Ottoman ironclad Muin-i Zafer

Muin-i Zafer (Ottoman Turkish: Aid to Triumph) was the second of two casemate ships built for the Ottoman Navy in the late 1860s.

Design


Muin-i Zafer was 68.9 m long between perpendiculars, with a beam of 10.9 m and a draft of 5 m. The hull was constructed with iron, incorporated a partial double bottom, and displaced 2362 MT normally and 1399 MT BOM. She had a crew of 15 officers and 130 enlisted men.

The ship was powered by a single horizontal compound engine which drove one screw propeller. Steam was provided by four coal-fired box boilers that were trunked into a single funnel amidships. The engine was rated at 2200 ihp and produced a top speed of 12 kn, though by 1877 she was only capable of 10 kn. Decades of poor maintenance had reduced the ship's speed to 8 kn by 1892. Muin-i Zafer carried 220 MT of coal. A supplementary brigantine rig was also fitted.

The ship was armed with a battery of four 230 mm muzzle loading guns mounted in a central, armored casemate, two guns per side. The guns were positioned so as to allow any two to fire directly ahead, astern, or to either broadside. The ship's armored belt was 5 to 6 in thick, with the thicker portion above the waterline and the thinner below. The belt was capped with 3 in thick transverse bulkhead at either end. The casemate had heavy armor protection, with the gun battery protected by 150 mm of iron plating. The hull had a complete armored belt at the waterline, which extended .6 m (2 ft) above the line and 1.2 m (4 ft) below.

Service history
Muin-i Zafer was ordered in 1867 from the Samuda Brothers shipyard in Cubitt Town, London. The keel for the ship was laid down in 1868 and she was launched in June 1869. She conducted sea trials in 1870 and was commissioned into the Ottoman fleet later that year.

Russo-Turkish War
The Ottoman fleet began mobilizing in September 1876 to begun prepare for a conflict with Russia, as tensions with the country had been growing for several years, an insurrection had begun in Ottoman Bosnia in mid-1875, and Serbia had declared war on the Ottoman Empire in July 1876. In December 1876, Muin-i Zafer and her sister ship OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Avnillah were transferred to Batumi owing to the increasingly active Russian naval forces in the area. The Russo-Turkish War began on 24 April 1877 with a Russian declaration of war. Muin-i Zafer spent the war in the Black Sea squadron, with the bulk of the Ottoman ironclad fleet. The eight ironclads of the Ottoman fleet in the Black Sea, commanded by Hobart Pasha, was vastly superior to the Russian Black Sea Fleet; the only ironclads the Russians possessed there were RUSSIAN MONITOR Vitse-admiral Popov and RUSSIAN MONITOR Novgorod, circular vessels that had proved to be useless in service.

The presence of the fleet did force the Russians to keep two corps in reserve for coastal defense, but the Ottoman high command failed to make use of its naval superiority in a more meaningful way, particularly to hinder the Russian advance into the Balkans. Hobart Pasha took the fleet to the western Black Sea, where he was able to make a more aggressive use of it to support the Ottoman forces battling the Russians in the Caucasus. The fleet bombarded Poti and assisted in the defense of Batumi. On 14 May 1877, an Ottoman squadron consisting of Muin-i Zafer, Avnillah, OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Necm-i Şevket, OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Feth-i Bülend, OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Mukaddeme-i Hayir, and OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Iclaliye bombarded Russian positions around the Black Sea port of Sokhumi before landing infantry and arming the local populace to start an uprising against the Russians. The Ottomans captured Sokhumi two days later. By June, Muin-i Zafer had been transferred to Sulina at the mouth of the Danube, along with the ironclads OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Hifz-ur Rahman and OTTOMAN IRONCLAD Asar-i Şevket. The ships were tasked with defending the seaward approach to the port, supporting three coastal fortifications.

Later career


After the end of the war in 1878, the ship was laid up in Constantinople; she did not see further activity for the next twenty years. During this period, the ship was modernized slightly. In 1882, a pair of 87 mm breech-loading guns manufactured by Krupp were added. At some point, she also received new Scotch marine boilers, and her brigantine rig was removed, with heavy military masts installed in its place. The Ottomans planned to further strengthen the ship's armament with a pair of 63 mm Krupp guns, two 37 mm Hotchkiss revolver cannon, two 25.4 mm guns, also manufactured by Hotchkiss, and a 450 mm torpedo tube, but the plan came to nothing.

At the start of the Greco-Turkish War in February 1897, the Ottomans inspected the fleet and found that almost all of the vessels, including Avnillah, to be completely unfit for combat against the Greek Navy. Many of the ships have rotted hulls and their crews are poorly trained. Through April and May, the Ottoman fleet made several sorties into the Aegean Sea in an attempt to raise morale among the ships' crews, though the Ottomans had no intention of attacking Greek forces. The condition of the Ottoman fleet could not be concealed from foreign observers, which proved to be an embarrassment for the government and finally forced Sultan Abdul Hamid II to authorize a modernization program, which recommended that the ironclads be modernized in foreign shipyards. Following a lengthy process of negotiations, Krupp received the contract to rebuild Muin-i Zafer on 11 August 1900, along with several other warships. By December 1902, however, Krupp withdrew from the deal and the Italian firm Gio. Ansaldo & C. took over the project. By 1906, the work was completed. Her old muzzle-loading guns were replaced with new 150 mm Krupp 40-caliber guns, and a new light battery consisting of six 75 mm quick-firing (QF) Krupp guns, ten 57 mm QF Krupp guns, and two 47 mm QF Krupp guns.

Muin-i Zafer was reduced to a stationary ship in İzmir in 1910, at which point her armament was reduced to just two of the 75 mm guns and four 57 mm guns. In September 1911, Italy declared war on the Ottoman Empire, initiating the Italo-Turkish War. At the start of the war, Muin-i Zafer was stationed as a guard ship in Beirut. She left shortly after the onset of hostilities, however, and on 30 September arrived in Port Said at the northern end of the Suez Canal. There, she was disarmed and her guns were taken ashore to strengthen the local defenses. In 1913, she became a torpedo training ship based in Constantinople. The ship was converted into a floating barracks in 1920 stationed in İzmit. In 1928, the vessel was converted again, into a depot ship for submarines at Erdek. She served in that capacity for four years before being decommissioned in 1932; she was broken up for scrap in 1934.