1939
SEPTEMBER 1939
Maritime Situation - These were based on the
assumption Britain and France
were actively allied against the
European Axis powers of Germany and Italy. The Royal Navy would be
responsible for the North Sea and most of the
Atlantic, although the French would contribute
some forces. In the Mediterranean, defence would
be shared between both Navies, but as it
happened, Benito Mussolini's claimed ownership of
the Mediterranean - his 'Mare Nostrum' - did not
have to be disputed for another nine months. |
Italy
- declared its neutrality
1940
JUNE 1940
Strategic
Situation concerning the Mediterranean and Red
Sea Areas
Mediterranean - Italy stood astride the central
basin, with Italy itself, Sardinia and Sicily to
the north and Libya with its provinces of
Tripolitania and Cyrenaica to the south. Albania
on the Adriatic Sea and the Dodecanese Islands in
the southern Aegean off Turkey were Italian. In
the western half, Britain and France between them controlled
Gibraltar at the narrow entrance from the
Atlantic, southern France, Corsica, Algeria and
Tunisia. Malta at the centre was a British
colony. In the eastern half, Britain maintained a hold on Egypt
and the Suez Canal, Palestine and Cyprus. In the
Levant, Lebanon and Syria were French.
The Neutral
countries in the western Mediterranean were
Spain, and in the east, Greece and Crete,
Yugoslavia and Turkey.
Red
Sea Area
In between the Sudan and Somaliland were the
linked Italian colonies of Eritrea, Ethiopia
(Abyssinia) and Italian Somaliland. Bordering
them to the south was British Kenya. To the east
of the Red Sea, Saudi Arabia had close ties with Britain, and at the southern end
of the Red Sea, Aden was a British colony. On the
west shore were Egypt and the Anglo-Egyptian
Sudan, and further south French and British
Somaliland.
Military and
Maritime Circumstances
A large Italian army in Libya
(Tripolitania
and Cyrenaica) threatened Alexandria and the Suez
Canal, against which only a relatively small
British and Dominion force could be fielded.
Fortunately this had been reinforced earlier in
the year by Australian and New Zealand troops. From bases in
Italian East Africa the Italian Air Force and Navy were
capable of cutting Allied supply routes to Suez
through the Red Sea. The Italian army was
also powerful enough to conquer British and
French Somaliland and posed a threat to the Sudan
and Kenya. The Italians' one major problem was
the impossibility of supplying these forces other
than by air from Libya.
Even allied to
France, Britain's position in the Mediterranean was
not guaranteed. Gibraltar may have beeen
secure, assuming Spain's continued neutrality,
but Malta was considered indefensible in
the face of the Italian Air Force based in
Sicily. As it happened only the later arrival of
the German Luftwaffe turned this threat into a
near reality. However, Malta's well-equipped base
had to be abandoned by the Mediterranean Fleet
for the poorer facilities at Alexandria in
Egypt. These threats to Malta, Suez and the Red
Sea depended on Italy taking and holding the
initiative. Instead, Malta became a thorn
in the side of Axis supply routes to Libya. And
Libya and Italian East Africa in fact become
endangered from the very Allied territories they
threatened. Over the next three years, Malta
above all became the pivot about which the whole
Mediterranean campaign revolved - both the
problems of its supply and its effectiveness as
an offensive base. Later Axis plans to invade the
island so invaluable to the Allied cause came to
nothing.
Major Naval Strengths
The Italian Navy maintained a small but
useful force in the Red Sea. Against these
could be deployed ships of the East lndies
Command based at Trincomalee in Ceylon. But the
Italians overwhelming strength was in the Mediterranean.
The Royal
Navy maintained
a small force of destroyers at Gibraltar,
largely for Atlantic convoy work, but the Western
Mediterranean was primarily the responsibility of
the French Navy - although British reinforcements
could soon be dispatched from the Home Fleet as
shortly happened. The Eastern Mediterranean was
in the hands of the Mediterranean Fleet and a
small French squadron based at Alexandria.
It was up to strength in major units but still
weak in cruisers, destroyers and submarines when
compared with the Italian Navy. This was partly
offset by the presence of carrier
Eagle to accompany battleships
Malaya, Ramillies,
Royal Sovereign and
Warspite.
Major
Warship types |
Western
Med FRENCH NAVY |
Mediterranean Italian NAVY
|
Eastern
Med ROYAL NAVY
|
Eastern
Med FRENCH NAVY
|
Mediterranean ALLIED TOTAL
|
Battleships |
4 |
6 (b)
|
4 |
1 |
9
|
Carriers |
- |
- |
1 |
- |
1
|
Cruisers |
10 |
21
|
9 |
4 |
23
|
Destroyers |
37(a) |
52(c)
|
25 |
3 |
65
|
Submarines |
36 |
106
|
10 |
- |
46
|
TOTALS |
87
|
185(d) |
49
|
8
|
144 |
Notes:
(a) Plus 10
British destroyers at Gibraltar (b) included 2 new battleships completing. (c) Plus over 60 large torpedo boots. (d) Based at Massawa in the Red Sea were
another 7 destroyers, 8 submarines and 2
torpedo boats.
|
Italy Declared War - Italy declared war on Britain and
France on the 10th. Two weeks later France was out of the
war. Still on the 10th, Australia, Canada, India, New
Zealand and South Africa declared war on Italy.
France - The French
Government of Marshal Petain requested armistice terms
from Germany and Italy on the 17th. Later in the month
Italian forces invaded southern France but with little
success. A Franco-Italian Armistice was signed on the
24th, and included provision for the demilitarisation of
French naval bases in the Mediterranean.
Mediterranean
12th -The
Mediterranean Fleet with Warspite,
Malaya, Eagle, cruisers and
destroyers sailed from Alexandria for a sweep against
Italian shipping in the Eastern Mediterranean. South of
Crete, light cruiser CALYPSO
was torpedoed and sunk by Italian
submarine Bagnolini.
13th -
Mediterranean Fleet submarines operated out of Alexandria
on patrol off Italian bases and soon lost three of their
number
(1-3). At the
time mines were usually blamed, but it turned out that
Italian anti-submarine forces were far more effective
than expected. While Royal Navy submarines suffered their
losses, the many Italian submarines on patrol suffered
more heavily. The first British loss was ODIN (1)
off the Italian coast
in the Gulf of Taranto, sunk by the guns and torpedoes of
destroyer Strale. 16th - The second
British submarine GRAMPUS (2), minelaying off Augusta, Sicily was
caught and sunk by large torpedo boats Circe
and Clio. 17th - Six Italian
submarines [1-6]
were sunk in the Mediterranean itself,
half by the Royal Navy. However the first to go, PROVANA
[1]
was rammed
and sunk off Oran, Algeria by French sloop La
Curieuse after attacking a French convoy, and just
a week before France was forced out of the war. 19th
- Towards the other end of the North African coast, the
third British loss ORPHEUS (3) was sent to the bottom by Italian
destroyer Turbine north of the Cyrenaica port
of Tobruk, soon to become a household name. 20th -
The second Italian boat lost in the Mediterranean was DIAMANTE
[2] torpedoed by
submarine Parthian off Tobruk. 27th -
The third Italian submarine lost was the LIUZZI
[3] sunk by Med
Fleet destroyers Dainty, Ilex,
Decoy and the Australian Voyager
south of Crete. 28th - As the Mediterranean Fleet
7th Cruiser Squadron covered convoy movements in the
Eastern Mediterranean, three Italian destroyers carrying
supplies between Taranto in southern Italy and Tobruk
were intercepted. In a running gun battle, ESPERO was
sunk by Australian cruiser
Sydney to the southwest of Cape Matapan at
the southern tip of Greece. 28th - The first of
two Italian submarines sunk by RAF Sunderlands of No. 230
Sqdn was ARGONAUTA [4] in the central Med as she was
believed to be returning from patrol off Tobruk. 29th
- The same Med Fleet destroyers after sinking
Liuzzi two days earlier, were now southwest
of Crete. They repeated their success by sinking UEBI
SCEBELI [5]. 29th - A day after their first
success, the Sunderlands of No. 230 Sqdn sank RUBINO [6]
in the Ionian Sea as she
returned from the Alexandria area
Red Sea Area
15th - In the Red
Sea and Indian Ocean area, four of the eight submarines
based there {1-4}
were soon accounted for starting with MACALLE
{1} which ran
aground, a total loss. 19th - At the southern end
of the Red Sea, the Italian GALILEO GALILEI {2} on patrol off Aden was captured by armed
trawler Moonstone following a gun duel. 23rd
- Also in the Gulf of Aden, but off French
Somaliland, Italian boat EVANGELISTA TORICELLI {3}
was
sunk by destroyers
Kandahar and Kingston with sloop
Shoreham. During the action, destroyer
KHARTOUM suffered
an internal explosion and sank in shallow water off Perim
Island, a total loss. 23rd - Italian submarine
Galvani sank Indian patrol sloop PATHAN in the Indian Ocean.
24th -
The following day off the Gulf of Oman, GALVANI
{4}
was accounted
for by sloop Falmouth.
British Force H -
By the end of the month, Force H had been assembled at
Gibraltar from units of the Home Fleet. Vice-Adm Sir
James Somerville flew his flag in battlecruiser
Hood and commanded battleships
Resolution and Valiant, carrier
Ark Royal and a few cruisers and destroyers.
Warship Loss Summary
- In a confusing month, the the Italian Navy had lost one
destroyer and ten submarines; the Royal Navy one light
cruiser, one destroyer, three submarines and one sloop to
Italian forces; .
Battle
of the Atlantic -
The Allied loss of Norway brought German warships and
U-boats many hundreds of miles closer to the Atlantic
convoy routes. Within a matter of days the first U-boats
were sailing from the Norwegian port of Bergen, while
others were sent to patrol as far south as the Canary and
Cape Verde Islands off northwest Africa. Italian submarines
joined them in this area, but without any early
successes.
JULY 1940

5th -
Torpedo-carrying Swordfish from carrier
"Eagle's" squadrons flew from land bases on
successful attacks against Tobruk and area.
On the 5th,
aircraft of 813 Squadron sank Italian destroyer "ZEFFIRO" and a freighter at Tobruk. The
success was repeated two weeks later.
9th - Action off Calabria or Battle of
Punto Stila (map below) - On the 7th, Adm Cunningham sailed from
Alexandria with battleships "Warspite",
Malaya", Royal Sovereign", carrier
"Eagle", cruisers and destroyers to cover
convoys from Malta to Alexandria and to challenge the
Italians to action. Next day - the 8th - two
Italian battleships, 14 cruisers and 32 destroyers were
reported in the Ionian Sea covering a convoy of their own
to Benghazi in Libya. Italian aircraft now started five
days of accurate high-level bombing (also against Force H
out of Gibraltar) and cruiser "Gloucester"
was
hit and damaged. Mediterranean
Fleet headed for a position to cut off the Italians from
their base at Taranto. On the 9th, Eagles aircraft
failed to find the Italians and first contact was made by
a detached cruiser squadron which was soon under fire
from the heavier Italian ships. "Warspite" came
up and damaged "Giulio Cesare" with a 15in hit. As the Italian
battleships turned away, the British cruisers and
destroyers engaged, but with little effect. Mediterranean
Fleet pursued to within 50 miles of the south west
Italian coast off Calabria before withdrawing.
As Adm Cunningham covered
the by-now delayed convoys to Alexandria,
"Eagle's" Swordfish attacked Augusta harbour,
Sicily on the 10th.Destroyer
"Pancaldo"
was torpedoed, but later re-floated and
re-commissioned.

11th - Force H,
which had put to sea on receiving reports of the Italian
fleet, was now returning to Gibraltar when screening
destroyer "ESCORT"
was sunk by the Italian submarine
"Marconi".
16th - Submarine "PHOENIX"
attacked
an escorted tanker off
Augusta and was lost to depth charges from Italian
torpedo boat "Albatros".
19th -
Action off Cape Spada - Australian cruiser "Sydney" and
destroyers "Hasty", "Havock",
"Hero", "Hyperion" and
"llex" on a sweep into the Aegean Sea were sent
to intercept two reported Italian cruisers. Off Cape
Spada at the north west tip of Crete, "BARTOLOMEO
COLLEONI"
was stopped
by Sydney's gunfire and finished off with torpedoed from
the destroyers. "Bande Nere" escaped.
20th - Carrier
"Eagle's" Swordfish continued their strikes
against Italian targets around Tobruk. In the nearby Gulf
of Bomba, 824 Squadron was responsible for sinking
destroyers "NEMBO" and "OSTRO" and another freighter.
AUGUST 1940
1st - Submarine "OSWALD" on patrol south of the Strait of
Messina reported Italian Navy movements. She was detected
and later rammed and sunk by destroyer
"Vivaldi".
Malta - The
decision was taken to reinforce Malta, and in Operation
'Hurry', carrier "Argus" flew off 12 Hurricanes
from a position southwest of Sardinia. This was the first
of many reinforcement and supply operations, often
bitterly fought to keep Malta alive and in the fight
against Axis supply routes to their armies in North
Africa.
22nd - Land-based
Swordfish from "Eagle's" 824 Squadron repeated
their July success with another torpedo strike in the
Gulf of Bomba near Tobruk. Just as she prepared for a
human torpedo attack on Alexandria, submarine "IRIDE" and a depot ship were sunk.
23rd - Heavy mining
in the Strait of Sicily by Italian surface ships led to
the loss of destroyer "HOSTILE" on passage from Malta to
Gibraltar. Extensive Italian fields in the 'Sicilian
Narrows' sank and damaged many Royal Navy ships over the
next three years.
SEPTEMBER 1940
Royal Navy in the
Mediterranean - Reinforcements were sent to the
Mediterranean Fleet in Alexandria right through until the
end of the year.The arrival of "Illustrious"
allowed Adm Cunningham to go ahead with plans to attack
the Italian battlefleet at Taranto.
17th - Units of the
Mediterranean Fleet including battleship
"Valiant" sailed with "Illustrious"
for a raid on Benghazi. Swordfish biplanes torpedoed
destroyer "BOREA"; mines laid by them off the port sank "AQUILONE". On the return to Alexandria,
heavy cruiser "Kent" was detached to bombard Bardia, but was
torpedoed and badly damaged by Italian aircraft.
22nd - British
submarine "Osiris" on patrol in the southern
Adriatic attacked a convoy and sank Italian torpedo boat "PALESTRO".
30th - As Italian
submarine "GONDAR" approached Alexandria carrying human
torpedoes for an attack on the base, she was found by a
RAF Sunderland of No 230 Squadron and sunk by Australian
destroyer "Stuart".
OCTOBER 1940
2nd - Mediterranean
Fleet destroyers "Havock" and "Hasty"
sank Italian submarine "BERILLO" off Sollum the border town between
Libya and Egypt.
12th/14th
- Attack on Malta Convoy
- From Alexandria a convoy safely reached Malta
covered by the Mediterranean Fleet with four battleships
and carriers "Illustrious" and
"Eagle". As the Fleet returned on the 12th,
attacks were made by Italian light forces southeast of
Sicily. Cruiser "Ajax" sank Italian torpedo
boats "AIRONE" and "ARIEL" and badly damaged destroyer "ARTIGLIERE" which was finished off by heavy
cruiser "York". Later heading back east, the
carriers launched air strikes against Leros island in the
Dodecanese. On the 14th as the Mad Fleet headed
for Alexandria, cruiser "Liverpool" was badly damaged by a torpedo hit from
Italian aircraft.
15th - On patrol
off Calabria, south west Italy in the Ionian Sea,
submarine "RAINBOW" was lost
in a gun action with the Italian
submarine "Enrico Toti". At about this time "TRIAD"
was probably mined off the Gulf of
Taranto.
18th - Air and sea
patrols accounted for two Italian submarines to the east
of Gibraltar. On the 18th "DURBO"
went down to attacks by destroyers
"Firedrake" and "Wrestler" working
with RAF London flying boats of No 202 Squadron.
20th - Two days
after "Durbo's" sinking, Gibraltar-based
destroyers "Gallant", "Griffin" and
"Hotspur" accounted for the "LAFOLE".
Red Sea Area
21st - Red Sea
convoy BN7 was attacked by Italian destroyers based at
Massawa in Eritrea. The escorts, including New Zealand
cruiser "Leander" and the destroyer Kimberley,
drove "NULLO" ashore with their
gunfire, where she was destroyed next day by RAF Blenheim
light bombers.

NOVEMBER 1940
Fleet
Air Arm attack on Taranto (left)
- Early in the month a complex series of
British reinforcement and supply moves mounted
from both ends of the Mediterranean led to the classic
air attack on the Italian battlefleet at Taranto. On the
11th, carrier "Illustrious", escorted by
cruisers and destroyers, headed for a position in the
Ionian Sea 170 miles to the southeast of Taranto. All six
battleships of the Italian Navy were at anchor there.
That night, two waves of Swordfish biplanes were
launched, some belonging to "Eagle". One hit
each was made on "CONTE DI CAVOUR" and "CAIO DIULIO" and three on the brand new "LITTORIA". All three battleships sank at
their moorings and "Cavour" was never
recommissioned, for the loss of just two Swordfish.
27th - Action off Cape Spartivento,
Southern Sardinia
-
A fast British convoy sailed eastward from
Gibraltar with ships for Malta and Alexandria. Cover was
provided by Force H with battlecruiser
"Renown", carrier "Ark Royal",
cruisers "Despatch" and "Sheffield".
Meanwhile, units of the Mediterranean Fleet including
"Ramillies" and cruisers "Newcastle",
"Berwick" and "Coventry" headed west
for a position south of Sardinia to meet them. Other
ships accompanied the two Mediterranean Fleet carriers in
separate attacks on Italian targets - "Eagle"
on Tripoli, Libya and "Illustrious" on Rhodes
off the southwest Turkish coast. These moves took place
on the 26th. Next day, on the 27th, south
of Sardinia, aircraft of Force H's "Ark Royal"
sighted an Italian force with two battleships and seven
heavy cruisers. Force H, now joined by the Med Fleet's
"Ramillies", sailed to meet them. In an
hour-long exchange of gunfire "Renown" and the
cruisers were in action, during which time "Berwick"
was damaged and an Italian destroyer
badly hit. The slower "Ramillies" had not come
up by the time the Italians turned back for home. Adm
Somerville pursued, but as he approached Italian shores
had to turn back himself.
Battle of the Atlantic - In North Atlantic
operations, Italian submarine "FAA DI
BRUNO" was lost
in uncertain circumstances, possibly sunk by British
destroyer "Havelock". By the end of the month
26 Italian submarines were operating out of Bordeaux, but
were never as successful as their German ally.
DECEMBER 1940
Late November/early
December - Submarines "REGULUS" and "TRITON"
were lost in late November or early
December, possibly on Italian mines in the Strait of
Otranto area at the southern end of the Adriatic Sea.
Alternatively "Regulus" may had been sunk by
Italian aircraft on 26th November.
3rd - At anchor in
the poorly defended Suda Bay, cruiser "Glasgow" was hit by two torpedoes
from Italian aircraft and badly damaged.
13th - Cruiser "Coventry"
was torpedoed by
Italian submarine "Neghelli", but remained
operational
14th - Also
operating in support of the land campaign, destroyers
"Hereward" and "Hyperion" sank
Italian submarine "NAIADE" off Bardia, Libya just over the Egyptian
border.
Mediterranean
Operations - Another series of British convoy and
offensive operations were carried out by the
Mediterranean Fleet with battleships
"Warspite", "Valiant "and carrier
"Illustrious". At the same time, battleship
"Malaya" passed through to the west for
Gibraltar. On the way, escorting destroyer
"HYPERION"
hit a mine near Cape Bon, northeast tip of Tunisia on the
22nd and had to be scuttled.
Mediterranean
Theatre after Seven Months - A total of nine British
submarines had been lost since June in the
Mediterranean, a poor exchange for the sinking of
10 Italian merchantmen of
45,000 tons. In the same time the
Italians had lost 18 submarines from all causes
throughout the Mediterranean and Red Sea areas.
Mussolini's claimed domination of the
Mediterranean had not been apparent. In spite of
the loss of French naval power, Force H
and the Mediterranean Fleet had held the Italian
Navy in check. Malta had been supplied and
reinforced, and the British offensive in North Africa was
underway. |
Battle of the Atlantic - Italian submarine "TARANTINI" returning from North Atlantic
patrol was torpedoed and sunk by submarine
"Thunderbolt" on the 15th in the Bay of Biscay.
1941
JANUARY 1941
Air War - RAF
Wellingtons raided Naples and damaged Italian battleship "Giulio
Cesare".
Malta Convoy "Excess" - On
the 6th, British convoy 'Excess'
left Gibraltar for Malta and Greece covered by
Gibraltar-based Force H. By the 10th, 'Excess' had
reached the Strait of Sicily and was attacked by Italian
torpedo boats. "VEGA" was sunk by escorting cruiser
"Bonaventure" and destroyer
"Hereward". As the Mediterranean Fleet
including "Illustrious" met the convoy off the
Italian-held island of Pantelleria, screening destroyer "GALLANT" hit a mine. Towed back to Malta,
she was not re-commissioned and finally wrecked by
bombing over a year later in April 1942.
19th - Destroyer
"Greyhound", escorting a convoy to Greece, sank
Italian submarine "NEGHELLI" in the Aegean Sea
Battle of the Atlantic - Italian submarine "NANI"
attacked a
convoy west of North Channel on the
7th and was sunk by corvette "Anemone"
FEBRUARY 1941
Force H attack in the Gulf of Genoa
- "Ark Royal," "Renown"
and "Malaya" sailed into the Gulf of Genoa,
northwest Italy on the 9th. The big ships bombarded the
city of Genoa while "Ark Royal's" aircraft
bombed Leghorn and laid mines off Spezia. An Italian
battlefleet sortied but failed to make contact.
25th - On patrol
off the east coast of Tunisia, submarine
"Upright" torpedoed and sank Italian cruiser "ARMANDO
DIAZ" covering a
convoy from Naples to Tripoli.
27th - After
breaking out of Massawa, Eritrea's Red Sea port, Italian
armed merchant cruiser "RAMB 1" was located off the Indian Ocean Maldive
Islands and sunk by New Zealand cruiser
"Leander".
Battle of the Atlantic - Italian submarine "MARCELLO"
was
believed sunk to the
west of the Hebrides islands, off NW Scotland by ex-US
destroyer "Montgomery" and other escorts of
Liverpool-out convoy OB287 on the 22nd.
MARCH 1941
6th - Italian
submarine "ANFITRITE"
attacked a British troop convoy bound for Greece,
east of Crete and was sunk by escorting destroyer "Greyhound".
26th - At anchor in
Suda Bay, northern Crete, heavy cruiser "YORK" was badly damaged by Italian explosive
motor boats and beached. She was later wrecked by bombing
and abandoned when Crete was evacuated in May.
28th - Mines laid
by submarine "Rorqual" west of Sicily on the
25th, sank two Italian supply ships the next day and
torpedo boat "CHINOTTO" on the 28th.
28th - Battle of Cape Matapan - As ships of the Mediterranean Fleet
covered troop movements to Greece, 'Ultra' intelligence
was received reporting the sailing of an Italian
battlefleet with one battleship, six heavy and two light
cruisers plus destroyers to attack the convoy routes. On
the 27th, Vice-Adm Pridham-Wippell with cruisers
"Ajax", "Gloucester",
"Orion" and the Australian "Perth"
and destroyers sailed from Greek waters for a position
south of Crete. Adm Cunningham with carrier
"Formidable" and battleships
"Warspite", "Barham" and
"Valiant "left Alexandria on the same day to
meet the cruisers. Around 08.30 on the 28th, south of
Crete, Adm Pridham-Wippell was in action with an Italian
cruiser squadron. Just before noon he found himself
between them and the battleship "Vittorio
Veneto" which had now come up. An attack by
Swordfish from "Formidable" failed to hit the
Italian battleship, but enabled the British cruisers to
extricate themselves.
Mediterranean Fleet heavy units
arrived, but their only chance of action was to slow down
the Italians before they could reached Italy. A second
Swordfish strike at around 15.00 hit and slowed down "Vittorio
Veneto", but only
for a short while. At 19.30 a third strike southwest of
Cape Matapan stopped heavy cruiser "Pola". All
this time, RAF aircraft were attacking but without
success. Later that evening (still on the 28th), two more
heavy cruisers - "Fiume" and "Zara with
four destroyers were detached to help "Pola".
Before reaching her, Adm Cunningham's ships detected them
by radar and "FIUME", "ZARA" and destroyers "ALFIERI" and "CARDUCCI"
were crippled by the close range gunfire
of "Barham", "Valiant" and
"Warspite". All four Italians were finished off
by four destroyers led by the Australian
"Stuart". Early next morning on the 29th, "POLA"
was found, partly abandoned. After
taking off the remaining crew, destroyers
"Jervis" and "Nubian" sank her with
torpedoes. The Royal Navy lost one aircraft.
31st - Continuing
her successes, "Rorqual" torpedoed and sank
submarine "CAPPONI" off northeast Sicily.
31st - Cruiser "BONAVENTURE" with a Mediterranean Fleet cruiser
force escorting a convoy from Greece to Egypt, was
torpedoed and sunk to the southeast of Crete by Italian
submarine "Ambra"
APRIL 1941
East Africa - On
the Red Sea coast of Italian East Africa, the capture of Eritrea
was completed when Asmara was occupied on the 1st and
the port of Massawa on the 8th. 3rd - Leading up
to the capture of Massawa, the eight surviving Italian
destroyers and torpedo boats were lost or scuttled. On
the 3rd, five seaworthy destroyers sailed to attack Port
Sudan, Sudan further north along the Red Sea shore.
Shore-based Swordfish from carrier "Eagle" sank
"MANIN" and "SAURO". 8th - Before the final
scuttling at Massawa, Italian MTB MAS-213 torpedoed and
damaged cruiser "Capetown" escorting a convoy off Massawa. Four
Italian submarines did manage to escape and eventually
reached Bordeaux, France after sailing around Africa.
16th - Action of Sfax, Tunisia
- Capt P. J. Mack with destroyers
"Janus", "Jervis", "Mohawk"
and "Nubian" sailing from Malta intercepted a
German Afrika Korps convoy of five transports escorted by
three Italian destroyers off Kerkennah Islands, east of
Tunisia. All Axis ships were sunk including the
destroyers "BALENO" (foundered next day), "LAMPO" (later salvaged) and "TARIGO". In the fighting "MOHAWK" was torpedoed by "Tarigo" and
had to be scuttled.
MAY 1941
Late April/early May
- Two submarines operating out of Malta were lost,
possibly in Italian minefields - "USK" in the Strait of Sicily area and "UNDAUNTED" off Tripoli. "Usk" may
have been sunk by Italian destroyers west of Sicily while
attacking a convoy.
2nd - Returning to
Malta with cruiser "Gloucester" and other
destroyers from a search for Axis convoys, "JERSEY"
was mined and sunk in the entrance to
Valletta's Grand Harbour.
21st
- In the opening stages of the attack on Crete, cruiser
minelayer "Abdiel" laid mines off the west
coast of Greece sinking Italian destroyer "MIRABELLO" and two transports.
21st
May-1st June - Battle for Crete
- Most of the Mediterranean Fleet with four
battleships, one carrier, 10 cruisers and 30 destroyers
fought the Battle for Crete. There were two phases, both
of which take place under intense air attack, mainly
German but also Italian, from which all British losses
resulted.
JUNE 1941
North
Africa - Another unsuccessful British offensive to
relieve Tobruk started from Sollum on the 15th (Operation
'Battleaxe'). Within two days the operation was called
off. A heavy price had to be paid for the supply of
besieged Tobruk by the Royal Navy and Royal Australian
Navy ships involved. All trips take place under continual
threat of German and Italian aircraft
attack: 24th - Sloop "AUCKLAND"
was lost off Tobruk. 30th -
Australian destroyer "WATERHEN"
was bombed and sunk off Bardia.
27th -
Submarine "Triumph" on patrol off the Egyptian
coast sank the Italian submarine "SALPA".
Battle
of the Atlantic - Italian submarine "GLAUCO"
was scuttled west of Gibraltar on the 27th
after being damaged by destroyer "Wishart".
JULY 1941
5th - Submarine
"Torbay" on patrol in the Aegean Sea sank
Italian submarine "JANTINA".
11th - On the
Tobruk Run, destroyer "DEFENDER"
was bombed by German or Italian
aircraft and went down off Sidi Barrani.
20th - Two more
British submarines fall victim to Italian anti-submarine
forces during convoy attacks in July - the first was "UNION" to torpedo boat "Circe"
off Pantelleria.
21st-24th - Malta Convoy, Operation
'Substance' - 'Substance' set out from Gibraltar
with six transports covered by Force H with "Ark
Royal", battlecruiser
"Renown", cruisers and destroyers. Battleship
"Nelson", three cruisers and more destroyers
reinforced Force H from the Home Fleet. On the 23rd,
south of Sardinia, sustained Italian air attacks started.
Cruiser "Manchester"
was hit and destroyer
"FEARLESS"
sunk by aircraft torpedoes. Next day the transports
reached Malta safely. On the 26th the Italians
launched an attack on Grand Harbour with explosive
motor-boats, human torpedoes and aircraft, but failed to
reached the recently arrived ships.
30th - The second
Royal Navy submarine loss to Italian anti-submarine
forces during convoy attacks was "CACHALOT" while on passage from Malta to
Alexandria, rammed by torpedo boat "Papa".
AUGUST 1941
Malta Convoy - Operation 'Style' - Early in the month, two cruisers,
cruiser-minelayer "Manxman" and two destroyers
successfully carried reinforcements and supplies from
Gibraltar to Malta. On the way, cruiser
"Hermione" rammed and sank Italian submarine "TEMBIEN" southwest of Sicily on the 2nd.
18th - Submarine "P-32"
was
lost on mines off Tripoli as she
attempts to attack a convoy entering the port. "P.33"
was also lost around the same time in this
area, possibly on mines.
26th - As an
Italian battlefleet returned from a sortie against Force
H, submarine Triumph torpedoed and damaged
heavy cruiser "Bolzano" north of Sicily.
Battle of the Atlantic - Submarine "Severn" on
patrol for U-boats attacking HG convoys west of
Gibraltar, torpedoed and sank Italian submarine "BIANCHI" on the 7th.
SEPTEMBER 1941
24th-28th - Malta Convoy: Operation
'Halberd' - 'Halberd' sailed from Gibraltar with nine
transports. Force H, reinforced from the Home Fleet,
included "Nelson", "Rodney" and
"Prince of Wales" and air cover from "Ark
Royal". On the 26th the Italians sailed to
intercept but returned to base next day. South of
Sardinia on the 27th, "Nelson"
was damaged by an Italian aircraft
torpedo, and at the end of the day Force H turned back
for Gibraltar. Convoy and escort went on to reach Malta
on the 28th minus one transport lost to air attack. As
Force H returned, screening destroyers "Gurkha"
and "Legion" sank Italian submarine "ADUA" off the coast of Algeria on the
30th.
27th - Submarine
"Upright" sank Italian torpedo boat "ALBATROS" off Messina, northeast Sicily.
28th - Corvette
"Hyacinth" on patrol off Jaffa, Palestine, sank
Italian submarine "FISALIA".
Battle of the Atlantic
8th - As Italian
submarines patrolled to the west of Portugal for HG
convoys, "BARACCA"
was
depth charged and rammed by
destroyer "Croome". A second Italian submarine
may have been sunk later in the month.
21st - Destroyer
"Vimy" claimed to have sunk Italian submarine "MALASPINA" during attacks on Gibraltar/UK
convoy HG73. She may have been lost earlier through
unknown causes.
OCTOBER 1941
20th - Mines
previously laid by submarine "Rorqual" in the
Gulf of Athens sank Italian torpedo boats "ALDEBARAN" and "ALTAIR".
Late October -
Submarine "TETRARCH"
sailed from Malta for Gibraltar but fails
to arrive, presumed lost in the Italian minefields in the
Strait of Sicily.
Battle of the Atlantic - Two escorts and two U-boats were
lost in attacks on the UK/Gibraltar convoy routes. One of
the submarines was the Italian "FERRARIS"
on the
25th, damaged by a RAF
Catalina of No 202 Squadron and sent to the bottom by the
gunfire of escort destroyer "Lamerton".
NOVEMBER 1941
9th - Action off Cape Spartivento,
Southwest Italy - RAF reports of an Italian convoy in the Ionian Sea
making for North Africa led to British cruiser Force K
sailing from Malta. The convoy consisted of seven
transports escorted by six destroyers, with a distant
cruiser covering force. Early in the morning every one of
the transports and destroyer "FULMINE" were
sent to the bottom. Later, while
rescuing survivors, destroyer "LIBECCIO"
was sunk by submarine
"Upholder".
DECEMBER 1941
Declarations
of War - In a
series of diplomatic moves, numerous declarations of war
were made, including 11th-13th - Germany, Italy,
Rumania, Bulgaria and Hungary against the United States.
1st - Malta-based
Force K searching for Axis shipping encountered Italian
destroyer DA MOSTA north of Tripoli. She was sunk by cruisers
Aurora and Penelope and destroyer
Lively.
6th - Submarine
PERSEUS on
patrol off the west coast of Greece was mined and sunk
off Zante Island.
11th - Submarine
Truant sank Italian torpedo boat ALCIONE
north of Crete. On the
same day escort destroyer Farndale on passage
sighted and sank Italian submarine
CARACCIOLA on
a supply trip from Bardia on the Libyan side of the
border with Egypt.
13th -
Action off Cape Bon, Tunisia - Destroyers Legion,
Maori, Sikh and Dutch lsaac
Sweers sailed from Gibraltar to join the
Mediterranean Fleet at Alexandria. Off Cape Bon, Tunisia
they sighted two Italian 6in cruisers, DA
BARBIANO and DI
GIUSSANO
returning from an aborted mission to carry a deck cargo
of petrol to Tripoli. In a short night action and without
being seen, the destroyers quickly sank both cruisers
with gunfire and torpedoes. Italian loss of life was
heavy.
13th-20th - First Battle of Sirte and
Related Actions - Italian
convoy operations to Libya led to major Royal Navy losses
over just a few days. A first Axis convoy bound for
Benghazi set out on the 13th, covered by an Italian
battlefleet. On receiving the news, Rear-Adm Vian left
Alexandria with a cruiser force to join up with Force K
from Malta. On the evening of the 14th, submarine
Urge torpedoed and damaged battleship Vittorio
Veneto off the
Sicilian Strait of Messina and the Italians cancelled
that operation. The cruiser forces returned to their
bases but as they did Adm Vian's GALATEA
was sunk by U-557 and went
down off Alexandria. Adm Vian went out again late on the
15th to escort fast supply ship Breconshire
from Alexandria to Malta. On the 17th they met Force K
off the Gulf of Sirte, and shortly encountered Italian
battleships covering a second convoy, this time to
Tripoli. The two cruiser forces attacked and the Italians
withdrew in what became known as the First Battle of
Sirte. Breconshire reached Malta on the 18th
and Force K left harbour to search for the second convoy
still making for Tripoli. Early on the 19th off Tripoli,
the British force ran into an Italian minefield. Cruiser
NEPTUNE hit
three or four mines and sank with only one man surviving.
Aurora
was badly damaged and Penelope slightly. Trying to assist
Neptune, destroyer KANDAHAR
was mined and had to be scuttled the
following day. Out of a three cruiser and four destroyer
force, only three destroyers escaped damage.
19th - That morning
three Italian human torpedoes launched from submarine
Scire (Cdr Borghese) penetrated Alexandria
harbour. Their charges badly damaged battleships Queen
Elizabeth with
Adm Cunningham on board and Valiant. They both settled to the bottom
and the Mediterranean Fleet battle squadron ceased to
exist. News of the sinking was kept from the Italians.
1942
JANUARY 1942
Early January -
Submarine "TRIUMPH" sailed from Alexandria on 26th December for a
cloak-and-dagger landing near Athens before patrolling in
the Aegean. She reported the landing on the 30th, but
failed to rendezvous back there on the 9th and was
presumed mined off the island of Milo, southeast of the
Greek mainland.
5th - Italian
submarine "SAINT-BON"
was torpedeod and
sunk north of Sicily
by submarine "Upholder".
Malta - During the
month, Malta was resupplied by three small convoys coming
from the east. During this period the Italian Navy had
escorted two substantial convoys to North Africa in time
for Rommel's next offensive. Malta continued to be
heavily bombed for many months by the German and Italian
Air Forces.
30th - The second
Italian submarine loss in the month was "MEDUSA", torpedoed by "Thorn" in
the Gulf of Venice, in the far north of the Adriatic.
FEBRUARY 1942
13th - Two Royal
Navy submarines were lost. The first was "TEMPEST" which torpedoed a supply ship off
the Gulf of Taranto but was depth-charged by the escorts
including Italian torpedo boat "Circe", brought
to the surface and soon sunk.
23rd - Ten days
later "P-38"
attacked
a heavily defended
convoy off Tripoli and was also lost to the escorts'
counter-attack which again included Italian torpedo boat
"Circe".
MARCH 1942
14th - Italian
submarine "MILLO" was sunk off Calabria in the Ionian Sea by
submarine "Ultimatum". Two more were lost to
British "U" class submarines
17th - The second
was "GUGLIELMOTTI" also off Calabria, by
"Unbeaten".
18th - Finally "TRICHECO"
went
down off Brindisi in
the southern Adriatic torpedoed by "Upholder".
22nd - Second Battle of Sirte (map left) - Adm Vian sailed
on the 20th from Alexandria with
four fast supply ships for Malta escorted by cruisers
"Cleopatra", "Dido",
"Euryalus" and "Carlisle" plus
destroyers. Early on the 22nd, Italian battleship
"Littorio" with two heavy and one light cruiser
plus destroyers headed for the British force. In the
early afternoon the Italians were sighted to the north,
just off the Gulf of Sirte. The four main phases of the
battle lasted for a total of four hours. For much of this
time the convoy was heavily attacked from the air.
Starting around 15.00: (1) The three Italian cruisers
were driven off in a long-range gunnery duel with the
Royal Navy's 5.25in "Dido" class cruisers. (2)
The Italian cruisers returned, this time with
"Littorio". A series of attacks out of the
smoke by cruisers and destroyers held them off. (3)
Contrary to Adm Vian's expectations, the Italians worked
around the smokescreen to the west, suddenly appearing
only eight miles away. Torpedo attacks by four destroyers
were unsuccessful, and "Havock"
was disabled by a 15in shell. (4) The
Italian force continued trying to get round the smoke
and, in another destroyer torpedo attack, it was "Kingston's" turn to receive a 15in hit. As the
Italians turned north and away, the British cruisers went
in one last time. Just after the battle, severe storms
damaged ships of both sides and on the 23rd two of
the returning Italian destroyers foundered east of
Sicily. As for the convoy, all four transports including
the "Breconshire" were lost to air attack, two
off Malta and two in harbour before much of their cargo
could be off-loaded. As the Hunt class "SOUTHWOLD" stood by "Breconshire"
on the 24th, she hit a mine and sank off the
island. And on the 26th the returned destroyer "LEGION" and submarine "P-39"
were lost in air-raids.
APRIL 1942
1st - Submarine
"Urge" sank Italian cruiser "BANDE
NERE" north of
Sicily. This was a welcome success in a month that saw
heavy Royal Navy losses including "Urge"
herself.
Malta - By now
Malta had almost ceased to be of any value as a base for
attacking Rommel's supply lines, and most of his
transports were getting through. The German and Italian
bombing led to the loss, directly and indirectly, of
numerous ships including four destroyers and four
submarines. 1st - Submarines "P-36" and "PANDORA"
were sunk in Malta and others of the 10th
Flotilla damaged. "Pandora" had only recently
arrived from Gibraltar on a supply trip. 4th -
Greek submarine "GLAVKOS" was also sunk in Malta. 5th -
Destroyer "GALLANT" wrecked in Malta. She was badly damaged in
January 1941 and had not been repaired. 6th - A
number of ships managed to escape. "HAVOCK" tried to reach Gibraltar but ran
aground and was wrecked near Cape Bon, Tunisia. She was
later torpedoed by an Italian submarine. 9th -
Destroyer "LANCE" in dry dock in Malta was badly damaged and
never repaired. 11th - Destroyer "KINGSTON"
was bombed and sunk in harbour.
14th - 10th
Flotilla lost its most famous boat when
"UPHOLDER"
(Lt-Cdr Wanklyn VC) was lost. She attacked a convoy
northeast of Tripoli and was presumed sunk in the
counter-attack by destroyer escort "Pegaso".
27th - By this time
the 10th Submarine Flotilla had been ordered to leave
Malta. "URGE"
sailed
for Alexandria on the
27th, but failed to arrive, probably lost in an Italian
minefield.
MAY 1942
29th -
In a series of attacks on convoys bound for North Africa,
submarine "Turbulent" sank three transports in
May and on the 29th torpedoed and sank escorting Italian
destroyer "PESSAGNO" northwest of Benghazi.
JUNE 1942
12th-16th - Malta Convoys 'Harpoon' from
Gibraltar, 'Vigorous' from Alexandria -
Six escorted merchantmen passed
through the Strait of Gibraltar covered by battleship
"Malaya", carriers "Argus" and
"Eagle", cruisers "Kenya",
"Charybdis", "Liverpool" and
destroyers - this force comprised Operation
'Harpoon'. Attacks by Italian aircraft on the 14th led to
the first merchant ship going down south of Sardinia. "Liverpool"
was
also damaged and had
to return. Later that day at the entrance to the Strait
of Sicily, the big ship cover force turned back. In the
morning of the 15th, south of Pantelleria, an
Italian two-cruiser squadron in conjunction with Italian
and German aircraft attacked the by-now lightly defended
convoy. The five escorting fleet destroyers headed for
the Italians, but "Bedouin" and "Partridge"
were disabled by gunfire. Three more
merchantmen were lost to bombing attacks and Italian
torpedo aircraft finished off BEDOUIN. Later that evening, as the
seriously depleted convoy approached Malta, it ran into
an Italian minefield. Two destroyers and the fifth supply
ship were damaged, but Polish escort destroyer KUJAWIAK
was
sunk. Just two of 'Harpoon's' six
ships reached Malta for the loss of two destroyers and
serious damage to three more and a cruiser.
Meanwhile, the Operation
'Vigorous' force
of 11 ships and their escorts sailed from Haifa and Port
Said, and were met on the 13th off Tobruk by Adm Vian
with seven light cruisers and 17 destroyers. By the 14th,
two ships had been lost to air attacks and two more
damaged. That evening Vian learnt an Italian battlefleet
with two battleships, two heavy and two light cruisers
plus destroyers had sailed south from Taranto. The
chances of driving them off were slim. Early on the 15th
the first of five (1-5) course reversals
were made as 'Vigorous' tried to break through to Malta.
As the convoy now headed back (1), German E-boats
from Derna launched torpedo strikes. Cruiser "Newcastle"
was
damaged by
"S-56" and destroyer HASTY sunk by "S-55". Around
07.00, when the Italian fleet was 200 miles to the
northwest, the convoy turned back for Malta (2).
Attacks by Malta-based aircraft were made on the main
Italian fleet without serious effect, although they
disabled heavy cruiser "TRENTO" which was finished off by
submarine "Umbra". Between 09.40 and noon on
the 15th, two more course reversals (3 & 4) were
made so that once again the convoy was bound for Malta.
All afternoon air attacks were mounted; and south of
Crete, cruiser "Birmingham"
was damaged and escort destroyer AIREDALE sunk by Ju87 Stukas. The convoy
was now down to six ships when Australian destroyer "Nestor" was
badly damaged. That evening
'Vigorous' finally turned back for Alexandria (course
reversal 5). Now into the early hours of the 16th,
cruiser HERMIONE
was torpedoed and sunk by "U-205" and NESTOR
had to be scuttled. At this time, as the
Italian fleet headed back for Taranto, a RAF Wellington
from Malta torpedoed and damaged battleship "Littorio". None of the 'Vigorous' ships
reached Malta. One cruiser, three destroyers and two
merchant ships had been lost in the attempt.