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The Sinking of SMS Wien

An article by Russell Phillips

On the 10th of December 1917, the Austro-Hungarian Monarch class battleship SMS Wien (Vienna)
was attacked in port at Trieste. All three ships of the Monarch class had been relegated to harbour
duties in 1914, since they were obsolete and due to be replaced by the new dreadnought battleships
of the Improved Tegetthoff class. Although the first Improved Tegetthoff was scheduled to be laid
down in 1914, the outbreak of war meant that no work was done on their construction, and so the
operational life of the Monarch class was extended.

SMS Wien at anchor

In November and December of 1917 SMS Wien, along with SMS Budapest (another Monarch class
battleship) was involved in shore bombardment operations in the Gulf of Trieste in support of the
left flank of the Austro-Hungarian army. In the early morning of 16th November the two battleships,
escorted by nine torpedo boats, five minesweepers and three seaplanes left Trieste and opened fire at
10:35 from a range of 10,000 yards. The range was later reduced to 6,500 yards to allow the 15cm
secondary guns to join the bombardment. Italian naval units were sent from Venice to attack the
Austro-Hungarian force, but they made no serious attempt to interfere with the bombardment,
which continued until 14:30, when the force retired to Trieste. During the bombardment, Wien was
hit seven times on her superstructure, but did not suffer serious damage, while the Budapest was hit
by a single shell below the waterline which failed to penetrate her armour.

All the Austro-Hungarian ports were well defended, but Lieutenant Luigi Rizzo, an ex-Merchant
Service Captain commanding the small motor torpedo boat MAS 9, had made many
reconnaissances of the harbour at Trieste. These had led him to believe that access could be gained
through the moles, as long as a way could be found to break through the steel hawsers stretched
across them. Powerful cutters, designed to cut through a 4-inch hawser, were therefore fitted to the
bows of MAS 9.

On the 9th December 1917, the Italian torpedo boats 9 PN and 11 PN left Venice, towing MAS 9
and MAS 13, commanded by Chief Quartermaster Ferrarini. At 22:45, 10 miles from Trieste, the
MAS boats were dropped off and quietly made their own way to the harbour. Having reached the
harbour, Rizzo climbed one of the moles and listened to the lookouts talking, before returning to his
craft to deal with the hawsers. The main 4" hawser presented little problem, but the six 3" cables
took two hours to cut, as the cutters were not designed to deal with these thinner cables. As the two
boats entered the harbour, they had to take shelter from a searchlight in the shadow of the mole.
After the searchlight was switched off the MAS boats headed towards the Wien and Budapest. After
locating the targets and inspecting them – to make sure there were no anti-torpedo nets, Rizzo
ordered MAS 13 to attack the farther ship, while he attacked the nearer one.

At about 02:30, Rizzo fired his two torpedoes, and almost immediately was illuminated by a
searchlight from the Austrian ship. He was not illuminated for long, though, as his torpedoes found
their target and the searchlight went out. Not long after, there were two more explosions, leading the
Italians to hope that Ferrarini’s torpedoes had also hit, although in fact they had missed their target
and exploded harmlessly. The two MAS boats left the harbour at full throttle, to meet their torpedo
boats, and were back in Venice later that morning.

The Wien was hit on the starboard side, and assumed a severe list, which counter—flooding failed
to rectify. Within five minutes, she had rolled over and sunk. The sinking of the Wien to torpedo
attack dramatically illustrated a design weakness in the Monarch class: an armoured longitudinal
bulkhead on the centre line. Ironically, this design flaw had been intended to protect the ships from
torpedo attack. However, the bulkhead actually led to instability when the one side was flooded.
Had the bulkhead not been fitted, the flooding would have been more generally distributed across
the hull, leading to a loss of buoyancy, but no list.
SMS Wien & SMS Budapest
Displacement: 5,547 tons load, 5,786 tons deep load
Dimensions: 99.22m x 17m x 6.4m
Maximum speed: 17.5 knots

Armament:
4x 24cm guns in two twin turrets
6x 15cm guns in single casemate mountings
1x 66mm AA gun
12x 47mm Hotchkiss guns
2x 45cm torpedo tubes, beam mounted

Armour:
Belt: 220-270mm
Conning tower: 220mm
Turrets: 250mm
Casemates: 80mm
Deck: 40-60mm

Torpedo Boats 9 PN & 11 PN


Displacement: 125 tons
Dimensions: 139' x 15' x 5'
Maximum speed: 30 knots

Armament:
1x 6 pounder
2x 18" torpedo tubes

Motor Torpedo Boats MAS 9 & MAS 13


Displacement: 18 tons
Length: 59'
Maximum speed: 35 knots

Armament:
3x machine gun
2x 18" torpedo tubes
About Russell Phillips
Russell Phillips writes books and articles about military technology and
history. Born and brought up in a mining village in South Yorkshire, he
has lived and worked in South Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Cumbria and
Staffordshire. He currently lives in Stoke-on-Trent with his wife and
two children.
Russell’s articles have been published in Miniature Wargames,
Wargames Illustrated, The Wargames Website, and the Society of
Twentieth Century Wargamers‘ Journal. He has been interviewed on
BBC Radio Stoke, The WW2 Podcast, The Voice of Russia, and Cold
War Conversations.

Also by Russell Phillips


Series: Weapons and Equipment of the Warsaw Pact
1.Tanks and Combat Vehicles of the Warsaw Pact

2.Combat Engineering Equipment of the Warsaw Pact

3.Artillery of the Warsaw Pact

Ebook box set: Weapons and Equipment of the Warsaw Pact: Volume 1

Standalone
•Operation Nimrod: The Iranian Embassy Siege

•A Ray of Light: Reinhard Heydrich, Lidice, and the North Staffordshire Miners

•A Fleet in Being: Austro-Hungarian Warships of WWI

•A Damn Close-Run Thing: A Brief History of the Falklands War

•This We'll Defend: The Weapons & Equipment of the U.S. Army

•The Bear Marches West: 12 Scenarios for 1980s NATO vs Warsaw Pact Wargames

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Licence
This work by Russell Phillips is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

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