-
primarily by
battleships. The
Naval Treaties of the 1920s and 1930s
limited the
number of
battleships,
though technical innovation in
battleship design continued...
- The four Iowa-class
ships were the last
battleships commissioned in the U.S. Navy. All
older U.S.
battleships were
decommissioned by 1947 and stricken...
- Pre-dreadnought
battleships were sea-going
battleships built from the mid- to late- 1880s to the
early 1900s.
Their designs were
conceived before the appearance...
- The
United States Navy
began the
construction of
battleships with USS Texas in 1892,
although its
first ship to be
designated as such was USS Indiana...
- of
battleships includes all
battleships built between 1859 and 1946,
listed alphabetically. The
boundary between ironclads and the
first battleships, the...
-
launched in 1906 that
similar battleships built after her were
referred to as "dreadnoughts", and
earlier battleships became known as pre-dreadnoughts...
- for a
total of six
battleships and six
armored cruisers (the Six-Six Fleet). The two
ships of the
Shikishima class and the
battleships Asahi and Mikasa...
-
Allied battleships.[citation needed] Both
ships of the
class survived the war, but were s****ped in 1948–1949
along with all
other British battleships except...
-
early World War I-era
dreadnought battleships were
typically built with low
design speeds, so the term "fast
battleship" is
applied to a
design which is...
-
sister ship Kongō, the
battleship Nagato, and the "super
battleships"
Yamato and Musashi, the
largest and most
powerful battleships ever built, supported...