Originally three more
Tashkents were ordered to be built in the Soviet Union, but it proved to be too difficult to marry the Italian design with Soviet shipbuilding practices and they were cancelled. Instead, the Soviets designed the
Kiev class to be a smaller version with much the same armament as the
Tashkent class. The Soviet Navy envisioned building 13
Kiev class ships in 1937 during the
Third Five-Year Plan and then proposed 30 ships in its shipbuilding proposal in August 1939, but the government decided to only build half that number, with twelve in the first part of the five-year plan and two in the latter part. Of these twelve ships, the first eight were ordered as part of the Third Five-Year Plan–three ships for the
Black Sea Fleet and five for the
Baltic Fleet–and the remaining four on 10 April 1941, split between the Black Sea and
Northern Fleets. The remaining ships were intended to be ordered as part of the Fourth Five-Year Plan. Only three of these ships were
laid down, all in 1939. On 19 October 1940, the government reevaluated the shipbuilding program in light of the changing international situation and canceled all ships that had not yet been laid down. In addition, it ordered the one ship that had been started for the Baltic Fleet to be scrapped, and the pair being built for the Black Sea Fleet to be completed. A contributing factor in this decision may have been the Project 35 large-destroyer design scheduled for 1941 which was intended to have a
dual-purpose main armament and much greater range. The
Kiev-class ships had an
overall length of , a
beam of , and a mean
draft of . The ships displaced at
standard load and at
deep load. Their crew numbered 264 officers and sailors.
Armament The main armament of the
Kiev-class ships consisted of six 50-
caliber B-13 guns in three twin-gun
B-2-LM turrets, one
superfiring pair forward of the
superstructure and the other mount aft of it. The ships carried 900
rounds for their guns.
Anti-aircraft defense was provided by a twin-gun 39-K mount for 55-caliber
34-K AA guns atop the rear superstructure. The 34-K guns could elevate between −5° and +85° and had a rate of fire of 15–20 rounds per minute. Their muzzle velocity of gave their
high-explosive shells a maximum horizontal range of and an effective ceiling of . The ships were fitted with four twin-gun mounts for
DShK machine guns. The DShK had an effective rate of fire of 125 rounds per minute and an effective range against aircraft of . The ships carried ten
torpedo tubes in two rotating quintuple mounts
amidships. The ships could also carry 86 Model 1926
mines and 30
depth charges–ten BB-1s and twenty BM-1s–which were delivered by two throwers. ==Ships==