First World War Royal Sovereign was laid down on 15 January 1914 at the
HM Dockyard, Portsmouth. The ship was launched on 29 April 1915 and commissioned in May 1916. On 30 May 1916, three weeks after her commissioning,
Royal Sovereign was present in
Scapa Flow when the fleet commander, Admiral
John Jellicoe ordered the Grand Fleet to sea. Jellicoe purposely left
Royal Sovereign behind in port due to the inexperience of her crew; causing her to miss the Battle of Jutland the following day. In the months after the engagement,
Royal Sovereign was quickly made ready for service with the fleet to further increase the numerical superiority of the
Grand Fleet over the German
High Seas Fleet. The Grand Fleet sortied on 18 August 1916 to ambush the High Seas Fleet while it advanced into the southern North Sea, but a series of miscommunications and mistakes during the
action of 19 August prevented Jellicoe from intercepting the German fleet before it returned to port. Two
light cruisers were sunk by German
U-boats during the operation, prompting Jellicoe to decide to not risk the major units of the fleet south of 55° 30' North due to the prevalence of German submarines and
mines. The
Admiralty concurred and stipulated that the Grand Fleet would not sortie unless the German fleet was attempting an invasion of Britain or there was a strong possibility it could be forced into an engagement under suitable conditions. In April 1918, the High Seas Fleet again sortied, to attack British convoys to Norway. They enforced strict wireless silence during the operation, which prevented
Room 40 cryptanalysts from warning the new commander of the Grand Fleet, Admiral
David Beatty. The British learned of the operation only after an accident aboard the battlecruiser forced her to break radio silence to inform the German commander of her condition. Beatty then ordered the Grand Fleet to sea to intercept the Germans, but he was not able to reach the High Seas Fleet before it turned back for Germany. This was the last time
Royal Sovereign and the rest of the Grand Fleet would go to sea for the remainder of the war. On 21 November 1918, following the
Armistice, the entire Grand Fleet left port to escort the surrendered German fleet into internment at Scapa Flow.
Inter-war period The
Royal Marines detachment assigned to
Royal Sovereign left the ship on 21 June 1919 to conduct exercises. The ship meanwhile went into drydock at
Invergordon in September. Post-war demobilisation in 1919 saw some 500 men leave the ship while she was in dock. Upon returning to service in late 1919, the ship was assigned to the 1st Battle Squadron of the
Atlantic Fleet. Conflicts between Greece and the crumbling
Ottoman Empire prompted the Royal Navy to deploy a force to the eastern Mediterranean. In April 1920,
Royal Sovereign and her sister ship steamed to the region via
Malta. While in the Ottoman capital
Constantinople,
Royal Sovereign and the other British warships took on
White émigrés fleeing the Communist
Red Army. Among those refugees aboard
Royal Sovereign was a princess of the
Galitzine family. The 1922
Washington Naval Treaty cut the battleship strength of the Royal Navy from forty ships to fifteen. The remaining active battleships were divided between the Atlantic and
Mediterranean Fleets and conducted joint operations annually.
Royal Sovereign remained with the Atlantic Fleet through 1926. On 15 May 1929, the refit was finished, and the ship was assigned to the 1st Battle Squadron of the Mediterranean Fleet. The squadron consisted of
Royal Sovereign, her sisters
Resolution and , and , and based in Malta. By the 1930s, the five ships of the
Queen Elizabeth class were rotated through extensive modernisation.
Royal Sovereign and her sisters, however, were smaller and slower than the
Queen Elizabeth class, and so they were not extensively modernised in the inter-war period. The only changes made were augmentations to their anti-aircraft batteries. Fleet exercises in 1934 were carried out in the
Bay of Biscay, followed by a fleet
regatta in
Navarino Bay off Greece. In 1935, the ship returned to Britain for the Jubilee
Fleet Review for King
George V. In August 1935,
Royal Sovereign was transferred to the 2nd Battle Squadron of the Atlantic Fleet, where she served as the
flagship of Rear Admiral
Charles Ramsey. The ship served as a
training vessel until 2 June 1937, when she was again placed in reserve for a major overhaul. This lasted until 18 February 1938, after which she returned to the 2nd Battle Squadron. In 1939, King
George VI made a state visit to Canada;
Royal Sovereign and the rest of the fleet escorted his ship halfway across the Atlantic and met it on the return leg of the voyage. In early 1939, the Admiralty considered plans to send
Royal Sovereign and her four sisters to Asia to counter Japanese expansionism. They reasoned that the then established "
Singapore strategy", which called for a fleet to be formed in Britain to be dispatched to confront a Japanese attack was inherently risky due to the long delay. They argued that a dedicated battle fleet would allow for faster reaction. The plan was abandoned, however, because the new s would not begin to enter service until 1941. In the last weeks of August 1939, the Royal Navy began to concentrate in wartime bases as tensions with Germany rose.
Royal Sovereign steamed to Invergordon, where she joined her sisters
Resolution and , , and the
battlecruiser . By 31 August, the force joined , the flagship of Admiral
Charles Forbes, the commander of the
Home Fleet.
Second World War On 31 August, the day before the German invasion of Poland,
Royal Sovereign was assigned to a screening force in the
Greenland-Iceland-United Kingdom gap to patrol for German merchant ships that might be attempting to reach Germany. At the outset of war in September 1939,
Royal Sovereign was assigned to the 2nd Battle Squadron of the Home Fleet. She was assigned to the North Atlantic Escort Force, which was based in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and was tasked with protecting
convoys to Britain. Upon returning to
Plymouth, she underwent a short refit. In May 1940, she moved to the Mediterranean Fleet. There she was based in
Alexandria with the battleships ,
Malaya, and , under the command of Admiral
Andrew Cunningham. On 25–27 June, she and her sister ship escorted two convoys from Alexandria to Malta. On 28 June, aerial reconnaissance located Italian
destroyers off
Zakynthos; Admiral
John Tovey took the 7th Cruiser Squadron.
Royal Sovereign was left behind due to her slow speed. Cunningham split his fleet into three groups;
Royal Sovereign and
Malaya were the core of Group C. She was present at the
Battle of Calabria on 18 July, but her slow speed prevented her from engaging the Italian battleships. In mid-August 1940, while steaming in the
Red Sea,
Royal Sovereign was unsuccessfully attacked by the . Later that month, she returned to Atlantic convoy duties. These lasted until August 1941, when periodic maintenance was effected in
Norfolk, Virginia. though
Royal Sovereign reached the theatre earlier. At the beginning of March 1942,
Royal Sovereign, the
heavy cruiser , and several smaller vessels escorted the convoy SU.1 of twelve
troopships transporting 10,090 soldiers. The convoy departed
Colombo on 1 March, bound for Australia. The convoy reached
Fremantle without incident on 15 March. In late March, the code-breakers at the
Far East Combined Bureau, a branch of
Bletchley Park, informed Somerville that the Japanese were planning a
raid into the Indian Ocean to attack Colombo and
Trincomalee and destroy his fleet. He therefore divided his fleet into two groups: Force A, which consisted of the two fleet carriers,
Warspite and four cruisers, and Force B, centred on
Royal Sovereign and her sisters and the carrier
Hermes. He intended to ambush Nagumo's fleet in a night action, the only method by which he thought he could achieve a victory. After three days of searching for the Japanese fleet without success, Somerville returned to
Addu Atoll to refuel. While refuelling his ships, Somerville received a report that the Japanese fleet was approaching Colombo, which they attacked the following day, on 5 April, followed by attacks on Trincomalee on 9 April. Following the raid in April 1942, Somerville withdrew
Royal Sovereign and her three sisters to
Mombasa, where they could secure the shipping routes in the Middle East and the Persian Gulf. with the exception of another long period in the dockyard in Philadelphia in late 1942. While
Royal Sovereign was moored in Philadelphia, the American light cruiser , a badly damaged veteran of the
Battle of Cape Esperance, shared a pier with her. During the refit, the ship's deck armour was increased by and four of her six-inch guns were removed.
Royal Sovereign was sent back to the United States for a major overhaul in Philadelphia, from March to September 1943. She then returned to the Indian Ocean to resume her patrol duties. In January 1944, she left the Indian Ocean, bound for Britain.
Service with the Soviet Navy After returning to Britain,
Royal Sovereign was sent to the naval base in Scapa Flow. On 30 May 1944 she was transferred on loan to the
Soviet Navy as
Arkhangelsk in lieu of war reparations from Italy, as there was concerns about mutiny from sailors in the newly allied country. The ship left Britain on 17 August 1944 as part of the escort for
Convoy JW 59, which contained thirty-three merchant vessels. Six days later, while still en route, the convoy was attacked by the U-boat . The submarine's captain,
Hans-Günther Lange, incorrectly reported hits on
Arkhangelsk and a destroyer, though his torpedoes had exploded prematurely. Under the impression that they had crippled the battleship, the Germans launched several submarine attacks on the ship while she was moored in
Kola. Anti-torpedo nets ensured that the attacks failed, however. A Soviet crew commissioned the ship on 29 August 1944 at
Polyarny.
Arkhangelsk was the largest ship in the Soviet fleet during the war. While in Soviet service, she was the flagship of Admiral
Gordey Levchenko and was tasked with meeting Allied convoys in the Arctic Ocean and escorting them into Kola. The ship itself was poorly winterized before its transfer to the Soviet Navy, and it lacked shipwide heating systems as well as turret lubricants suited for the conditions of the
Arctic convoys.
Arkhangelsk ran aground in the White Sea in late 1947; the extent of damage, if any, is unknown. The Soviet Navy returned the ship to the Royal Navy on 4 February 1949 after the former was transferred to the Soviet
Black Sea Fleet. and were jammed on the centreline. She was sold for scrap, the last member of her class to suffer this fate. The ship arrived at
Thos. W. Ward's scrapyard at
Inverkeithing, Scotland, on 18 May to be broken up. ==Footnotes==