Named for the 18th-century
Holy Roman Emperor,
Karl VI,
Kaiser Karl VI was built at the STT shipyard in Trieste. Her keel was laid on 1 June 1896 and her completed hull was launched on 4 October 1898.
Fitting-out work then commenced, which lasted until 23 May 1900, when the ship was commissioned into the Austro-Hungarian fleet. Starting from her commissioning,
Kaiser Karl VI frequently served in the training squadron, along with the three s, though she alternated in the squadron with the armored cruiser
Sankt Georg. Once the summer training schedule was completed each year, the ships of the training squadron were demobilized in the reserve squadron, which was held in a state of partial readiness. In 1900, she served as the flagship of then-
Rear Admiral Rudolf Montecuccoli in the training squadron, along with
Kaiserin und Königin Maria Theresia. During the summer maneuvers of June 1901, she served as the flagship of Rear Admiral G. Ritter von Brosch, commander of the reserve squadron. The other major ships in the squadron included the old ironclad and the cruiser
Kaiser Franz Joseph I. In mid-1910,
Kaiser Karl VI conducted the last trans-Atlantic cruise of an Austrian vessel, when she visited Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina. On 25 May, she represented Austria-Hungary at the centennial of Argentina's
May Revolution, which won the country's independence from Spain.
World War I On 28 June 1914, Archduke
Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, was
assassinated in Sarajevo; the assassination sparked the
July Crisis and ultimately the
First World War, which broke out a month later on 28 July. The German
battlecruiser , which had been assigned to the
Mediterranean Division, sought the protection of the Austro-Hungarian fleet, and so Admiral
Anton Haus sent the fleet, including
Kaiser Karl VI, south on 7 August to assist his German ally.
Goebens commander, Admiral
Wilhelm Souchon, intended to use the Austro-Hungarian move as a feint to distract the British
Mediterranean Fleet which was
pursuing Goeben; Souchon instead took his ship to
Constantinople in the
Ottoman Empire. Their decoy mission complete,
Kaiser Karl VI and the rest of the fleet returned to port without engaging any British forces. On 8 August, Montenegrin gun batteries on
Mount Lovćen began shelling the Austro-Hungarians at
Cattaro. At the time,
Kaiser Karl VI was the only large warship in the harbor, and she assisted the local army artillery in attempting to suppress the hostile guns. The Austro-Hungarian gunners were aided by navy
seaplanes that could spot the fall of their shots. On 13 September, the three
Monarch-class coastal defense ships arrived to strengthen the Austro-Hungarian force. Five days later, a French artillery battery was landed in Montenegro to reinforce the guns on Lovćen with the aim of eventually capturing the port, which prompted the Austro-Hungarians to send the pre-dreadnought battleship with its guns. By 27 October, the French and Montenegrin gun batteries had been silenced, and the French abandoned its attempt to seize Cattaro. By the end of August, the mobilization of the fleet was complete;
Kaiser Karl VI was assigned to the Cruiser Flotilla, which was commanded by Vice Admiral
Paul Fiedler. For most of the war, the Cruiser Flotilla was based at Cattaro, although the armored cruisers were too slow to operate with the newer s that carried out the bulk of offensive operations. In May 1915, Italy declared war on the Central Powers. The Austro-Hungarians continued their strategy of serving as a
fleet in being, which would tie down the now further numerically superior Allied naval forces. Haus hoped that torpedo boats and mines could be used to reduce the numerical superiority of the Italian fleet before a decisive battle could be fought. By early 1918, the long periods of inactivity had begun to wear on the crews of several warships at Cattaro, including
Kaiser Karl VI. On 1 February, the
Cattaro Mutiny broke out, starting aboard
Sankt Georg and quickly spreading to
Kaiser Karl VI. Officers were confined to their quarters while a committee of sailors met to formulate a list of demands, which ranged from longer periods of leave and better rations to an end to the war, based on the United States President
Woodrow Wilson's
Fourteen Points. The following day, shore batteries loyal to the government fired on the old ironclad , which prompted many of the mutinous ships to abandon the effort. Late in the day on 2 February, the
red flags were struck from
Kaiser Karl VI and she rejoined the loyalist ships in the harbor. The next morning, the s of the III Division arrived in Cattaro, which convinced the last holdouts to surrender. Trials on the ringleaders commenced quickly and four men were executed.
Fate In the aftermath of the Cattaro Mutiny, most of the obsolete warships of the Austro-Hungarian Navy, including
Kaiser Karl VI, were decommissioned to reduce the number of idle warships. On 3 November 1918, the Austro-Hungarian government signed the
Armistice of Villa Giusti with Italy, ending their participation in the conflict. After the end of the war,
Kaiser Karl VI was ceded as a
war prize to Great Britain, under the terms of the
Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye. She was then sold to ship breakers in Italy and broken up for scrap after 1920. == Notes ==