In the initial
Japanese attacks on Port Arthur on the night of 8 February 1904,
Pallada was
torpedoed on the port side amidships, but despite a fire in her coal bunker, she was not seriously damaged. In August 1904 at the
Battle of the Yellow Sea, after being struck by a
torpedo,
Pallada managed to make her way back to Port Arthur, and was thus unable to break through the Japanese blockade along with a number of other Russian cruisers. Thereafter,
Pallada was trapped in the harbor. Her guns were removed to help strengthen the land defenses and most of her crew was reassigned to serve as
infantry.
Pallada was sunk by Japanese 11-inch siege howitzers on 8 December 1904. After the end of the war, the wreck of
Pallada was raised and towed to Japan, where it was repaired and commissioned into the
Imperial Japanese Navy as a
prize of war. Renamed , she served as a training vessel and later as a minelayer until decommissioned in 1922 and sunk as a target in 1924. ==References==