Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Japanese cruiser Soya

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Name
  
Soya

Laid down
  
31 October 1899

Commissioned
  
9 July 1907

Launched
  
2 January 1900

Builder
  
William Cramp & Sons

Ordered
  
1898

Completed
  
14 January 1901

Construction started
  
31 October 1899

Draft
  
6.1 m

Japanese cruiser Soya httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Acquired
  
by Japan as prize of war, 1904

Soya (宗谷) was a protected cruiser in the Imperial Japanese Navy, acquired as a prize of war during the Russo-Japanese War from the Imperial Russian Navy, where it was originally known as the Russian cruiser Varyag.

Contents

Background

Varyag was built in the United States by William Cramp and Sons of Philadelphia for the Imperial Russian Navy. It was stationed in Korea in 1904, and involved in the opening Battle of Chemulpo Bay of the Russo-Japanese War. After suffering heavy damage from the unequal battle with nine Japanese cruisers, Varyag was scuttled by its crew on 9 February 1904.

After the Russo-Japanese War, the Japanese raised the badly damaged wreck from Chemulpo harbor, repaired it, and commissioned it into the Imperial Japanese Navy as the 2nd class cruiser Soya on 9 July 1907. Its new name was taken from the northernmost cape of Hokkaidō, Soya Misaki.

Service life

After being placed into Japanese service as a 3rd class cruiser, Soya was used primarily for training duties. From 14 March 1909 to 7 August 1909, it made a long distance navigational and officer cadet training cruise to Hawaii and North America. It repeated this training cruise every year until 1913.

During World War I Russia and Japan became allies and Soya (along with several other vessels) was transferred back to Russia at Vladivostok on 5 April 1916, and its original name of Varyag restored.

References

Japanese cruiser Soya Wikipedia