12
they had a very small army and only had 23 battleships
17 because only Germany had them but the triple entente had 29 because only Britain had dreadnaughts this is data from ww1
Many large battleships and cruisers from the British, US, Canadian, and Australian navies fired on Nazi defences on D Day. The Royal Navy even brought some of their WW1 battleships out of mothballs just for D Day.
See website: WW1 for a itemized list
lots of battleships and cruisers and the British naval force destroyed the German naval force and was number 1
Britain needed the battleships to convoy goods across the atlantic They were not "given" to Britain at all, but transferred in exchange for use of British bases. They were not battleships but old destroyers from the latter years of WW1. On average they took 18 months in a dockyard to make them seaworthy enough for convoy protection.
The Mission (purpose) of battleships was to fight a decisive fleet action. Only ONCE did they ever complete that purpose; at the Battle of tsushima on May 27, 1905. They failed to fight a decisive sea action in WW1; and they were replaced by the aircraft carrier in WW2. The carriers fought decisive duels in WW2, not the battleships. The ONE time they were used, as designed by the architects & engineers, did result in the construction of HMS Dreadnaught, which was launched in 1906; thus starting the naval arms race which resulted in WW1.
3030
yes
No, Britain did not build any battleships for Turkey during World War 1. However, they did build and deliver two dreadnought battleships for the Ottoman Empire (which included present-day Turkey) in the years leading up to the war. These were the Sultan Osman I and Reşadiye, which were both commissioned in 1914.
July 28, 1914
WW1 started in 1914