The
Diadem class was intended, like the preceding , for trade protection, and were intended to be "capable of dealing with any cruiser existing or building". These changes saved about £100,000 per ship (approximately 15%) relative to the
Powerful design. With eight ships, each of 11,000 tons and costing £600,000, the
Diadems were an important class. However, they proved controversial. The naval journalist
Fred Jane characterised them as "much-discussed" and complained that "all the weak points of the
Powerfuls were exaggerated in them". In particular, contemporary critics raised objections to their indifferent speed, poor manoeuvrability, and lack of heavy guns, and the fact that, while most of the armament was well protected in casemates, the fore and aft pairs of guns, which commanded the greatest fields of fire, were protected only by gunshields. All eight ships exceeded their design power on trials; the first four averaged in service, the later four . In general the
Diadems served most of their careers in home waters, although there were some deployments to
China Station, the
Mediterranean and the
Caribbean.
Niobe was sold to
Canada in 1910. After 1906, they were only occasionally in commission, and by 1914 the class had for the most part been relegated to training ship and depot ship duties. However, with the outbreak of the
First World War, several of them were reactivated, initially for patrol duties with the 9th Cruiser Squadron in the Eastern
Atlantic. In 1917
Amphitrite and
Ariadne were converted into
minelayers, for service with the
Dover Patrol.
Ariadne was the only war loss, being torpedoed by the German submarine on 26 July 1917. By the end of the war the survivors had again been withdrawn from active service, and all of them had been sold for scrap by 1932, with the exception of
Andromeda, which served as a boys’ training ship until 1956. == Building Programme ==