Some destroyers were captured and used by the Germans; for full list see
Torpedoboot Ausland.
ZH1 The Dutch destroyer
Hr.Ms. Gerard Callenburgh was built by RDM Rotterdam and launched on 12 October 1939. The Dutch attempted to scuttle this ship during the German invasion, but the destroyer was salvaged and completed under German control with technical guidance from
Blohm & Voss. She was commissioned as the
ZH1 on 11 October 1942. The Germans retained most of the Dutch armament and equipment. The ZH1 spent most of her life on trials in the Baltic, but transferred to Western France via the English Channel in November 1943. When the western allies
invaded Normandy in 1944, the German destroyers based in western France attempted to interdict the invasion armada. The German squadron was
intercepted by an Allied force – the 10th Destroyer Flotilla (
HMS Tartar,
Ashanti,
Eskimo,
Javelin,
HMCS Haida,
Huron, and
ORP Błyskawica,
Piorun). In the night action, ZH1 was torpedoed and sunk by
Ashanti on 9 June 1944; 33 men were lost.
ZF2 The hull of the French
Le Hardi-class destroyer ''L'Opiniatre'' was captured intact and 16% complete in Bordeaux. The
Kriegsmarine intended to complete her for service. Since French armament was not available, and for standardisation with the rest of the German Navy, 127 mm guns and German pattern torpedo tubes were ordered. Work proceeded tardily until all progress was abandoned in July 1943. The hull was eventually broken up on the slip
ZG3 (Hermes) The Greek destroyer
Vasilefs Georgios was captured in damaged condition after the fall of
Greece, then repaired in Greece with assistance from the
Germaniawerft and commissioned by the Kriegsmarine as the ZG3 or the
Hermes. She was the only major Kriegsmarine surface ship in the
Mediterranean Sea during World War II, and she was involved in escorting
convoys to
North Africa and the
Aegean Islands.
Hermes detected and depth charged the
Royal Navy submarine
HMS Splendid off
Capri, Italy, on 21 April 1943, forcing it to surrender;
Splendid was scuttled by her crew.
Hermes was damaged by
air attacks off
Tunisia.
Hermes had to be scuttled in
La Goulette,
Tunis, on 7 May 1943.
The Sleipner-class Destroyers Four out of six of Norway's s were captured following Germany's conquest of Norway. , renamed
Löwe and , renamed
Panther were captured at
Kristiansand. , renamed
Tiger and , renamed
Leopard, were captured while still under construction, and completed by the Germans. In
Kriegsmarine service, they were classified as torpedo boats. In January 1945,
Löwe was one of the escorts for the
MV Wilhelm Gustloff on her last voyage. When
Wilhelm Gustloff was torpedoed and sunk, she stood alongside and rescued 427 of her passengers and crew. After the war, the ships were returned to Norway and given back their original names, and remained in service until the late 1950s.
Troll The Norwegian ,
HNoMS Troll was captured by the Germans in
Florø on 18 May 1940. Following Norway's surrender, she had been ordered to sail to the UK with her sister,
HNoMS Draug, but due to lack of crew and coal, she was unable to do so. Once placed under the German flag, she was considered too old and obsolete for military service, and was converted into a distillation and steam supply ship, having her whole superstructure removed, and was stationed at
Bergen. She retained her name throughout the war. She survived the war and was returned to Norway, but her condition and age made her unfit for future service and was sold for scrap in 1949.
TA32 The
Royal Yugoslav Navy destroyer leader,
KB Dubrovnik, was captured by Italy in the
Bay of Kotor on 17 April 1941. She was recommissioned in the
Regia Marina as
Premuda, and served in the
Mediterranean Sea until 1943. She was undergoing repairs in
Genoa when Italy surrendered and joined the Allies. With this, she was seized by the Germans and commissioned into the Kriegsmarine as
TA32. In 1944, her repairs were completed with German modifications and soon saw action shelling Allied positions along the Italian coast. While on minelaying duty off Genoa, she engaged the American destroyer, , but escaped undamaged. On 18 March 1945, while on minelaying duty off
Corsica, she was engaged by 2 British destroyers in what became the
Battle of the Ligurian Sea. While both her escorts were sunk, she escaped with a damaged rudder. With the Allies advancing further into Northern Italy, she was scuttled in Genoa on 24 April 1945, and her crew retreated. She was raised and broken up in 1950.
TA43 The
Royal Yugoslav Navy ,
KB Beograd, was captured by Italy in the
Bay of Kotor on 17 April 1941. She was recommissioned in the
Regia Marina as
Sebenico, and served in the
Mediterranean Sea until 1943. Following Italy's surrender and joining the Allies, she was captured by the Germans in
Venice on 9 September 1943. She was then recommissioned into the Kriegsmarine as
TA43. However, at the time of her capture she was damaged and not operational. While being repaired, her anti-aircraft armament was improved and reentered active service in February 1945. She operated in the northern
Adriatic Sea, but saw little action other than escort work and minelaying. Sources differ on her fate. One claim is that while docked in
Trieste, she was sunk by artillery fire of Yugoslav forces on 30 April 1945. Another is that she was scuttled by her crew in Trieste on 1 May 1945. She remained sunk in Trieste until 1947 when she was raised and broken up.
TA14 The
Regia Marina ,
Turbine, was captured by the Germans in
Piraeus on 8 September 1943, following Italy's Armistice with the Allies. She was recommissioned as
TA14 and operated in the
Aegean Sea. Her anti-aircraft armament was upgraded during her time in German service. She operated as an escort ship off the Greek coast. On 19 June 1944, she was badly damaged by an explosion and sent to
Salamis for repairs. While docked in Salamis, on 16 September 1944, she was sunk by American aircraft rockets before repairs were completed. ==See also==