily plays xenophile materialist tech rush empires, there is no such thing as "enough research".

    • @Wolfeson28
      @Wolfeson28 Před 27 dny +2

      As any EUIV player would know, the pain of seeing your high-stat monarchs suddenly drop in quick succession, leaving you stuck with a 20-year-old 1/1/2 who seems to have the resilience of Wolverine.

  • @HansPottermann
    @HansPottermann Před 27 dny +27

    Just a random question, do you plan on doing a video about naval aviation in the future? I don't neccessarily mean aircraft carriers, more like catapult-launched planes from battleships. Not many people talk about it, and I think it would be nice for a brief explanation of how it works and what impact it had.

  • @mpersad
    @mpersad Před 27 dny +5

    Terrifically scripted and illustrated video. I learnt a great deal, thank you Drach!

  • @AndrewGivens
    @AndrewGivens Před 27 dny +3

    A genuinely fascinating fleet, one which quite clearly transitioned from the 'scandinavian' model to a first-class blue-water navy in a worryingly short time (from the British perspective). I think that some of the deigns were clever, and what many of them may have lacked in elegance (at least by existing British standards of beauty in a warship) they made up for in pure innovation. The Sachsens and the 9.4-inch battleships were both very curious at first glance, but absolutely a case of thinking outside the box, and glorious for it.
    Interestingly, while slipways may have been a limiting factor for procurement during the 1880s, the Vulcan yard at Stettin was still able to make space to build several warships for the Qing Empire; two fascinating but nevertheless diminutive 'armoured cruisers' or torpedo rams and, slightly preceding these, the pair of rather impressive Dingyuan-class battleships and the small torpedo cruiser Jiyuan.
    Vulcan's design was very evident in these vessels - they would not have been out of place in the ironclad-era German coast-defence fleet, alongside the Sachsens and small Wespe-class gunboats.
    So, Vulcan may or may not have been building to foreign contract as make-up work during lean times, but they certainly had capacity to turn out fine ships in reasonable numbers. Had the German politics and economics of the time paid attention to this, then it's my opinion that a steady - if moderate - stream of construction would have been quite possible, even at this early date. The benefits of this would have been many and obvious, I feel.

  • @50043211
    @50043211 Před 27 dny +52

    "... industrious people in lederhosen!" just waiting for your German viewers to flood the comment section and tell you that only the Bavarian's are wearing these! 😆 And Iam very impressed that you pronounce Caeser properly!

  • @micnorton9487
    @micnorton9487 Před 27 dny +30

    11:07,, gotta love 19th century military fashion,, this dude's moustache is as flamboyant as General Ambrose Burnside's crazy "sideburns" that started the name sideburns...

    • @lafeelabriel
      @lafeelabriel Před 27 dny +3

      About as effective a commander as Burnside was too..
      Although in Burnside's defense he kept claiming he wasn't up to the jobs that he kept being handed, his superiors just kept on not listening.

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 Před 27 dny +1

      @@lafeelabriel Good point,, General Burnside just didn't seem to learn from the deaths of his men... General McClellan at Antietam ordered General Burnside to quit attacking across the stone bridge because of the horrific casualties,, and General McClellan has always been bashed by history for doing so when General Burnside a few months later did the same thing at Fredericksburg... I guess he was openly crying, totally despondent the next morning and wanted to lead the new charge himself, obviously suffering severe survivor's guilt and wanting to die with his men but his subordinates talked him out of it... then the battle of the crater,, the war between the states sure didn't go very well for General Burnside...

    • @lafeelabriel
      @lafeelabriel Před 27 dny +1

      @@micnorton9487 He did rather tend to go..unhinged when things went wrong (Antietam, Fredericksburg, the Mud March, and of course the Crater)

    • @micnorton9487
      @micnorton9487 Před 27 dny

      @@lafeelabriel Well mate his performance in the field was mixed,, on the field of combat he made horrendous mistakes, but his staff ops were good,, sorta... like at Fredericksburg,, like a gentleman he waited over 2 weeks for pontoon bridges to cross the river, unfortunately by that time Lee's men were thoroughly entrenched in the heights surrounding Fredericksburg... and from all accounts General Burnside was a gracious host at his headquarters and at the many balls he attended he cut quite a figure,, but so many Union generals were just businessmen and bankers in Federal uniform......

    • @thadvinson2959
      @thadvinson2959 Před 26 dny +2

      ⁠McClellan was the quartermaster that every army needs. He just wasn’t bold enough to be in high command.

  • @generalvikus2138
    @generalvikus2138 Před 27 dny +7

    Von Caprivi spent his tenure supporting a national strategy based on Germany's actual situation, and trying to accomplish this as cost - effectively as possible. Tirpitz spent his tenure drumming up tensions with a friendly power in order to create a new strategic situation for the aggrandizement of his own service, all while demanding as much money as possible. So who was the better Minister for Germany - as opposed to the German Navy?

    • @dclark142002
      @dclark142002 Před 15 dny

      Interesting points.
      Actual effectiveness vs what leaders wanted...lots of interesting beer conversation here.

  • @brittenmusic6923
    @brittenmusic6923 Před 27 dny +18

    Somewhat related to Queen Victoria 🤣

    • @drewhunter8558
      @drewhunter8558 Před 27 dny

      I know...I caught that too...a bit looney to say.....

    • @marckyle5895
      @marckyle5895 Před 27 dny

      WW1 was just a family spat between cousins.

  • @malcolmtaylor518
    @malcolmtaylor518 Před 26 dny +2

    Excellent photographs.

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 Před 26 dny +1

    It was an informative and wonderful historical coverage episode about the German Empire Navy ...

  • @JoboGamezzz
    @JoboGamezzz Před 9 dny +1

    I’d like to mention that Willy’s reign saw the merchant fleet expand 2 as german ships actually competed with British ones for the blue ribbon and for luxury aswell as Germany debatably having the first super liner the Kaiser willhelm der grosse

  • @akumaking1
    @akumaking1 Před 27 dny +4

    Oh boy, Drachinifel video!

  • @timclaridge7455
    @timclaridge7455 Před 27 dny +4

    That intro music, is exactly what your content and hard work to create said content deserves. I wish that same music would play when I walk through the door at work every morning...

  • @VanAleph
    @VanAleph Před dnem

    22:45 Neat, this cruiser comes with its own brass section

  • @oliversmith9200
    @oliversmith9200 Před 27 dny +2

    I'm not sure I'm not imposing my own esthetic prejudices, but... I love the line and looks of some of those German boats in contrast to, for example, some nation's of the period's floating hotels.

  • @laisphinto6372
    @laisphinto6372 Před 19 dny +4

    Damn Brits WE build some ships to protect our trade then the Engländer gets all pissy Out of nowhere

  • @robertpearson8798
    @robertpearson8798 Před 23 dny +2

    The opening music had me thinking that I'd accidentally clicked on a Mark Felton video. I’m relieved to discover that I didn’t.

  • @williamgreen7415
    @williamgreen7415 Před 27 dny +3

    Thanks!

  • @DaveSCameron
    @DaveSCameron Před 24 dny

    Always a bonus to see you give us a more than five minutes upload as opposed to the meagre five and under efforts that I can’t help but feel somehow cheated but due to my inability to find anything else to criticise you for this will have to suffice… dammit you are good Sir. 🇬🇧🙏🇺🇸

  • @rcwagon
    @rcwagon Před 27 dny

    VERY INTERESTING video. Thank you Drach!

  • @RailfanDownunder
    @RailfanDownunder Před 27 dny +1

    Superb work again sir😊

  • @agesflow6815
    @agesflow6815 Před 27 dny

    Thank you, Drachinifel.

  • @sebastianheinecke8568
    @sebastianheinecke8568 Před 27 dny +1

    Thx to you very much, to have done a importand view of thw Gemayy Navy ...

  • @theawickward2255
    @theawickward2255 Před 27 dny

    Today's my birthday, so thank you for the excellent birthday video, Drach.

  • @PalleRasmussen
    @PalleRasmussen Před 27 dny +6

    Oh, looks more like a schnapps ration today.

  • @user-ex8eq1yy8d
    @user-ex8eq1yy8d Před 26 dny +1

    Could you make a video similar to this but in how the US Navy had developed into its own super power, starting from the Monitors in the Civil War to the re-establishment of the US Navy up until the Grand Tour of the Great White Fleet?

  •  Před 27 dny +11

    Your Central European sea has the wrong shape. That’s the shape of contemporary Germany, not something the Kaiser would have recognised.

  • @graveyard1979
    @graveyard1979 Před 27 dny +1

    I have fond memory playing this early navy in in Carolines 1885. Promptly losing my Hansa to a Spanish torpedo gunboat.

  • @steveh111
    @steveh111 Před 27 dny +1

    "He was, in some way, related to Queen Victoria" - he was her eldest grandson!

  • @w.osterberg9385
    @w.osterberg9385 Před 27 dny +2

    Drach, thank you for another awesome video

  • @teekaa2520
    @teekaa2520 Před 27 dny

    Thanks for mentioning and showing the Frankfurt Parliament 👍

  • @Fellfloete
    @Fellfloete Před 22 dny

    very good as always - greetings from the ruhtgebiet

  • @chpet1655
    @chpet1655 Před 27 dny +6

    I wish Ultimate admirals Dreadnoughts would take a step back 15 or 20 years to allow us to build Ironclads

    • @jacobdill4499
      @jacobdill4499 Před 27 dny +2

      We sort of can in the training section and the early ships using iron or compound armor are technically ironclads.

    • @chpet1655
      @chpet1655 Před 20 dny

      @@jacobdill4499 right but it’s just a taste and it leaves me wanting more

  • @ThomasSteffien
    @ThomasSteffien Před 27 dny

    thank you for making a bit of german 18th and 19th cent. history clear to all the people that do not know much about it

  • @howardjones7569
    @howardjones7569 Před 27 dny +9

    Hey Drach, sorry to be picky but surely it is offence and defence?

    • @Drachinifel
      @Drachinifel  Před 27 dny +17

      That's how I'd spell it but the YT autocorrect was annoying me so I gave in.

    • @tommihommi1
      @tommihommi1 Před 27 dny +5

      always these Americans forcing their spelling on you

    • @NathanDudani
      @NathanDudani Před 27 dny +2

      ​@@tommihommi1 gekoloniseerd

    • @williamzk9083
      @williamzk9083 Před 25 dny

      @@tommihommi1 Actually its the British forcing their spelling on the world. herb used to be speled erb (so the Americans pronounce it correctly) , Solder was soder. Self Appointed British "style council" types introduced pointless new letters in hundreds of words.

    • @akmzd6938
      @akmzd6938 Před 8 dny

      ​@@williamzk9083Inglis ortografi is ol boloks eniuei.

  • @jeddkeech259
    @jeddkeech259 Před 16 dny

    another historical artwork well done

  • @karstentopp
    @karstentopp Před 27 dny +2

    The last time I was that early, Wilhelmshaven was still the main port of the German navy...

  • @johnnash5118
    @johnnash5118 Před 27 dny +1

    @27:27 Dual cage masts and stars and stripes off the port stern.

    • @PsychicalTraumaPL
      @PsychicalTraumaPL Před 26 dny +1

      I dare to say it's one of the early 20th century Virginia class US battleship 😎

    • @johnnash5118
      @johnnash5118 Před 26 dny

      @@PsychicalTraumaPL Good choice, but there were three classes in that era with three funnels and cage masts, the Maine, Virginia and Connecticut. I agree it’s likely the Virginia class because of the vertical-walled mast tops instead of the flared out tops that the Maine and Connecticut had.

  • @user-hw1qo2mu9e
    @user-hw1qo2mu9e Před 26 dny

    Thanks Drach.

  • @ottovonbismarck2443
    @ottovonbismarck2443 Před 27 dny +1

    The Drachnicisms were high up with the best of your best ! EFF me, I still have tears of laughter rolling down. 🤣
    You know, sometimes the EXCELLENT information is only your secondary battery.

  • @daguard411
    @daguard411 Před 27 dny +1

    Thank You!

  • @SA-xf1eb
    @SA-xf1eb Před 27 dny +2

    Witty and informative.

  • @jehl1963
    @jehl1963 Před 27 dny

    Hopefully a discussion of the sea-borne operations supporting Operation Albion will appear sometime in the future. It's an relatively unknown example of a successful large scale amphibious operation in WWI, and included a number of encounters between the German Navy and the Russian Navy.

  • @alexandermuller7142
    @alexandermuller7142 Před 7 dny

    I often tell the little joke / story that the Valued Added Tax (VAT) was invented to fund the Kaiserliche Marine. These ships have been lying at the bottom of the ocean for a long time, but the tax is still alive and kicking.
    I never checked if its true, because if not, i would not be able to tell that anymore.

    • @derbonuspool1274
      @derbonuspool1274 Před 7 dny

      Its not the Regular VAT but a specific Tax on Foam wines (Champagne, Prosecco etc.) and yeah that very same tax to fund this fleet is still alive and kicking.

  • @Dr.GeoDave
    @Dr.GeoDave Před 27 dny +1

    Would be nice to know, speed/range of ships and maybe compliment.

  • @gargolus.
    @gargolus. Před 27 dny +1

    I can see the chef has cooked a scrumptious meal

  • @samsmith2635
    @samsmith2635 Před 27 dny +1

    I came for the Seiner Majestaet Schiffen and stayed for the projection of Naval power

  • @maryholder3795
    @maryholder3795 Před 2 dny

    So the naval arms race between Germany, France and Uk started. Starting small late 1800 and getting bigger and bigger till the UK and Germami Dreadnought ships. Leading eventually to the naval battles in WW1 between Germany and England.

  • @wacherwicht1810
    @wacherwicht1810 Před 22 dny +1

    I think we called them "Große Kreuzer" and "Kleine Kreuzer" (Big Cruiser and Small Cruiser)

  • @anelstarcevic696
    @anelstarcevic696 Před 27 dny +3

    Last time I was this Early Deutschlands class battleships were not obsolete

  • @jasonz7788
    @jasonz7788 Před 27 dny

    Thanks drach

  • @ihn-90
    @ihn-90 Před 22 dny +1

    This is gonna be fun

  • @simonfrederiksen104
    @simonfrederiksen104 Před 27 dny +6

    Very good! You could have mentioned in more detail how Denmark kicked Prussian and k.u.k. arse but otherwise top tier content.

    • @Drachinifel
      @Drachinifel  Před 27 dny +14

      The Schleiswig Wars will have their own video at some point :)

    • @tommihommi1
      @tommihommi1 Před 27 dny +7

      ​@@Drachinifelsorry for being a spelling Prussian, but, Schleswig :P

    • @simonfrederiksen104
      @simonfrederiksen104 Před 27 dny +4

      ​@@tommihommi1 Slesvig & Holsten also commonly referred to as "the duchies" (meaning Slesvig & Holsten) Only the Germans slapped them together as one unit after the Prussians took over all the loot from A-H

    • @JoboGamezzz
      @JoboGamezzz Před 9 dny

      @@simonfrederiksen104yes but they won on the land and Denmark lost when it was done with there support from other powerz

  • @ryanbrewis6990
    @ryanbrewis6990 Před 26 dny

    That's an interesting idea. Two navies, both using Jeune Ecolle strategies, fighting each other. Wonder how that would go. Can't really torpedo a torpedo boat after all. Not easily anyhow.

  • @Dav1Gv
    @Dav1Gv Před 16 dny

    Fascinating. I've always wondered if there was any evidence that if the money spent on the HIgh Seas Fleet had been spent on the army the Schlieffen Plan might have worked? Any comments?

  • @chpet1655
    @chpet1655 Před 27 dny +1

    Always thought von Caprivi was out of his depth and had bigger ideas that the nascent German Navy was never going to be of much use in.

    • @davidperin9938
      @davidperin9938 Před 27 dny

      I heard his ambitions and was confused about how they planned on paying for that fleet.

  • @comentedonakeyboard
    @comentedonakeyboard Před 27 dny +3

    Last time i was this early "Heil dir im Siegerkranz" was still Germanys national anthem.

    • @thomasbenck9525
      @thomasbenck9525 Před 27 dny +1

      Now wouldn't that tune sound familiar to some people?😂😂😂

    • @comentedonakeyboard
      @comentedonakeyboard Před 27 dny

      @@thomasbenck9525 dont tell the Copyright Bots 😂

  • @shaider1982
    @shaider1982 Před 22 dny +1

    so Willie wanted a fleet like Grandma V had.

  • @PMMagro
    @PMMagro Před 22 dny

    The 1864 "German states" war vs Denmark lasted until the Austrian navy from Trieste came up and fought the Danish navy.

  • @petewood2350
    @petewood2350 Před 27 dny

    I think Drach has missed the other race that was on at the time in Europe. The Moustache race, He who could have the bigger and more elaborate Moustache.

  • @silvergalaxie
    @silvergalaxie Před 24 dny

    counter float armor,hull w/larger hull around it
    w/urethane beads between,with,upon piercing
    outer hull,beads burst to up to100times their size,adding ambient foam layer between inner
    &outer hulls. passè i know,considering railgun

  • @emdenny10
    @emdenny10 Před 27 dny

    Like button hit before it started sir

  • @kineuhansen8629
    @kineuhansen8629 Před 27 dny +1

    if you ever get arround to it there is a survivor of the schleswig war here in denmark think the 2nd one if i remember right called screw frigate jutland

    • @harrylor66
      @harrylor66 Před 5 dny

      The restored heavy steam/propeller frigate ‘Jylland’ can be seen in Ebeltoft/Denmark, extremely impressive!

    • @kineuhansen8629
      @kineuhansen8629 Před 5 dny

      @@harrylor66 yep ive been there a couble of times

  • @gavinrewell9703
    @gavinrewell9703 Před 27 dny

    Just brilliant

  • @andyhastings5950
    @andyhastings5950 Před 27 dny

    I have located what l believe to be an Asian salute cannon. It's bronze or brass. Lot of decorations cast into the whole cannon, even has handles cast in.
    I appears to be approximately 2.5" Bore. If interested PM me.

  • @alexv3357
    @alexv3357 Před 11 dny

    I want to write a story now about a Great Central European Sea that suddenly gets filled in by some nation from another world

  • @user-bh4ge1pm2t
    @user-bh4ge1pm2t Před 27 dny

    Awesome! There is nothing better than an early comment. I must think what to say. I mean, other than thanks, and please keep up the good work. Ew, how about this. A hypothetical match up between the American "standards" against British QE'S/Revenge's. You could add Hood and a Renown to round out numbers or not.

  • @normtrooper4392
    @normtrooper4392 Před 25 dny

    I'd love for you to do some videos about the Hanseatic league

  • @ottovonbismarck2443
    @ottovonbismarck2443 Před 27 dny

    I really can't remember that admiral I fired ...

  • @MrKatzinski
    @MrKatzinski Před 20 dny

    "... industrious people in lederhosen!" ... 😊😊😊... funny how other people see us ... anyway ... good video thumbs up 👍

  • @TomFynn
    @TomFynn Před 27 dny +23

    The quick succession of the three German emperors was summed up by Berliners by “Der greise Kaiser, der weise Kaiser und der Scheiße-Kaiser“lit.:" The senile emperor, the wise emperor and the shit-emperor."

    • @Grnhrz
      @Grnhrz Před 27 dny +2

      Greis just means old not senile.

    • @jehl1963
      @jehl1963 Před 27 dny

      It's a pretty open secret what the non-Prussians thought of them. The largest immigration of Germans into the US occurred in the 2nd half of the 19th century, to the point where they were the largest ethnic group in the US by 1900.

    • @michimatsch5862
      @michimatsch5862 Před 27 dny +2

      I'd translate greis with geriatric if I wanted to be negative but old works better in most cases.

    • @JeffEbe-te2xs
      @JeffEbe-te2xs Před 23 dny

      Depends on how used

    • @timemeddler7730
      @timemeddler7730 Před 17 dny

      W2 was the "Reise Kaise" the traveling Emperor cause he didnt stay a lot in Berlin but visited many citys in germany and in other country s, he was very popular ... no Idea where u got that from

  • @masterskrain2630
    @masterskrain2630 Před 26 dny

    Some of those early cruisers are just about as goofy looking as the French Pre-dreadnoughts. (Shudder), though with less of a resemblance to a hotel block.

  • @gchoquette299
    @gchoquette299 Před 27 dny

    Please do a review of the USS Princeton circa 1844.

  • @elisekehle8520
    @elisekehle8520 Před 7 dny

    10:48- had he stopped biting people by this point?

  • @keeshoogendoorn6241
    @keeshoogendoorn6241 Před 27 dny

    Who needs congres when you've got leo von Caprivi

  • @BobSmith-dk8nw
    @BobSmith-dk8nw Před 27 dny +3

    As to Kaiser Wilhelm II and the British Royal Family - Willi's Mother was Queen Victoria's oldest Daughter - making him - her first Grand Child.
    Willi spent a good bit of time in Britain and absolutely loved the RN.
    My personal opinion is - that had he the option (which of course he never would have) of choosing to be an Officer in the RN - or Kaiser of Germany - Willi would have chosen the RN.
    Having had one of his arms ruined in birth - and his mother having the British devotion to Horses - she *_MADE_* him learn to ride. Given the number of times he fell off - Willi hated riding.
    But he loved the sea and had his own personal yacht where he preferred to spend his time.
    Given his being an Officer of the RN - not a possibility - Wili seems to have decided to build a Navy of his own and doesn't seem to have realized that the British would not be happy about this.
    This rather useless High Seas Fleet was in fact something of Germany's undoing.
    Besides the men, materials and money lavished upon this Navy - it was the mutiny of it's Sailors that played a real part in Germany losing WWI.
    In High School I played the Avalon Hill Game - _Justland_ - a lot. I lent my game to someone who never returned it - but - in recent years bought a copy off EBay.
    I liked playing the Germans and the ships of the High Seas Fleet are old friends of mine (in the game).
    Still - it would have been better had the Germans kept their Navy on the smaller side - and not violated Belgian Neutrality. Had they done so - they would probably not have had - as in 1870 - Britain as an enemy - and won WWI against Russia and France.
    .

    • @harrylor66
      @harrylor66 Před 5 dny +1

      That's not quite right.
      Better inform yourself,
      especially about the ‘Naval Scare of 1909’.

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 Před 27 dny +2

  • @tommihommi1
    @tommihommi1 Před 27 dny +4

    Naval Strike: Global Offense?

  • @stephenwills980
    @stephenwills980 Před 27 dny

    could you please do a video on the history of russian destroyers? nice video btw