Military Wiki
NMS Fulgerul
Fulgerul foto original 01
Fulgerul at sea
Class overview
Name: Fulgerul gunboat
Builders:
Operators: Romanian Naval Forces
Completed: 1
Retired: 1
Career
Ordered: 1873
Cost: 130,000 lei
Laid down: 1873
Launched: 1873
Christened: 1874
Completed: 1874
Commissioned: 1874
Decommissioned: 1886
Fate: Scrapped, 1968
General characteristics
Type: Gunboat
Displacement: 90 tons
Length: 25 meters
Beam: 4.80 meters
Draught: 1.30 meters
Propulsion: 2 steam engines, 2 shafts
Speed: 7 knots
Complement: 35
Armament:

Initial

  • 1 x 90 mm Krupp gun

Subsequent

  • 2 x 57 mm Nordenfelt guns
  • 2 x 11.43 mm machine guns
Service record
Operations: Romanian War of Independence

NMS Fulgerul a French-built gunboat, the first seagoing warship of the Romanian Navy.[citation needed] She was built as an unarmed vessel in Toulon, France in 1873 and fitted with her armament in Romania, after her arrival, in April 1874. This was done in order to allow her passage through the Turkish straits, as the Ottoman Empire refused to allow passage for any foreign armed warship. Initially, her armament consisted of one 90 mm Krupp gun in a cylindrical mild steel turret. However, after the turret was pierced by a bullet during a training exercise, it was decided to leave the gun uncovered. Eventually, her armament was replaced by two 57 mm Nordenfelt guns and two 11.43 mm machine guns. She was christened Fulgerul and took part in the Romanian War of Independence, fighting alongside other Romanian gunboats against Ottoman ships on the Danube.[1] During World War I, she was used as an oil tanker. After the war, she was handed over to the Galați shipyard, where she would remain until 1968, when she was scrapped.[2]

References[]

  1. Király, Béla K.; Rothenberg, Gunther Erich (1985). War and Society in East Central Europe: Insurrections wars and the eastern crisis in the 1870s. War and Society in East Central Europe. 17. Brooklyn College Press. pp. 104. ISBN 9780880330909. https://books.google.com/books?id=M2HfAAAAMAAJ&q=&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwiux82TxenNAhXLZiYKHT4dClsQ6AEIJzAC. 
  2. Lieutenant-Commander Constantin Ciuchi, History of the Romanian Navy across 18 centuries, p. 160-162 (in Romanian)
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