The Battle of Cape Spada (Battaglia di Capo Spada) was a naval battle between the Royal Navy and the during the Battle of the Mediterranean in the second World War. It took place during the morning of 19 July 1940 off Cape Spada, the north-western extremity of Crete.

The Italian (2nd Cruiser Division) comprised the fast light cruisers and . In a meeting encounter it engaged the Royal Navy's 2nd Destroyer Flotilla and the independently sailing light cruiser and destroyer HMS Havock.

During the battle Bartolomeo Colleoni was sunk and Giovanni delle Bande Nere damaged, with minor damage inflicted on Sydney. There were 555 survivors from Bartolomeo Colleoni but 121 men were killed. was mortally wounded and died on 23 July.

Prelude

The action occurred during a relocation of the 2nd Cruiser Division to Leros, whence it was supposed to conduct raids on Allied shipping passing the Aegean. During the move from Tripoli to Leros, an Italian colony in the Dodecanese Islands, the two Italian cruisers encountered the Royal Navy's 2nd Destroyer Flotilla and began a high-speed chase.

The Royal Navy forces were commanded by Captain John Collins (Royal Australian Navy, RAN) aboard the light cruiser with the her escort and the 2nd Destroyer Flotilla consisting of H-class destroyers (escort), , , and the similar . The Italian (2nd Cruiser Division) (Vice-Admiral) Ferdinando Casardi, comprised the fast light cruisers (Admiral's ship) and .

Battle

When the Italians encountered the British destroyers at about 07:30 (06.30 Italian time), Sydney and Havock were to the north on a sweep for submarines. The other destroyers led the Italian cruisers on a chase northwards to give Sydney time to come to the rescue. Sydney sighted the Italians at 08:26, opening fire at 08:29, and the Italian cruisers turned away to the south-west. In the chase that followed, Bartolomeo Colleoni was hit several times by Sydney and a shell went through her thinly armoured hull; the boilers and guns were disabled at 09:23, leaving her dead in the water.

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The crew of Bartolomeo Colleoni fought on but were unable to manoeuvre or use the main armament; despite the fire from her guns, she was sunk by three torpedoes launched from Ilex and Hyperion at 09:59. Sydney continued to engage Bande Nere who now withdrew from the battle. Sydney was hit in the funnel by an Italian shell but hit Bande Nere at least twice, killing eight in the bow and the hangar. After an hour-long chase, Sydney, Hero and Hasty disengaged because the cruiser was short of ammunition and Bande Nere was drawing away from them. The Italian cruiser returned to Benghazi by 20.00 hours, shadowed by the battleship and a screen of destroyers.

Despite their speed advantage, the Italian cruisers could not outrun Sydney initially because they had to steer south-southwest, instead of the most obvious route of escape to the south, to avoid being trapped between their opponents and the Cretan coast. This gave the Australian cruiser the chance to close the range. The light armour of Colleoni and Bande Nere was unable to withstand Sydneys shells. The lack of aerial reconnaissance was another factor contributing to the successful Commonwealth chase.

<gallery mode="packed" heights="140px">

File:Italian cruiser Bartolomeo Colleoni NH 80948.tiff| in 1935

File:HMAS Sydney in 1936 (9916488333607636).jpg| in 1936

File:Sailors of the light cruiser HMAS Sydney peer through a hole in a funnel 4166485.jpg|The hole in Sydney's forward funnel

</gallery>

Aftermath

Casualties

Of the crew of Bartolomeo Colleoni there were 555 survivors but 121 men died; the captain, Umberto Novaro, was mortally wounded and died on 23 July. Capt. Novaro was decorated with the Gold Medal for Military Valor.

Subsequent operations

The British destroyers were bombed by Italian aircraft after the battle, damaging Havock, whose no. 2 boiler was flooded. A floatplane from Warspite, that was searching for Bande Nere, ditched in the sea and was lost near Tobruk, the crew being taken prisoner by the Italians. The British Convoy AN 2 was ordered to sail back to Port Said and remain there until Bande Nere reached Benghazi.

Orders of battle

{|class="wikitable sortable"

|+ (2nd Cruiser Division)

|-

! scope="col" width="140px" |Name

! scope="col" width="110px" |Flag

! scope="col" width="120px" |Type

! Notes

|-

! colspan="4" |2nd Cruiser Division, Rear-Admiral Ferdinando Casardi

|-

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|Sunk

|-

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|-

|}

Royal Navy

{|class="wikitable sortable"

|+British ships

|-

! scope="col" width="80px" |Name

! scope="col" width="80px" |Flag

! scope="col" width="110px" |Type

! Notes

|-

! colspan="4" |Support Force, Captain John Collins

|-

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|Flag

|-

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|H-class destroyer

|align="left"|

|-

! colspan="4" |2nd Destroyer Flotilla, Captain H. Nicholson

|-

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|H-class destroyer

|align="left"|

|-

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|H-class destroyer

|align="left"|

|-

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|H-class destroyer

|align="left"|

|-

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|

|align="left"|Flag

|-

|}

Footnotes

References

Further reading

  • Action off Cape Spada
  • Scontro di Capo Spada
  • The Battle of Cape Spada Pt.I
  • The Battle of Cape Spada Pt.II