List of Austro-Hungarian U-boats

The Austro-Hungarian Navy (Kaiserliche und Königliche Kriegsmarine, shortened to k.u.k. Kriegsmarine) built a series of U-boats between 1907 and 1918 to defend its coastline and project naval power into the Adriatic and Mediterranean Seas in wartime. With the establishment of the Austrian Naval League in September 1904 and the appointment of Vice-Admiral Rudolf Montecuccoli to the post of Chief of the Naval Section of the War Ministry in October that same year, the k.u.k. Kriegsmarine began a program of naval expansion befitting a Great Power.[1] Montecuccoli immediately pursued the efforts championed by his predecessor, Admiral Hermann von Spaun, and pushed to greatly expand and modernize the Austro-Hungarian Navy. By the spring of 1905, Montecuccoli envisioned a modern Austrian fleet of 12 battleships, four armoured cruisers, eight scout cruisers, 18 destroyers, 36 high seas torpedo craft, and six submarines.[2]

The Austro-Hungarian U-boat fleet during the First World War mainly consisted of German designs built under licence and purchased units transported by rail from Germany's northern shipyards to the Austrian ports on the Adriatic Sea. They served throughout the war against Italian, French and British shipping in the Mediterranean Sea with some success, losing 8 of the 28 boats in service in return. Following the end of the war in 1918, all Austrian submarines were surrendered to the Entente powers, who disposed of them individually. As both Austria and Hungary became landlocked in the aftermath of the war, no Austrian or Hungarian submarines (or any other naval vessels) have been commissioned since.

In some sources Austro-Hungarian U-boats are referenced with Roman numerals as a way to distinguish them from German U-boats with similar numbers, but the Austro-Hungarian Navy itself used Arabic numerals. There are gaps in the numbering for several reasons. One series of Austro-Hungarian U-boats under construction in Germany was sold and commissioned into the Imperial German Navy. In other cases, U-boats commissioned into the Imperial German Navy were temporarily assigned Austro-Hungarian numbers when they operated in the Mediterranean. One final reason, in the case of the unassigned U-13, was superstition.

Austrian Red Cross WWI Medal 1915, picturing U 5 and U 12

Austro-Hungarian U-boats

Commissioned

Other

Submarines on which construction was begun but which were not completed or commissioned during World War I are included in this table.

German U-boats operating under the Austro-Hungarian flag

After Italy had entered World War I by declaring war on Austria-Hungary on 23 May 1915, Germany felt treaty-bound to support the Austrians in attacks against Italian ships, even though Germany and Italy were not officially at war. As a result, German U-boats operating in Mediterranean were assigned Austro-Hungarian numbers and flags. In some cases the same Austro-Hungarian numbers were assigned to different German U-boats. After 28 August 1916, when Germany and Italy were officially at war, the practice continued, primarily to avoid charges of flag misuse. The practice was largely ended by 1 October 1916 except for a few large U-boats that continued using Austro-Hungarian numbers.[3]

German U-boats under the Austro-Hungarian flag[3]
Austro-Hungarian
name
German U-boat name(s)
SM U-7SM UB-7
SM U-8SM UB-8
SM U-9SM UB-3[4][Note 1]
SM U-18SM UC-14
SM U-19SM UC-15
SM U-24SM UC-12
SM U-25SM UC-13
SM U-26SM UB-14
SM U-33SM U-33
SM U-34SM U-34
SM U-35SM U-35
SM U-36SM U-21
SM U-47
SM U-37SM U-32
SM U-38SM U-38
SM U-39SM U-39
SM U-42SM UB-42
SM U-44SM UB-44
SM U-45SM UB-45
SM U-46SM UB-46
SM U-54SM UB-128
SM U-55SM UB-129
SM U-56SM UB-130
SM U-57SM UB-131
SM U-58SM UB-132
SM U-60SM UC-20
SM U-62SM UC-22
SM U-63SM UC-23
SM UC-63
SM U-64SM U-64
SM U-65SM U-65
SM U-66SM UB-66
SM UC-66
SM U-67SM UB-67
SM U-68SM UB-68
SM U-69SM UB-69
SM UC-69
SM U-70SM UB-70
SM U-71SM UB-71
SM U-72SM U-72
SM U-73SM U-73
SM U-74SM UC-34
SM U-75SM UC-35
SM U-77SM UC-37
SM U-78SM UC-16
SM UC-38
SM U-79SM UB-48
SM U-80SM UB-49
SM U-81SM UB-50
SM U-82SM UB-51
SM U-83SM U-63
SM UB-52
SM UC-20
SM UC-23
SM U-88SM UC-24
SM U-89SM UC-25
SM U-92SM UC-73
SM U-93SM UC-74
SM U-94SM UC-52
SM U-95SM UC-53
SM U-96SM UC-54
SM U-97SM UB-105
SM U-99SM UC-103
SM U-110SM UC-108
SM U-133SM UB-133
SM U-134SM UB-134
SM U-135SM UB-135
SM U-146SM UB-146
SM U-147SM UB-147

Notes

References

Bibliography