Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Greek submarine Xifias (1911)

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Ordered
  
September 1910

Commissioned
  
March 1913

Class and type
  
Schneider-Laubeuf

Launched
  
1913

Laid down
  
1911

Decommissioned
  
1920

Construction started
  
1911

Length
  
50 m

Greek submarine Xifias (1911) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Builder
  
Schneider Shipyards, Toulon

Xifias (Greek: Ξιφίας, "swordfish") was a Greek submarine (actually called a "submersible", καταδυόμενον, according to the then current French terminology) which served during World War I. It was the third submarine to enter service in the Greek navy, and the second and last vessel of the Delfin class. It was taken over by the French in 1916, and decommissioned in 1920 without seeing action.

Contents

History

Along with its sister ship Delfin, the Xifias was ordered in 1910 from the Toulon shipyards in France. It was delivered to the Royal Hellenic Navy in March 1913, shortly after the end of the First Balkan War. It was thus unable to participate in any naval operations against the Ottoman fleet. Like its sister ship, Xifias was plagued by mechanical problems and had insufficient operational capabilities; its use was minimal in the years that followed. Xifias and the rest of the Greek fleet were confiscated by the French in 1916, during the Greek National Schism. When the ships were returned in 1919, the two submarines were in a bad shape, and the following year, they were decommissioned.

Tradition

A second vessel of the Hellenic Navy has received the name Xifias: the British U class submarine HMS Untiring (P59), which was leased to Greece in 1945–1952.

References

Greek submarine Xifias (1911) Wikipedia