Italian destroyer Audace (1916)


The Italian destroyer Audace was originally ordered by Japan from Yarrow Shipbuilders in Scotland under the name of Kawakaze, but was transferred to Italy in 1916 while still under construction. She served as the command ship for the radio-controlled target ship in 1937–1940 and then was rearmed for convoy escort and patrolling duties when World War II began. Audace was captured by the Germans in 1943 and used by them as a minelayer and escort ship in the Adriatic Sea until she was sunk by a pair of British destroyers in late 1944.

Design and description

Audace had a length between perpendiculars of and an overall length of. She had a beam of and a draft of. The ship displaced at normal load, and at deep load. Her complement was 5 officers and 113 enlisted men.
The ship was powered by two Brown-Curtis steam turbines, each driving one propeller shaft using steam supplied by 3 Yarrow boilers. Designed for a maximum output of and a speed of, Audace handily exceeded this, reaching a speed of during her sea trials while lightly loaded. Her intended German-built diesel cruising engines were not delivered because of the war. She had a cruising range of at a speed of and at a speed of.
Only two quick-firing 39-caliber two-pounder anti-aircraft guns had been installed before the ship was transferred to Italy in 1916. The gun fired its,, high-explosive shells at a muzzle velocity of. The ship's main armament consisted of seven QF Cannon 76/40 Model 1916 guns in single mounts. This gun fired a projectile at a muzzle velocity of. Audace was also equipped with four torpedo tubes in twin mounts, one on each broadside.

Construction and career

The Imperial Japanese Navy ordered a pair of s from the British Yarrow Shipbuilders in 1913, and Kawakaze was laid down on 1 October 1913 at their Scotstoun shipyard. Construction was delayed by a backlog of previous orders and then by the outbreak of World War I in August 1914. The Italians, desperately short of destroyers, began negotiations with the Japanese to acquire Kawakaze and succeeded on 3 July 1916 when they agreed to transfer the ship. The Regia Marina named their new acquisition Intrepido two days later, but renamed her Audace on 25 September. She was launched on 27 September and completed on 1 March 1917. She saw action in the Adriatic Sea during World War I, and was the first Italian ship to enter Trieste at the end of the war, celebrating the final union of the city with Italy.
Audace was reclassified as a torpedo boat on 1 September 1929 and was modified to serve as the command ship of the radio-controlled target ship San Marco from 1937–40. She was rearmed in 1940 for escort duties with her main armament reduced to three 102-millimeter guns. In 1943 one 102-millimeter gun and the two 2-pounder AA guns were replaced by five /65 Breda Model 35 autocannon in single mounts. Between 1940 and 1943 she was mostly used as an escort in the Adriatic Sea.
The ship left Trieste on 9 September 1943, following the Italian Armistice and the beginning of Operation Achse, intending to reach an Italian or Allied-controlled port in southern Italy; but engine problems forced her to make for Venice, where she was captured on 12 September when the Germans occupied the city. She was then commissioned into the Kriegsmarine and renamed TA20. The Germans augmented her anti-aircraft armament to 20 Breda guns in 10 twin mounts and assigned her to escort and minelaying work in the Adriatic Sea. On 15 March 1944, she laid a minefield south of Ancona and others east of San Giorgio on the night of 17/18 and 29 March. The British destroyers and ambushed and sank TA20 and two accompanying corvettes on 1 November south of Lussino in the Adriatic.