When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Yamato-class battleship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamato-class_battleship

    The Yamato-class battleships (大和型戦艦, Yamato-gata senkan) were two battleships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, Yamato and Musashi, laid down leading up to the Second World War and completed as designed. A third hull, laid down in 1940, was converted to the aircraft carrier Shinano during construction.

  3. Japanese battleship Musashi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_battleship_Musashi

    Musashi and Yamato in Truk Lagoon in early 1943. Musashi was commissioned at Nagasaki on 5 August 1942, and assigned to the 1st Battleship Division, together with Yamato, Nagato and Mutsu. [22] Beginning five days later, the ship conducted machinery and aircraft-handling trials near Hashirajima. Her secondary armament of twelve 127 mm guns, 12 ...

  4. List of battleships of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_battleships_of_Japan

    The Yamato-class battleships (大和型戦艦, Yamato-gata senkan) were built at the beginning of the Pacific War. The ships were the largest and most heavily armed battleships ever constructed. [154] Two ships (Yamato and Musashi) were completed as battleships, while a third was converted to an aircraft carrier during construction. A fourth ...

  5. Japanese battleship Yamato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_battleship_Yamato

    Musashi took over as the Combined Fleet flagship in early 1943, and Yamato spent the rest of the year moving between the major Japanese naval bases of Truk and Kure in response to American threats. In December 1943, Yamato was torpedoed by an American submarine which necessitated repairs at Kure, where she was refitted with additional anti ...

  6. Requiem for Battleship Yamato - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Requiem_for_Battleship_Yamato

    Requiem for Battleship Yamato (戦艦大和ノ最期, lit. The Last Days of the Battleship Yamato (Senkan Yamato no Saigo)) is a book by Mitsuru Yoshida . It tells the story of the Japanese battleship Yamato 's last battle, Operation Ten-Go in 1945, when the ship was sunk, which the author experienced himself.

  7. Kantai Kessen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kantai_Kessen

    Yamato near the completion of her fitting out, 20 September 1941. The Pearl Harbor raid reflected a very different strategy from the one for which the IJN had been planning and training for the preceding 30 years. This was the result of the views and actions of a single man—Isoroku Yamamoto, who assumed command of the Combined Fleet in August ...

  8. Niten Ichi-ryū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niten_Ichi-ryū

    Hyohō Niten Ichi-ryū (兵法 二天 一流), which can be loosely translated as "the school of the strategy of two heavens as one", is a koryū (ancient school), transmitting a style of classical Japanese swordsmanship conceived by Miyamoto Musashi.

  9. Battle of Leyte Gulf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Leyte_Gulf

    The only major operation by these surface ships between the Battle for Leyte Gulf and the Japanese surrender was the suicidal sortie in April 1945 (part of Operation Ten-Go), in which the battleship Yamato and her escorts were destroyed by American carrier aircraft. The first use of kamikaze aircraft took place following the Leyte landings.