Post–World War I origins Under the terms of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles, Germany was only allowed a minimal navy of 15,000 personnel, six capital ships of no more than 10,000 tons, six
cruisers, twelve
destroyers, twelve
torpedo boats, and no submarines or
aircraft carriers. Military aircraft were also banned, so Germany could have no
naval aviation. Under the treaty Germany could only build new ships to replace old ones. All the ships allowed and personnel were taken over from the
Kaiserliche Marine, which was renamed the . From the outset, Germany worked to circumvent the military restrictions of the Treaty of Versailles. The Germans continued to develop U-boats through a submarine design office in the Netherlands (
NV Ingenieurskantoor voor Scheepsbouw) and a torpedo research program in Sweden where the
G7e torpedo was developed. Even before the
Nazi seizure of power on 30 January 1933 the German government decided on 15 November 1932 to launch a prohibited naval re-armament program that included U-boats, airplanes, and an aircraft carrier. The launching of the first
pocket battleship, in 1931 (as a replacement for the old
pre-dreadnought battleship ) was a step in the formation of a modern German fleet. The building of the
Deutschland caused consternation among the French and the British as they had expected that the restrictions of the Treaty of Versailles would limit the replacement of the pre-dreadnought battleships to
coastal defence ships, suitable only for defensive warfare. By using innovative construction techniques, the Germans had built a heavy ship suitable for offensive warfare on the high seas while still abiding by the letter of the treaty.
Nazi control , commander of the
Kriegsmarine until 1943 When the Nazis came to power in 1933, Hitler soon began to more brazenly ignore many of the Treaty restrictions and accelerated German naval rearmament. The
Anglo-German Naval Agreement of 18 June 1935 allowed Germany to build a navy equivalent to 35% of the British surface ship tonnage and 45% of British submarine tonnage; battleships were to be limited to 35,000 tons. That same year the
Reichsmarine was renamed as the
Kriegsmarine. In April 1939, as tensions escalated between the United Kingdom and Germany over
Poland, Hitler unilaterally rescinded the restrictions of the Anglo-German Naval Agreement. The building-up of the German fleet in the time period of 1935–1939 was slowed by problems with marshaling enough manpower and material for ship building. This was because of the simultaneous and rapid build-up of the German Army and Air Force which demanded substantial effort and resources. Some projects, like the
D-class cruisers and the
P-class cruisers, had to be cancelled.
Spanish Civil War The first military action of the
Kriegsmarine came during the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939). Following the outbreak of hostilities in July 1936 several large warships of the German fleet were sent to the region. The heavy cruisers
Deutschland and , and the light cruiser were the first to be sent in July 1936. These large ships were accompanied by the 2nd Torpedo-boat Flotilla. The German presence was used to covertly support
Francisco Franco's Nationalists although the immediate involvement of the
Deutschland was humanitarian relief operations and evacuating 9,300 refugees, including 4,550 German citizens. Following the brokering of the
International Non-Intervention Patrol to enforce an international arms embargo, the
Kriegsmarine was allotted the patrol area between
Cabo de Gata (Almeria) and
Cabo de Oropesa. Numerous vessels served as part of these duties including . On 29 May 1937 the
Deutschland was attacked off
Ibiza by two bombers from the
Republican Air Force. Total casualties from the Republican attack were 31 dead and 110 wounded, 71 seriously, mostly burn victims. In retaliation the
Admiral Scheer shelled Almeria on 31 May killing 19–20 civilians, wounding 50 and destroying 35 buildings. Following further attacks by Republican submarines against the off the port of
Oran between 15 and 18 June 1937 Germany withdrew from the Non-Intervention Patrol. U-boats also participated in covert action against Republican shipping as part of
Operation Ursula. At least eight U-boats engaged a small number of targets in the area throughout the conflict. (By comparison the Italian
Regia Marina operated 58 submarines in the area as part of the
Sottomarini Legionari.)
Plan Z The
Kriegsmarine saw as her main tasks the controlling of the
Baltic Sea and winning a war against
France in connection with the German army, because France was seen as the most likely enemy in the event of war. But in 1938 Hitler wanted to have the possibility of winning a war against Great Britain at sea in the coming years. Therefore, he ordered plans for such a fleet from the
Kriegsmarine. From the three proposed plans (X, Y and Z) he approved Plan Z in January 1939. This blueprint for the new German naval construction program envisaged building a navy of approximately 800 ships during the period 1939–1947. Hitler demanded that the program be completed by 1945. The main force of Plan Z were six
H-class battleships. In the version of Plan Z drawn up in August 1939, the German fleet was planned to consist of the following ships by 1945: • 4 aircraft carriers • 10
battleships • 15 armored ships (
Panzerschiffe) • 3
battlecruisers • 5
heavy cruisers • 44
light cruisers • 158 destroyers and torpedo boats • 249 submarines • Numerous smaller craft Personnel strength was planned to rise to over 200,000. The planned naval program was not very far advanced by the time World War II began. In 1939 two s and two H-class battleships were laid down and parts for two further H-class battleships and three s were in production. The strength of the German fleet at the beginning of the war was not even 20% of Plan Z. On 1 September 1939, the navy still had a total personnel strength of only 78,000, and it was not at all ready for a major role in the war. Because of the long time it would take to get the Plan Z fleet ready for action and shortage in workers and material in wartime, Plan Z was essentially shelved in September 1939 and the resources allocated for its realisation were largely redirected to the construction of U-boats, which would be ready for war against the United Kingdom more quickly.
World War II The
Kriegsmarine took part in the
Battle of Westerplatte and the
Battle of the Danzig Bay during the
invasion of Poland. In 1939, major events for the
Kriegsmarine were the sinking of the British aircraft carrier and the British battleship and the loss of at the
Battle of the River Plate. Submarine attacks on Britain's vital maritime supply routes (
Battle of the Atlantic) started immediately at the outbreak of war, although they were hampered by the lack of well placed ports from which to operate. Throughout the war the
Kriegsmarine was responsible for
coastal artillery protecting major ports and important coastal areas. It also operated anti-aircraft batteries protecting major ports. In April 1940, the German Navy was heavily involved in the
invasion of Norway, where it suffered significant losses, which included the
heavy cruiser sunk by artillery and torpedoes from Norwegian shore batteries at the
Oscarsborg Fortress in the
Oslofjord. Ten destroyers were lost in the
Battles of Narvik (half of German destroyer strength at the time), and two light cruisers, the
Königsberg which was bombed and sunk by Royal Navy aircraft in Bergen, and the
Karlsruhe which was sunk off the coast of Kristiansand by a British submarine. The
Kriegsmarine did in return sink some British warships during this campaign, including the aircraft carrier . The losses in the
Norwegian Campaign left only a handful of undamaged heavy ships available for the planned, but never executed, invasion of the United Kingdom (
Operation Sea Lion) in the summer of 1940. There were serious doubts that the invasion sea routes could have been protected against British naval interference. The
Fall of France and the conquest of Norway gave German submarines greatly improved access to British shipping routes in the
Atlantic. At first, British
convoys lacked escorts that were adequate either in numbers or equipment and, as a result, the submarines had much success for few losses (this period was dubbed the
First Happy Time by the Germans).
Italy entered the war in June 1940, and the
Battle of the Mediterranean began: from September 1941 to May 1944 some 62 German submarines were transferred there, sneaking past the British naval base at
Gibraltar. The Mediterranean submarines sank 24 major Allied warships (including 12 destroyers, 4 cruisers, 2 aircraft carriers, and 1 battleship) and 94 merchant ships (449,206 tons of shipping). None of the Mediterranean submarines made it back to their home bases, as they were all either sunk in battle or
scuttled by their crews at the end of the war. In 1941, one of the four modern German battleships, sank while breaking out into the Atlantic for commerce raiding. The
Bismarck was in turn hunted down by much superior British forces after being crippled by an air-launched torpedo. She was subsequently scuttled after being rendered a burning wreck by two British battleships. In November 1941 during the Battle of the Mediterranean, German submarine
U-331 sank the British battleship
Barham, which had a magazine explosion and sank in minutes, with the loss of 862, or 2/3 of her crew. During 1941, the
Kriegsmarine and the
United States Navy became
de facto belligerents, although war was not formally declared, leading to the sinking of the . This course of events were the result of the American decision to support Britain with its
Lend-Lease program and the subsequent decision to escort Lend-Lease convoys with US war ships through the western part of the Atlantic. The Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor and the subsequent
German declaration of war against the United States in December 1941 led to another phase of the Battle of the Atlantic. In Operation Drumbeat and subsequent operations until August 1942, a large number of Allied merchant ships were sunk by submarines off the US coast as the Americans had not prepared for submarine warfare, despite clear warnings (this was the so-called
Second Happy Time for the German Navy). The situation became so serious that military leaders feared for the whole Allied strategy. The vast American ship building capabilities and naval forces were however now brought into the war and soon more than offset any losses inflicted by the German submariners. In 1942, the submarine warfare continued on all fronts, and when German forces in the
Soviet Union reached the
Black Sea, a few submarines were eventually transferred there. In February 1942, the three large warships stationed on the Atlantic coast at
Brest were evacuated back to German ports for deployment to Norway. The ships had been repeatedly damaged by air attacks by the
RAF, the supply ships to support Atlantic sorties had been destroyed by the Royal Navy, and Hitler now felt that Norway was the "zone of destiny" for these ships. The two battleships and and the heavy cruiser passed through the English Channel (
Channel Dash) on their way to Norway despite British efforts to stop them. Not since the
Spanish Armada in 1588 had any warships in wartime done this. It was a tactical victory for the
Kriegsmarine and a blow to British morale, but the withdrawal removed the possibility of attacking allied convoys in the Atlantic with heavy surface ships. With the German attack on the Soviet Union in June 1941 Britain started to send
Arctic convoys with military goods around Norway to support their new ally. In 1942 German forces began heavily attacking these convoys, mostly with bombers and U-boats. The big ships of the
Kriegsmarine in Norway were seldom involved in these attacks, because of the inferiority of German
radar technology, and because Hitler and the leadership of the
Kriegsmarine feared losses of these precious ships. The most effective of these attacks was the near destruction of
Convoy PQ 17 in July 1942. Later in the war German attacks on these convoys were mostly reduced to U-boat activities and the mass of the allied freighters reached their destination in Soviet ports. The
Battle of the Barents Sea in December 1942 was an attempt by a German naval surface force to attack an Allied Arctic convoy. However, the advantage was not pressed home and they returned to base. There were serious implications: this failure infuriated Hitler, who nearly enforced a decision to scrap the surface fleet. Instead, resources were diverted to new U-boats, and the surface fleet became a lesser threat to the Allies. After December 1943 when had been sunk in an attack on an Arctic convoy in the
Battle of North Cape by , most German surface ships in bases at the Atlantic were blockaded in, or close to, their ports as a
fleet in being, for fear of losing them in action and to tie up British naval forces. The largest of these ships, the battleship , was stationed in Norway as a threat to Allied shipping and also as a defence against a potential Allied invasion. When she was sunk, after several attempts, by British bombers in November 1944 (
Operation Catechism), several British capital ships could be moved to the Far East. From late 1944 until the end of the war, the surviving surface fleet of the
Kriegsmarine (heavy cruisers: , , , , light cruisers: , , ) was heavily engaged in providing artillery support to the retreating German land forces along the Baltic coast and in ferrying civilian refugees to the western Baltic Sea parts of Germany (
Mecklenburg,
Schleswig-Holstein) in large rescue operations. Large parts of the population of
eastern Germany fled the approaching
Red Army out of fear for Soviet retaliation (mass rapes, killings, and looting by Soviet troops did occur). The
Kriegsmarine evacuated two million civilians and troops in the
evacuation of East Prussia and
Danzig from January to May 1945. It was during this activity that the catastrophic sinking of several large passenger ships occurred: and were sunk by Soviet submarines, while was sunk by British bombers, each sinking claiming thousands of civilian lives. The
Kriegsmarine also provided important assistance in the evacuation of the fleeing German civilians of
Pomerania and
Stettin in March and April 1945. A desperate measure of the
Kriegsmarine to fight the superior strength of the Western Allies from 1944 was the formation of the
Kleinkampfverbände (Small Battle Units). These were special naval units with
frogmen, manned torpedoes, motorboats laden with explosives and so on. The more effective of these weapons and units were the development and deployment of
midget submarines like the
Molch and
Seehund. In the last stage of the war, the
Kriegsmarine also organised a number of divisions of infantry from its personnel. During the later war years, the
Monsun Boats were also used as a means of exchanging vital war supplies with Japan. During 1943 and 1944, due to Allied
anti-submarine tactics and better equipment, the U-boat fleet started to suffer heavy losses. The turning point of the Battle of the Atlantic was during
Black May in 1943, when the U-boat fleet started suffering heavy losses and the number of Allied ships sunk started to decrease. Radar, longer range air cover,
sonar, improved tactics, and new weapons all contributed. German technical developments, such as the
Schnorchel, attempted to counter these. Near the end of the war a small number of the new
Elektroboot U-boats (types
XXI and
XXIII) became operational, the first submarines designed to operate submerged at all times. The
Elektroboote had the potential to negate the Allied technological and tactical advantage, although they were deployed too late to see combat in the war.
War crimes ''. Summarized, the regulations were as follows: • All Jews were to wear the
yellow star on the front and back of their clothing; • Shopping hours for Jews were restricted to 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon. Jews were only allowed out of their residences for these hours and from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.; • Jews were barred from public events and transportation and were not to walk on the beach; • Jews were required to leave the pavement if they encountered a German in uniform; • Jewish shops were required to display the sign "A Jewish-owned business" in the window; • Jews were to surrender all radios, typewriters, uniforms, arms, and means of transportation On 16 July 1941,
Fregattenkapitän Dr. Hans Kawelmacher was appointed the German naval commandant in Liepāja. On 22 July, Kawelmacher sent a telegram to the German Navy's Baltic Command in
Kiel, which stated that he wanted 100
SS and fifty
Schutzpolizei (protective police) men sent to Liepāja for "quick implementation Jewish problem". Kawelmacher hoped to accelerate the killings, complaining: "Here about 8,000 Jews... with present SS-personnel, this would take one year, which is untenable for [the] pacification of Liepāja." Kawelmacher telegram on 27 July 1941 read: "Jewish problem Libau largely solved by execution of about 1,100 male Jews by Riga SS commando on 24 and 25.7." organised in the
German Mine Sweeping Administration (GMSA), which consisted of 27,000 members of the former
Kriegsmarine and 300 vessels. The destroyers and the Soviet share light cruiser were all retired by the end of the 1950s, but five escort destroyers were returned from the French to the new West German Navy in the 1950s and three 1945 scuttled type XXI and XXIII U-boats were raised by
West Germany and integrated into their new navy. In 1956, with West Germany's accession to
NATO, a new navy was established and was referred to as the
Bundesmarine (Federal Navy). Some
Kriegsmarine commanders like
Erich Topp and
Otto Kretschmer went on to serve in the
Bundesmarine. In
East Germany the
Volksmarine (People's Navy) was established in 1956. With the
reunification of Germany in 1990, it was decided to use the name
Deutsche Marine (
German Navy). ==Major wartime operations==