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Published byAlexander Phillips Modified over 11 years ago
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A map showing the location of the Battle of Jutland
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Diagram of the Battle of Jutland Note 1 Almost all the guns of the Grand Fleet could be brought to bear on the German ships 2 Only the forward guns of the High Seas Fleet could fire at the British 3 Ships further back in the German line could not reach the British ships with their guns 4 The ships shown here do not represent the actual numbers involved
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There seems to be something wrong with our bloody ships today, complained Admiral Beatty. The battle cruiser HMS Invincible lies broken in two by a single German shell which exploded a gun turrets magazine. All but six of the 1031 crew perished with her.
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The losses and damage to both sides were... of no importance. The balance of naval power was not remotely affected. What alone mattered was that on 1 June 1916 the [British] Grand Fleet was scouring the North Sea seeking its enemy. The German Fleet was not. It was once more at rest in its harbour. A modern view of the Battle of Jutland, adapted from T. Wilson, The Myriad Faces of War, 1986
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The few surface naval clashes which did occur (e.g. Jutland) were strategically unimportant, confirming the Allied control of the seaways... It was not a form of war which promised swift victories. Adapted from P. Kennedy, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers, 1988
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