naval ram, dated before 241 B.C. Includes winged decoration of the goddess of
Victory. at the moment of ramming by Soviet light frigate
FFL 824 on 12 February 1988 Navies in antiquity commonly used the ram: the "beak" () became an important part of the armament of the
galleys of
Imperial Rome. The
ancient Greeks used their
trireme vessels for ramming as well. In
ancient China, rams were largely unknown, as the lack of a
keel and the flat shape of the
junk's bow was not conducive to constructing an elongated underwater spur. The first recorded use of a ram in modern times in fighting between major warships occurred in the
American Civil War at the
Battle of Hampton Roads in March 1862, when the armored
Confederate warship rammed the
Union frigate , sinking her almost immediately. Another significant use of the naval ram occurred during the
Third Italian War of Independence (June to August 1866) at the
Battle of Lissa, between
Italy and
Austria. The Italian ironclad
''Re d'Italia, damaged aft by gunfire, had no functioning rudder. Lying helpless in the water, she was struck three times by the Austrian ironclad
Erzherzog Ferdinand Max'', the flagship of the Austrian Commander-in-Chief Admiral
Tegetthoff. The Austrian ship retreated unharmed as the Italian vessel rolled over and sank. During the
War of the Pacific of 1879-1884, the Peruvian ironclad repeatedly rammed the Chilean corvette , sinking the wooden steam- and wind-powered ship (May 1879). During
World War I (1914-1918), rammed and sank
German submarine in 1915. This was an incidental use of the ship's bow, however. In 1918 the British
troop ship HMT Olympic rammed – the submarine sustained such heavy damage that its crew was forced to
scuttle and abandon ship. In
World War II (1939-1945), naval ships often rammed other vessels, though this was often due to extraordinary circumstances, as considerable damage could be caused to the attacking ship. The damage that lightly-constructed
destroyers took from using the tactic led the
Royal Navy to officially discourage the practice from early 1943, after spent three months in dry dock following her sinking of in December 1942, and after was torpedoed and sunk after damaging her propellers during the ramming of in March 1943. rammed and was rammed by in May 1944; and rammed in 1943. On 29 January 1943 the
New Zealander naval trawlers, and rammed and wrecked the
Japanese submarine in shallow water at Kamimbo Bay,
Guadalcanal, during
Operation Ke. The submarine of 2,135 tons was much larger and more heavily armed than the minesweeping trawlers of 607 tons each. On 5 November 1942 the rammed the Soviet submarine in the Sea of Åland and sank it.
Vetehinen was on a night patrol searching for Soviet submarines. A contact was found, and after confirmation of an enemy contact,
Vetehinen launched a torpedo, which missed - probably due to launching at too short a distance.
Vetehinen then opened fire with its deck guns and managed to damage the Soviet submarine, which by then had started an emergency dive. The captain of
Vetehinen, determined not to let the other submarine escape, ordered his submarine to ram the other vessel, which at last was a success. During anti-submarine action, ramming was an alternative if a destroyer was too close to a surfaced submarine for her main guns to fire into the water. The famous British anti-submarine specialist
Captain Frederic John Walker used this tactic from December 1941 to the end of World War II. The British destroyer (formerly USS
Buchanan, supplied under
Lend-Lease) was disguised as a
German destroyer for the purpose of ramming the gates of the
Normandie dry dock at
St. Nazaire on 28 March 1942. This action aimed to prevent the Normandie dock ever being used by the German battleship . (It was the only dock on the
Wehrmacht-occupied Atlantic coast capable of repairing such a large vessel.) The operation succeeded, and a large explosive
time-bomb charge hidden in the bow of the ship exploded the next day, putting the dock out of commission for five years. On 2 August 1943, while returning from a "
Tokyo Express" night reinforcement mission in the
Solomon Islands, the Japanese destroyer
Amagiri spotted USN
PT boats at a range of about 1,000 yards. Rather than open fire—and give away their position—the destroyer captain, Lieutenant Commander Kohei Hanami, turned to intercept and closed in the darkness at 30 knots. The slower, less maneuverable Japanese destroyer rammed and crushed
PT-109, commanded by
Lt. John F Kennedy. Lt. Commander
Gerard Roope, the captain of the
G-class destroyer , posthumously won the
Victoria Cross for the 1940 ramming of the German heavy cruiser following a close-range action in bad weather off the Norwegian coast. Recent claims suggest that
Admiral Hipper was actually attempting to ram
Glowworm and that the two ships simply collided. During the so-called
Cod Wars of 1958 to 1976 between Britain and Iceland, unarmed British
fishing trawlers found themselves opposed by
Icelandic Coast Guard vessels and converted trawlers. As well as
Royal Navy coastguard vessels, Britain sent large, ocean-going
tugs and
frigate to protect its subjects, and numerous ramming incidents occurred against both sides, sometimes with very serious consequences. The whole Icelandic fleet of naval trawlers and at least 15 Royal Navy frigates suffered damage in the third conflict only (1975-1976). In 1988 the Soviet
Mirka II-class light frigate (FFL 824) and the
Burevestnik-class frigate
Bezzavetny (FFG 811) lightly rammed two US naval ships (the destroyer and the cruiser ) inside contested Soviet territorial waters in the Black Sea, near the port of
Foros. None of the ships involved suffered significant damage. On 30 March 2020 the Venezuelan patrol-boat
Naiguatá rammed the cruise ship
RCGS Resolute after failing to damage it with a volley of gunfire. The
Naiguatá was badly damaged from striking the strengthened hull of the
Resolute, built to break ice, and sank shortly afterwards. ==Air warfare==