Battle-class destroyers

E926969

The Battle-class destroyers were a group of large, fast, and heavily armed British warships built during and after World War II to provide enhanced anti-aircraft and fleet escort capabilities for the Royal Navy.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Battle-class destroyers canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (48)

Predicate Object
instanceOf destroyer class
warship class
armamentType anti-aircraft guns
depth charges
dual-purpose main guns
torpedoes
builtAfter World War II NERFINISHED
builtDuring World War II NERFINISHED
conflict World War II
surface form: Second World War
countryOfOrigin United Kingdom
designedBy Royal Navy NERFINISHED
designedFor carrier task force screening
enhanced anti-aircraft capability
ocean escort duties
designedIn 1940s
designedToCounter modern high-speed aircraft
designedToReplace pre-war destroyer designs
era World War II
surface form: World War II era

early Cold War era
followedBy Daring-class destroyer NERFINISHED
hasCharacteristic advanced fire-control for the time
fast
heavily armed
large for a destroyer
long-range escort capability
strong anti-aircraft armament
twin 4.5-inch gun turrets
hasSubclass 1942 Battle-class destroyer
1943 Battle-class destroyer
navalArchitectureFeature flush deck design
twin-gun turrets forward and aft
navalService Royal Navy NERFINISHED
notableFor heavy anti-aircraft battery for its size
improved seakeeping over earlier British destroyers
operator Royal Navy
partOf Royal Navy destroyer force
precededBy J-, K- and N-class destroyers
primaryRole anti-aircraft warfare
fleet escort
propulsion steam turbines
serviceEntryPeriod late 1940s
mid-1940s
usedFor anti-submarine screening
convoy escort
fleet air defence
surface action
usedIn Cold War naval deployments NERFINISHED
post-war Royal Navy operations

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Royal Navy destroyers hasSubclass Battle-class destroyers