Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/SMS_Seydlitz> ?p ?o }
- SMS_Seydlitz length "200600.0".
- SMS_Seydlitz abstract "SMS Seydlitz was a 24,988 metric tons (24,593 long tons; 27,545 short tons) battlecruiser of the Imperial German Navy, built in Hamburg. She was ordered in 1910 and commissioned in May 1913, the fourth battlecruiser built for the High Seas Fleet. She was named after Friedrich Wilhelm von Seydlitz, a Prussian general during the reign of King Frederick the Great and the Seven Years' War. Seydlitz represented the culmination of the first generation of German battlecruisers, which had started with the Von der Tann in 1906, and continued with the pair of Moltke-class battlecruisers ordered in 1907 and 1908. Seydlitz featured several incremental improvements over the preceding designs, including a redesigned propulsion system and an improved armor layout. The ship was also significantly larger than her predecessors—she was approximately 3,000 metric tons heavier than the Moltke-class ships.Seydlitz participated in many of the large fleet actions during the First World War, including the battles of Dogger Bank and Jutland in the North Sea. The ship suffered severe damage during both of these engagements; during the Battle of Dogger Bank, a 13.5 in (34.3 cm) shell from the British battlecruiser Lion struck Seydlitz's rearmost turret and nearly caused a magazine explosion that could have destroyed the ship. At the Battle of Jutland she was hit 21 times by heavy caliber shells, one of which penetrated the working chamber of the aft superfiring turret. Although the resulting fire destroyed the turret, the safety measures put in place after the battle of Dogger Bank prevented a worse catastrophe. The ship was also hit by a torpedo during the battle, causing her to take in over 5,300 metric tons of water, and her freeboard was reduced to 2.5 m. She had to be lightened significantly to permit her crossing of the Jade Bar. The ship inflicted severe damage on her British opponents as well; early in the battle, salvos from both Seydlitz and Derfflinger destroyed the battlecruiser Queen Mary in a matter of seconds.Seydlitz also saw some limited action in the Baltic Sea, when she provided screening for the German flotilla that attempted to clear the Gulf of Riga in 1915. As with the rest of the German battlecruisers that survived the war, the ship was interned in Scapa Flow in 1918. The ship, along with the rest of the High Seas Fleet, was scuttled in June 1919, to prevent her seizure by the British Royal Navy. She was raised on 2 November 1928, and scrapped by 1930 in Rosyth.".
- SMS_Seydlitz builder Blohm_+_Voss.
- SMS_Seydlitz builder Hamburg.
- SMS_Seydlitz class Battlecruiser.
- SMS_Seydlitz commissioningDate "1913-05-22".
- SMS_Seydlitz country German_Empire.
- SMS_Seydlitz layingDown "1911-02-04".
- SMS_Seydlitz length "200.6".
- SMS_Seydlitz motto "Always forward".
- SMS_Seydlitz orderDate "1910-03-21".
- SMS_Seydlitz shipBeam "28.5".
- SMS_Seydlitz shipDisplacement "2.4988E10".
- SMS_Seydlitz shipDisplacement "2.855E10".
- SMS_Seydlitz shipDraft "9.29".
- SMS_Seydlitz shipLaunch "1912-03-30".
- SMS_Seydlitz status "* Salvaged in 1928, scrapped".
- SMS_Seydlitz status "*Scuttled at Scapa Flow, 21 June 1919".
- SMS_Seydlitz thumbnail German_battlecruiser_SMS_Seydlitz_in_port,_prior_to_World_War_I_(retouched).jpg?width=300.
- SMS_Seydlitz topSpeed "49.078".
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageExternalLink WNGER_11-50_skc09.htm.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageExternalLink SM_Seydlitz_1913.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageID "1086719".
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageLength "63701".
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageOutDegree "159".
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageRevisionID "697106454".
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink 45.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink 50_gun.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink 5th_Battle_Squadron_(United_Kingdom).
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink 45_naval_gun.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Adolf_von_Trotha.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Alfred_von_Tirpitz.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Amherst,_New_York.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Annapolis,_Maryland.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Armistice_of_11_November_1918.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Armor-piercing_shell.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Armored_cruiser.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Baltic_Sea.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Barbette.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Dogger_Bank_(1915).
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Jutland.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_the_Gulf_of_Riga.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Battlecruiser.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Belt_armor.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Blohm_+_Voss.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Boiler.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Bovbjerg.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Caliber_(artillery).
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Captain_at_sea.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Casemate.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Castles_of_Steel.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:1912_ships.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:Battlecruisers_of_the_Imperial_German_Navy.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ships_built_in_Hamburg.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:World_War_I_battlecruisers_of_Germany.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Category:World_War_I_warships_scuttled_in_Scapa_Flow.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Central_European_Time.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Conning_tower.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink David_Beatty,_1st_Earl_Beatty.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Dinghy.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Dogger_Bank.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Double_bottom.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Dreadnought.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Electric_generator.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Erich_Ludendorff.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink File:German_battlecruiser_SMS_Seydlitz_in_port,_prior_to_World_War_I_(retouched).jpg.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink File:Map_of_the_Battle_of_Jutland,_1916.svg.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink File:Seydlitz_in_drydock.JPG.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink File:Seydlitz_moored_in_harbor.jpg.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Forecastle.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Franz_von_Hipper.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Frederick_the_Great.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Freeboard_(nautical).
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Bödicker.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Wilhelm_von_Seydlitz.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_von_Ingenohl.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink General_of_the_Cavalry_(Germany).
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink German_Empire.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink German_Imperial_Naval_Office.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink German_Revolution_of_1918–19.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Grand_Fleet.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Great_Yarmouth.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Greenwich_Mean_Time.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Großadmiral.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Gulf_of_Finland.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Gulf_of_Riga.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Gun_turret.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Hamburg.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Harwich_Force.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Heligoland.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink High_Seas_Fleet.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink I_Scouting_Group.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_German_Navy.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Jade_Bight.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink John_Jellicoe,_1st_Earl_Jellicoe.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Karl_Wilhelm_Heinrich_von_Kleist.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Kiel_Canal.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Kiel_mutiny.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Konteradmiral.
- SMS_Seydlitz wikiPageWikiLink Krupp.