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The Dubrovnik (later Premuda and TA 32) was a destroyer built for the Yugoslav Royal Navy in the 1930s. The ship was named after the city of Dubrovnik. She was captured by the Italian Navy in April 1941 following the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia. The ship was in turn captured by the Germans in September 1943 after the Italian armistice and scuttled in April 1945.
[edit] DesignThe ship was built by Yarrow Shipbuilders in Glasgow and was the largest destroyer yet built. The Yugoslavs demanded a destroyer that was faster and better armed than any likely Italian opponent. The guns were supplied by the Czech company Skoda and the ship had a heavy anti-aircraft armament for the time. The ship was laid down on 10 June 1930, launched 12 October 1931 and commissioned in May 1932. [edit]The ship took King Alexander of Yugoslavia on a state visit to France in 1934. She then had the task of returning his body home after he was assassinated. The ship was captured at Kotor on 17 April 1941. [edit]The ship was renamed Premuda by the Regia Marina and re-fitted. The 84 mm guns were removed and replaced by 37 mm guns and a new director/rangefinder was fitted. She served on convoys to North Africa and was involved in opposing Operation Harpoon. The Premuda was under refit in Genoa at the time of the Italian Armistice and was captured by the Germans on 8 September 1943. [edit] Kriegsmarine serviceThe Germans re-armed the ship with three 105 mm guns and converted her into a radar picket or fighter control ship with a large Freya type radar installation aft. The radar was later replaced by a fourth 105 mm gun and torpedo tubes. The ship was renamed TA 32 and was the flagship of the 10th Flotilla based in Genoa and active in the Ligurian Sea. She fought an action with British destroyers in March 1945 and was scuttled on 25 April 1945 shortly before Genoa was captured by the Allies. [edit] Specification (as refitted)
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Categories: Destroyers of the Yugoslav Royal Navy | Destroyers of the United Kingdom | Clyde-built ships | 1931 ships | Unique destroyers | World War II destroyers of Yugoslavia | Destroyers of the Regia Marina | World War II destroyers of Italy | Destroyers of the Kriegsmarine | World War II destroyers of Germany | Dubrovnik | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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