Azuma at anchor, Portsmouth, 1900
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Class overview | |
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Operators | Imperial Japanese Navy |
Preceded by | Yakumo |
Succeeded by | Kasuga class |
History | |
Name | Azuma |
Namesake | Mount Azuma |
Ordered | 12 October 1897 |
Builder | Ateliers et Chantiers de la Loire, Saint-Nazaire, France |
Laid down | 1 February 1898 |
Launched | 24 June 1899 |
Completed | 28 July 1900 |
Reclassified | As 1st class coast-defense ship, 1 September 1921 |
Stricken | 1941 |
Fate | Scrapped, 1946 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Armored cruiser |
Displacement | 9,278 t (9,131 long tons) |
Length | 137.9 m (452 ft 5 in) (o/a) |
Beam | 17.74 m (58 ft 2 in) |
Draft | 7.18 m (23 ft 7 in) |
Installed power |
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Propulsion |
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Speed | 21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph) |
Range | 7,000 nmi (13,000 km; 8,100 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph) |
Complement | 670 |
Armament |
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Armor |
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Azuma (吾妻) (sometimes transliterated (archaically) as Adzuma) was an armored cruiser (Sōkō jun'yōkan) built for the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) in the late 1890s. As Japan lacked the industrial capacity to build such warships itself, the ship was built in France. She participated in most of the naval battles of the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–05 and was lightly damaged during the Battle off Ulsan and the Battle of Tsushima. Azuma began the first of five training cruises in 1912 and saw no combat during World War I. She was never formally reclassified as a training ship although she exclusively served in that role from 1921 until she was disarmed and hulked in 1941. Azuma was badly damaged in an American carrier raid in 1945, and subsequently scrapped in 1946.