Dan Snow's History Hit - The Battle of Jutland
Episode Date: October 12, 2025On 31st May, 1916, 250 warships and nearly 100,000 sailors converged in the North Sea for the world's first full-scale clash of dreadnought fleets. Admiral Jellicoe’s Grand Fleet was pitted against ...Admiral Scheer’s High Seas Fleet for what was supposed to be a decisive battle - but which ended with a less than certain outcome.We're joined by Andrew Lambert, Laughton Professor of Naval History at King's College London, to hear all about the battle and whether it can be considered a German tactical success or a British strategic victory.Produced by James Hickmann and edited by Dougal Patmore.We'd love to hear your feedback - you can take part in our podcast survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi, everyone. Welcome to Dan Snow's history.
It was the only time in the modern industrial era
that the whole of the main battle fleets
of the world's two biggest naval powers
have clashed on the high seas.
The outcome, on that awesome occasion,
The outcome of the First World War hung in the balance.
It was a moment of decision that was denied to the men on shore
who fought in hellish trenches for years on end,
gaining and losing a few meters at a time.
This was a chance to win a battle that would for once transform the strategic situation.
It took place at the height of summer in the North Sea.
So, of course, the weather was pretty grim.
clouds, they obscured the great mass of ships, and that opacity was deepened by the clouds of
smoke that belched out of the ship's funnels and the thousands of shells that were fired.
Despite that, it was the climax of nearly half a millennium of battleship development.
The process that had begun with bronze cannon being manhandled under wooden ships,
that process reached its apogee here on that day in 1960.
As the largest guns ever built, sitting on top, castles of steel
propelled through the grey sea by dazzling new steam turbine engines
at speeds unimaginable a generation or two before.
This was the last and certainly the most titanic clash of battleships
before war at sea was transformed by the coming of air power
and the birth of a new era.
Fought, mostly, on the 31st of May, 1960.
This was the Battle of Jarlane.
Now you all know, listen to this podcast that I've got to.
list in my little old head at all times of the greatest moments in naval history. That split
second with the fighting Temerere just appeared out of the gunsmoke at Trafalgar, crashed into the
starboard side of the French Redu Tabla. It's carronades rescuing the desperate crew of HMS
victory in a moment of dreadful violence. Then we've got the moment where Lieutenant Commander
Wade McClustley tipped his dive bomber into a dive over the Japanese carriers at Midway,
changed the balance of power in the Pacific forever. Or when during the latest,
Gulf, the astonishingly brave little USS Johnston, went absolutely postal and took on
virtually the entire Japanese fleet by itself, or the pursuit, who can forget this,
the piece of Admiral Hawke into the rock-strewn uncharted moor of Kiberombay at sunset in the
teeth of November gale. Oh, I tell you, I do love the Battle of Yarmine as well, the last
stand of the Song Dynasty, the final watery grave of the last emperor. But anyway, I will
leave it there. The point being, there are many great moments in naval history.
And this, Friends, is one of them. It is certainly one of them. When the entire might of the
British Royal Navy's principal battle fleet, under the superb Admiral Sir John Jellico, surprised
their German adversary at Jutland and unleashed the most astonishing barrage that the world
has ever seen at sea, landing on the German high seas fleet of Admiral Reinhardt Shear.
That is the climax of the Battle of Jutland. That
is the Climax Today's podcast. Just listen to this episode and find out how it all came about.
What happened in that terrible moment and what the result was.
Joining me on the pod is the man himself at the apogee of naval history.
The legend, the one and only Professor Andrew Lambert, Lawton Professor of Naval History,
at the Department of War Studies at King's College, London.
The man who knows everything about everything. Strange, it's just a thing that he does.
This is the story of how Britain was entirely dependent on the sea.
entirely. It was dependent on the sea for its fuel, its food, its supplies. Its armies in France
and Belgium were dependent on the sea link to Britain and beyond. So it's the story of how Britain
faced down the most serious naval competitor since the Dutch in the 17th century. You heard me
Napoleon, since the Dutch in the 17th century. At stake, nothing less than the future of the world.
It's a big one, folks. Enjoy.
dropped on Hiroshima.
God save the game.
No black white unity
till there is first than black unity.
Never to go to war with one another again.
And lift off, and the shuttle has cleared the power.
Hi, Andrew, thanks coming back on the podcast.
Great pleasure, Dan.
I was happy to do this.
People are familiar with the outbreak of the First World War,
the causes spell-life, German troops invade Belgium,
triggering Britain's defense of Belgian neutrality. What was the reason that Britain was quite
keen to do that irrespective of Belgian neutrality, above and beyond Belgian neutrality?
The naval threat that Germany pote, how worried are the Brits about this Navy that's just
been built in Germany? The Imperial German Navy is the first peer competitor, the British
have faced that is really on a level, ship for ship, man for man. They're pretty much as good as the
British. In the past, they've invariably had an advantage in the quality of their people,
long-serving professional officers, highly skilled sailors. The Germans have created a fleet
which is certainly a fitting opponent. It isn't as big as the Royal Navy, but then it doesn't
have to be because it's only thinking about fighting in the Baltic on the North Sea.
It needs to command the Baltic against the Russians, needs to keep the British out of
the southern and eastern bits of the North Sea. Its problem is that Germany is a global trading power
and it needs access to the world market in order to keep up its supplies of critical raw materials.
So if you want rubber, which is a major element of First World War armaments and equipment,
there isn't any artificial rubber yet. If you want oil, where does oil come from?
Well, that comes from a long way away too.
Germans don't run out food.
So their Navy is a critical part of a war effort, which they see being short.
The whole German war plan is we have to win this quickly or we will lose.
So the Navy's job is to keep the Royal Navy from applying too much pressure to the German economy
in the short term while the German army wins the war against France and then doubles down
and wins the war against Russia, at which point the Brits will just have to go home
make an agreement with the Germans and understand the new world order. So the Navy is a seriously
important part of the German plan, but it is also the only reason why the British are on the
other side to the Germans. So 50 years before, Britain and Germany looked at France as their
mutual enemy. Now, because Germany has built this global power base and a very strong and quite
threatening Navy, Britain has had to change its diplomatic alignments. So this Navy is a serious threat
to Britain's global dominance, and it's a challenge to British sea control, which is the
basis of all British strategy. And so as the First World War breaks out, your point is so important
there. In terms of ships and their capabilities, it's more of a threat in some ways than Napoleon
was back in, you know, a hundred years before, because actually Napoleon's fleet was a bit rubbish
compared to the fleets, the ships of Nelson's Navy.
You think this was a fleet that was capable of taking
on possibly defeating these British dreadnoughts?
The German Navy was ship for ship pretty much equal.
So the chances of battle were much less likely to be successful for British
than they had been.
They would need to have a bigger fleet to make sure of victory
rather than just better people.
At Trafalgar, Nelson is outnumbered,
but he wins at Jutland.
The Germans are outnumbered.
and they don't necessarily lose.
So the playing field is more level than it has been.
But Germany's ability to do more than simply fight a battle in the North Sea is very limited.
They have no bases outside the North Sea.
They have no access to high-grade coal outside the North Sea.
Their communications will start to collapse.
So really, it's a very powerful North Sea fleet,
but its strategic ability is deeply limited by 1916.
there are no overseas bases that the Germans can access. They can't fight from anywhere
other than their base at Willemshaven. So the idea is that what they're very good at is
leave Willemshaven, perhaps inflict a stinging defeat, the bloody nose on the mighty British
and then sail back to Villenshaven. And is that, roughly speaking, the plan for 19...
As we get to 1916, what is the plan of the two navies? Well, I know when the war broke out,
there was some annoyance in Britain. They assumed their navy was going to sally forth,
annihilate the German Navy, and that would be the end of that. But that hasn't
happened is what pressures are both sides feeling by this point of the war? In both countries,
these enormous fleets of very costly warships are holding a balance. They are not fighting very
often. There's been one significant clash on the doggar bank, but only between half a dozen
ships on each side. There hasn't been a great fleet battle. Everybody expected it to happen on
day one of the battle, indeed of the whole war, doesn't happen because neither of them has an
objective they want to fight for, that is worth taking the risk of defeat. Both of them are
essentially on a defensive. The Germans are keeping the British out of the Baltic, which is
essential for them. The British are keeping the German fleet out of the Atlantic, which is
essential for them. So the North Sea is in stasis. Somebody has to take a risk. Somebody has to
go for a more positive objective. The Germans come out in May June 1916. They're trying to
set up an ambush of British battleships leaving harbour using submarines. So they will come out.
The British will then steam out to meet them. They'll run into a large flotilla of submarines
and the size of their fleet will be significantly reduced. It's an ambush strategy.
Let's trailer coat, bring the British out over an ambush, minefields, submarines, we'll level the balance so that next time we fight them it'll be one-on-one, not an unbalanced fleet.
The British, by contrast, have finally accepted the logic that Jackie Fisher and Sir Julian Corbett had stressed that the key to the war was to pressure Germany in and around the Baltic.
The threat to enter the Baltic is central to the Battle of Jutland.
Jellico has planned, British Admiral commanding the Grand Fleet, a full fleet sortie right into the Skaggarak just to the west of the Danish Peninsula and to send a squadron of cruisers down towards Copenhagen, essentially to say the British are coming into the Baltic. What are you going to do about it, Germany? The Germans would be then expected to send their fleet out. The British would meet the Germans and defeat them because of their larger and more powerful fleet. So both,
of them have a game plan. Admiral Shear is attempting to find a British convoy of ships coming
out of Norway and Denmark. He will attack that. The British will then go to relieve the convoy
and he'll set up a battle at a place of his choosing. The British are expecting the Germans to
react to them. Ironically, they both have a plan to come out at the same time expecting the other
side to be surprised. As it turns out, the British are actually at sea before the Germans set off.
The Germans then set off to try and draw the British out.
So it's one of those complicated games where it looks like everybody is just coming out for a battle.
But in fact, they're coming out for very different reasons.
And these two things intersect off the Danish coast
when the scouting cruisers of the British and German forces encounter each other
while they both go to inspect a neutral Danish merchant ship,
which happens to be in the middle of the battlefield.
Unlucky for them.
So just before we get onto this, in terms of the British public and even many naval planners,
they were assuming that Britain, as it has done many times in the previous century and a half,
a couple of centuries, would go out and win a major fleet battle and that would be the end of that.
But the technology has changed dramatically in almost every conceivable way.
Can you just say a little bit before we get into the battle about how actually everyone's sort of making,
this will be familiar to people that are talking about the Ukraine war,
and there's many new weapons on the battlefield, many new techniques that have taken perhaps some
the commanders by surprise. Can you say a little bit about why both sides do seem to be making
this up? They go along, really. No one's ever tried to ambush a battle fleet with submarines before,
for example. And does this mean that this is a slightly more obscure and scrappy battle and
traditional battles at sea? It's certainly a period of technological transformation.
So we're in 1916 for Jatland. In 1905, the British introduced the first, what we class as,
or modern battleship, a ship with 8, 10, 15 heavy guns, turbine-powered machinery for
higher speed, very thick armor, and increasingly on the British side, the basis of modern
fire control equipment, to essentially a mechanical integrator, the basis of pre-electronic
computing. If you're going to be firing very heavy guns out towards the horizon, you need to
know how far the other guys are away from you, what course they're steering.
where their ship is going to be when the shells arrive,
and that's more than the length of the ship
beyond the position you actually see it in.
So you are predicting.
To use a simple metaphor, it's wing shooting.
If you're shooting grouse, they're moving pretty fast,
and you're not firing at the target.
You're firing ahead of it to where the target will be when it arrives.
This has not happened before because previous battles,
even going back to 1905 in the Russo-Japanese war,
are fought at much lower ranges and considerably lower speeds.
These ships are slower, they're less powerful.
And what we got here is 28 British dreadnoughts, 16 German dreadnoughts.
These ships have never really fought each other in a fleet battle before.
Some of the technologies are still being worked out.
And yes, there is a buildup of pressure from the populations of both countries.
They've spent a king's ransom on these battle fleets.
and they've done nothing significant at all.
For the Germans, they're just saying,
why don't we just invest in the army?
The army's doing all right.
Why didn't we not bother with this Navy thing
and just have more troops?
For the British, it's existential,
but they do expect this victory
because they've been led to believe
that Trafalgar is inevitable.
Trafalgar isn't inevitable.
You need a commander of genius
with a great deal of latitude
to set that battle up.
And Trafalgar doesn't have,
happen at the beginning of the Napoleonic Wars. It's two years into the war. It's 1805. The war starts
in 1803. So everybody's over expecting. They're expecting Germans to come out to be destroyed.
They're not going to do that. They're expecting the British to be able to catch them.
The battle itself is fought on a day with very low visibility. So even the tactics of the battle
are compromised. You can't see the enemy at the range that you can engage them. The range is set
by low cloud and increasingly gun and funnel smoke, which makes it a closer range battle than it
would have been. And as the evening goes on, an extremely close range battle involving physical
contact. Okay, so one of the reasons that the British fleet's gone to see is because of this remarkable
Room 40, the crypto analysis section of the British Admiralty, this is a forerunner of all of the
clever, menigma and everything else going up to the present day and hacking into encrypted
apps and data. Just how groundbreaking was the work that the British Admiralty was doing
to try and drag intelligence gathering into this new era? The Royal Navy had always been
an intelligence positive organisation. It had always maximised the amount of intelligence
it could get. And with new communication technologies, those opportunities are greatly increased.
the Germans have quite slack radio procedures. The British know the Germans are putting to sea
because the flagship has sent a radio message round the fleet to say we're going to put the sea.
And the British can read that because it's a pretty common message. They repeat it over and over again.
They have very poor traffic security. They haven't thought about these things at all. They're using
the radio when they should have used a flag hoist or a light signal within the anchorage,
which could not be read in London. So the British,
have got that one sorted. They have broken the German code. The Germans have not broken the
British code. So the British have a major advantage. Jellico knows the Germans are putting to sea
before they put to sea. So Jellico sets off with the Grand Fleet before the Germans are expecting
him. And therefore, the Germans are very surprised to find the British on the Horn's Reef
when they get down there the next day. So it is critical. And room 40 is the basis of all of the
intelligence operations that happen in the Second World War, which we've paid far more attention to.
But without Room 14th, First World War decryption, you don't get those successes against the
Enigma traffic. Enigma is Germany's response to having its codes read in the First World War.
Right. So the British know that the Germans have left Vilim Sarvant. The British are keen to
get to grips with this fleet. And they head out into the Baltic. As you mentioned, the two cruisers,
So these sort of powerful scouting squadrons meet each other.
And there's the famous run to the south.
What happens here?
So the battle cruises squadrons,
these are faster versions of dreadnought battleships.
They've got more engines, less firepower, a bit less armour protection.
So they are your heavy scouting squadron.
They encounter each other in the middle of the afternoon at maximum visibility.
At this point, Admiral Beattie, commanding the British force,
has six battle cruisers and four battleships with him.
But by core signaling procedure, he manages to lose contact with four of his battleships
by just changing course and heading off towards the Germans without telling anybody what he's doing.
He seems to be obsessed with the idea that it is his job to sink his opponent, Admiral Franz Hipper,
and his five German battlecruisers.
He nearly finished them off at the Battle of the Dagger Bank, and this is unfinished business.
and he's in a real hurry.
And David Beattie is not just an admiral in a hurry.
He is also the son and brother of cavalry officers,
and he's a very enthusiastic huntsman.
So as far as he's concerned, this is Tallyho,
and we're going to finish these people off very quickly.
I have more ships, I have bigger guns,
I've got plenty of speed.
I should be able to do this.
And he makes a complete and utter bouch of his battle.
The Red Mist has descended.
He's not thinking clearly.
His staff are not providing with adequate information.
his ships are not doing enough range finding to work out exactly how far away the enemy are so when they open fire they've got the range wrong the germans by contrast are proceeding at less speed which means less vibration on their equipment they have taken adequate numbers of range finder readings so they know precisely how far away the british are they're calculated their speed in their course the german opening salvos are right on target the british opening salvos are three thousand yards over
basic failures of operating procedure. The battle cruiser fleet was not run in the same way as
the Grand Fleet. No Grand Fleet ships made mistakes like that. Admiral Jellico was a gunnery
officer, not a general service officer, and he insisted on the very high standards. Battle Cruiser
fleet is not shooting very well, and they don't seem to think that's important. So Admiral Hippar,
who handled his ships perfectly, his job is to take Beattie and his rashly advancing squadron
to meet the rest of the Ice East Fleet to be wiped out. And that is exactly what the run to the
south is. He's trailing his coach. He's saying, follow me. And you're going to get a big surprise.
And Beatty's just taken the bait. He's just, he's off on one. Yes. The Red Mist has descended and his
thinking capacity. He's not a stupid man, but he's behaving like one on this particular occasion.
and he has some very shocking events, which I think dissuade him that he needs to calm down a little,
that they are truly cataclysmic events.
Well, yes, let's get into those events.
By the, just before we get to those events, and his job, of course, as this sort of cavalry screen,
as this scouting, these fast moon batterers, is to update his commander-in-chief all the time on what's going on.
Is he doing that?
Is Jellico, his boss, being informed exactly what Beatty is doing, or is he just charged off almost by himself?
Beatty is keeping up a running commentary on what he's doing.
The problem is that the navigation is now dead reckoning because they're not able to see the sky.
So he is not able to give Jellico an accurate location for the enemy at any stage in the run to the south.
And when Jellico is approaching contact, he still doesn't have any accurate information about where the enemy is.
And his first reliable understanding of the enemy's position is when they come out of the mist, well within gun range of the fleet.
Failure of basic procedure, failure of intention and slack procedure all the way through.
You listen to Dan Snow's history.
Talking about the Battle of Jutland more coming up.
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And then Beatty pays a terrible...
In fact, he almost gets killed, but might come on to that,
but for some quick thinking.
But he starts losing ships.
I mean, BT is shocked by what happens the next few minutes.
Yeah. So shortly after the ship's come into contact with the Germans, it's six to five. The British should have an advantage. They should be able to concentrate. But instead, the ship at the rear of the British force, HMS Indefatigable, gets in a gun battle with the Vondatan. It's quickly overpowered by more accurate, rapid salvos. It then rolls over, blows out and sinks with the death of everybody who is inside the ship. That's well over a thousand men.
So you've just set off several hundred tons of high explosive
in a very large, strong, armored box.
Everything inside is pulverized.
There are no survivors other than those
who are literally outside on the outside of the ship,
two or three people.
And then that's not the end of it.
No.
Shortly after that, HMS Queen Mary,
named after the king's wife,
which is been embarrassing,
is hit by Salvos from other German battle cruisers,
and she then explodes in much the same way as indefatical, taking down even more high-quality sailors with her.
At this point, Beatty turned to his flag captain, Ernie Chatfield, and he said there seems to be something wrong with our bloody ships today.
But a few minutes later, he then admits, and our bloody system as well.
Beatty's finally understood that poor procedure and rash decisions have put him in a very bad position.
He's now outnumbered five to four.
He's lost two big ships, lost well over 2,000 men.
Fortunately, the baffle ships that were attached to him, the Queen Elizabeth
Klaus battleships, have managed to cut the corner and join the battle, and they are now taking
on the German baffle cruisers at the rear of Hipper's line and hitting them much more often
than the battle cruiser fleet, despite being at longer range.
These ships have done proper gunnery training, and they're firing at longer range with bigger
weapons. These are 15-inch guns, and they're doing serious damage to the German fleet.
Just as the British are beginning to get on top of the Germans, the battle takes another
violent turn when Admiral Shear's fleet hoves interview, and Beattie realizes that now it's not
HIPAA leading him to be ambushed. It's his job to lead Shear to be ambushed by Jellico.
The instant I mentioned earlier, because one of Beatty's ship takes a hit, doesn't it? And remind me, a turret is
flooded by a very brave Royal Marine that prevents the kind of catastrophic explosion that destroyed
the other ships. What happened? The ship in question is Beatty's flagship, HMS Lion.
On board HMS Lyon shortly after the detonation of the Queen Mary, the Q turret amid ships
is hit by a German round, goes straight through the faceplate of the armoured turret,
explodes in the gun mounting where the guns being reloaded. On the other ships that sank
Indefatigable and Queen Mary, they had taken out all of the safety interlocks that prevented
flash in the gun mounting from reaching the magazines in the bottom of the ship. That meant that those
ships were blown up by their own ammunition because they had removed the safety systems that
excluded flash from the magazines in the interest of increasing the rate of fire. Rather learning
to shoot properly, they preferred to shoot lots and hope that they would hit. Biti's flagship had
had those systems put back in at the behest of a new warrant officer gunner who'd taken over
the ship from a battleship in the Grand Fleet where nobody would have dreamt of taking
the safety systems out. So Beatty was saved by one of his subordinates doing the right thing
and the battle continued with Lyon with only six heavy guns because the X turret was out
of action that the ship was saved by doing the proper thing. Right. So Beatty then
does also finally the proper thing, having tried everything else,
and does a 180, starts heading north, dragging this German fleet back towards where
BT knows the main British battleships are?
Yeah, so BT's job now is literally to lure the Germans further out, to engage with
Jellico.
Jellico is now aware of this, but he does not know where the Germans are.
He just knows that they're heading towards him approximately, and that B.T. is leading
them. So he doesn't have a precise fix. It's pretty murky. It's in the middle of the afternoon,
but it's already really quite grim conditions. This limits the British advantage of having
longer range than heavier guns. It means a battle will be fought at medium range where the German
guns are perfectly adequate. So the whole battle has just made a 180 degree turn. Beatty's force is
steaming north to rendezvous with Jellico. Jellico needs to know where the enemy is coming.
He needs to know precisely because he is in cruising formation in six columns abreast.
He can't fight in six columns of breast.
He needs to get into a line ahead so he can deploy his full broadside against the oncoming German fleet.
Every ship, each one is stoner the one in front.
So every single ship is able to swing its guns around and just deliver a massive, massive broadside against the Germans, right?
And in order to do this, he needs to know what formation to adopt.
he's got to get into a line of battle, but does he do it on the starboard column? Does he do it on the
port column? Until BT tells him, he's left guessing. And he has to make a decision because
Beatty doesn't give him that information, because Beatty has lost control of the navigation. He doesn't
know where he is. He knows what course he's on, but he doesn't know where he's heading from.
So Jellico has to make a decision. He orders deployment on the port column, and as the first
fleet comes into line, the Germans burst through the mist to find that they are directly opposite
Jellico's flagship, the Iron Duke, which opens fire immediately. So the battle has provided surprises
for everybody. Apart from Jellico, he didn't know the Germans were coming there, but he did
know they were coming. The Germans did not know that Jellico was there. So that's the greatest
concentration naval firepower ever assembled in the history of the world to that point, and the
Germans who just crunched straight into it and didn't even know it was there.
An extraordinary moment.
And it's all the more extraordinary because the Germans are coming on in a single line ahead.
So the only firepower they have is the forward guns of the leading battleship.
So that's four guns against several hundred.
And that, frankly, remarkably, that leading ship takes quite a punishment, doesn't it?
But actually survives from memory?
Yes, all the German battleships, Dreadnought battleships, survived this action.
what happens is Shear has anticipated this moment. He knows he's inferior. He knows that he may have to face the entire British fleet. He's practiced a maneuver called the emergency battle turnaway. And this is a feat of seamanship, which even British naval officers had to admire. The whole German fleet is advancing at the speed of about 25 miles an hour, closely in formation, one behind the other. In order to reverse course, they have to start turning.
180 from the rear. So the last ship makes a maneuver and as soon as the ship ahead of it sees its
bow swing round, it begins that maneuver. So it's a ripple effect from the rear to reverse course.
This means that the leading ships, the most modern German battle ships, the Koenig class,
have to continue absorbing punishment from the Grand Fleet until everybody else has made that
maneuver. So this is heroic. It's doing it under fire, being hit by heavy rounds and these ships
are absolutely doing exactly what they've been ordered to do.
They get away with this.
They retreat into the Merck and Jellico has lost the target
before he's done enough damage to stop the German fleet
and force it to fight.
The Germans, however, are now out to the west of the British
and the British are between the Germans and their base.
This is a big strategic initiative.
Well, what does Jellica want to do at this point?
Does he want to crush that German enemy?
Or does he want to, you know, marshalers, keep his fleet in being and make sure he's still the biggest fleet in the North Sea by the end of the day?
Jellico's object is to do the maximum damage to the Germans he can without risking his fleet, because his fleet is absolutely essential to Britain in ways that the German Navy is not.
So he's looking for an opportunity to force the Germans to fight at a disadvantage.
And after that first exchange of fire, he's got that position.
He is now between them and their base.
if they want to go home and refuel, they've got to fight him.
Shear then sets a course to go back home,
and he straightaway runs back into Jellico,
and another round of heavy fire is pounded on the leading German ships.
The Germans throw in their destroyers, torpedo votes,
and they order the already badly damaged battle cruisers
to advance on the British fleet to distract them
while the main battle fleet is extracted.
So for a second time, they conduct the emergency battle,
battle turn away. This is a nightmare in navigational terms. These ships don't turn very easily
and they don't turn very smoothly. So you've got a whole fleet of dreadnought battleships
making a very big maneuver, a 180 in series, and they don't collide. There are no accidents.
The seamen ship is exemplary. So this is something really impressed the British. The Germans were
able to pull this off under very heavy fire, under immense pressure. And they did it
twice. And this second time, there's some contrasting here, because this second time,
rather than just chasing them at full speed, Jellico pauses. Now, why is that? Is that because
the battle cruisers are providing distraction, or is it these destroyers that you've mentioned,
these smaller, faster vessels? Jellico is deterred from pursuing the Germans into the murky
and thick weather because the torpedo boats and destroyers have been deployed, and he knows
that a torpedo hit on any of his battle ships could be fatal.
So he's not prepared to take excessive risk.
So at the beginning of the battle, B, he is taking huge risks and gets punished.
In the middle of the battle, Jellico is taking a more cautious approach.
He thinks he's got the Germans where he wants them.
He has.
They are not able to go home without fighting him.
And his hope must be that in the morning, when the light comes up and hopefully the clouds
have cleared, he can finish the job in conditions which favour him, which would be good
visibility, able to see much further, and to use the range and power of his more powerful artillery.
More Jutland after this. Don't go away.
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Summer is finally here, but for those of you, just like me, who are counting down the days until the leaves turn golden, the nights start drawing in, and it's finally acceptable to spend a whole weekend binge watching true crime in your PJs.
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There is no one in history that I envy less than Jellico at this point.
He's thinking strategically, he's thinking in ways that actually Nelson, Drake, didn't have to.
They had to hurl themselves at the enemy in front of them without much consideration for the,
well, Nelson was commanding a detached fleet. He wasn't commanding the Channel Squadron, was he?
So Britain wouldn't necessarily be automatically invaded if Nelson had.
been defeated at Trafalgar. But Jellico is having to make all these decisions knowing that this
is the great prop of the British Empire, this fleet. Yes, if Gellico loses the fleet, the war is over
and so is Britain. Right. Okay, so he watches them go off into the gloom. These destroyers are
firing off their little torpedoes, so Jellico goes, well, let's pause here, let's take it easy.
They've gone off into the gloom, we're still in a right place. The Germans at this point have avoided
twice absolute obliteration at the hands of the world's most powerful fleet. Shear the
German commander. What's he feeling as night falls? Is he feeling hopefully he might be able to sneak
away? According to his memoirs, yes. I very much doubt that was the case. He's now been pushed out
into the North Sea. His roots home are limited because the German bite is heavily mined. So he needs
to get to one of the three channels, which allows him to get from the North Sea back into his base
at Villamshaven on the German North Sea coast. The British know where those minefields are,
funnily enough, and Jellico is anticipating that he will try and return through the central
position. So Jellico has to make a choice where he thinks the Germans will try to go home.
He wants to be there at first light to catch them just as the conditions become right for gunnery
with the sun rising behind the German fleet illuminating it on the horizon against the British
range-finding instruments. So perfect gunnery conditions.
First thing in the morning, damaged German fleet, carrying some damaged ships with it, relatively slow-moving, perfect targets.
He should now be able to wipe out the enemy because they're holding together as a fleet and they're going fairly slowly.
They're not going to be able to run away from the Grand Fleet.
So the plan is that they should meet them at the perfect time to finish the job.
The mistakes of the previous day would be forgotten in a glorious victory.
And it doesn't quite work out like that, does it?
No, it doesn't.
Jellico is waiting on everything unfolding as he planned.
Unfortunately, Schia makes yet another attempt to break through the British position.
And in the middle of the night, there's some furious fighting at very close range between elements of the main German fleet
and elements towards the rear of the Grand Fleet.
and this is not reported to Jellico. Nobody seems to think it's worth bothering the Admiral in the
middle of the night. German battleship has sunk, some German cruises are sunk, one of them
in a collision with its own forces, a British armored cruiser is sunk, some really close
quarters fighting in the middle of the night. The Germans managed to break through and reach
not the central return route, but the extreme eastern return route at the Horn's Reef.
So at first light, they are not where Jellico expects them.
They've gone to one of the other two channels they could have used to get through the German minefields.
Once they're through the minefields, Jellico can't pursue them.
It's just astonishing that night action.
I mean, Jellico is making decisions throughout this battle, just terribly let down by his subordinates reporting to him.
I suppose the communication system.
Yes, and the real problem is initiative.
everybody seems to assume that the all-mowing, all-seeing admiral is actually on the bridge next to them and is able to report.
At one point, very badly damaged German battle cruiser, Zydlitz is lined up to be finished off by HMas Malbara.
And the captain is about fire when the rear Admiral on board says, we don't have any orders to do that and suspends fire.
And the Zydlitz creeps back to Willemshelven and survives the war.
So there's a lack of initiative which in the Grand Fleet is worse than in the Battle Cruiser
Fleet. In the Battle Cruiser Fleet, there's a lack of basic professional skills, which is far
worse than the Grand Fleet. The Grand Fleet fights very well, but it doesn't think much at all.
It waits to be told what to do. Battle Cruiser Fleet is much more initiative, much more freedom,
and what the British evolved between the wars is a fighting system which exploits the best bits of both
practices. So the Admiral who really shakes up procedure between the wars was the captain of
Beatty's flagship HMS Lion, only Chatfield, and he gets the Royal Navy ready to fight at night
in thick weather, in anything, and drills into them that you have to use your skill and
judgment. And in the Second World War, we do not find Royal Navy warships wondering what to do
or failing to report really important things. We find a much higher level of performance right
across the fleet. So why is it a problem at Jutland? Because they haven't done this for a hundred
years. Nobody in the Grand Fleet had taken part in a fleet battle. Nobody. Nobody had the experience
of this scale of warfare. They've been training, but the training and the war fighting are, of course,
as we all know, very different things. And under the stress of baffle, these people just sat still
and didn't use their initiative.
So Shear was saved by his own dogged determination
and the failure of initiative on part of the Grand Fleet,
for which Jellico is not responsible.
Is it one of the great what-ifs?
This is the question.
Had that German fleet been destroyed,
would the war have been very different?
And as well as that, I will ask,
there was consternation at the time
because the British lost double the number of sailors.
They lost 6,000 men, didn't they?
They lost a few more ships, sort of 14 to 11-ish.
and the Germans were able to claim some sort of victory.
Let's start with that.
I mean, where do you stand on the debate?
Was Jutland a defeat for the Royal Navy?
No.
First thing in the morning, the British command the North Sea.
They return to fleet base, scupper flow,
and they continue to dominate the North Sea for the rest of the war.
What they're not able to do is to declare that they've won the battle
because they've not achieved any strategic advantage.
Had they won the baffle, wiped out the high-seas fleet, or reduced it to irrelevance,
they would then have been able to think seriously about sending forces into the Baltic,
large ships to reinforce the Russian fleet, which was still active in the Baltic,
and was causing Germany some problems, completing the blockade of Germany by cutting it off
from Sweden, which was a major supplier of iron, copper, finished goods, even horses.
it may well have shortened the war, and the demoralizing effect of such a massive defeat
as the destruction of the high seas fleet may well have tipped the balance in German politics
towards some kind of concession. So it was an opportunity lost. It was not a defeat for the Royal
Navy. It was a failure to exploit its position effectively to achieve a knockout blow. But if you
compare it with the inconsequential results of most of the fleet battles of the 18th century,
we mustn't judge them by Nelson's standards, because the German fleet at Jetland was not the Franco-Spanish fleet at Trafalgar.
They were amateurs facing a genius. Shear and his men were highly professional, very skilled, man-for-man, unit-for-unit.
They were fit comparisons for the Royal Navy, and this was not a battle the British had had with that level of opponent since the Anglo-Dutch Wars of the 17th century.
The Dutch were as good as the British, and so were the Germans.
So this was not a defeat, but it was certainly a lost opportunity.
It should have been a more significant strategic victory.
But in the end, what did the Germans get from coming home from Jutland?
Nothing.
They abandoned the high-seas fleet, turned over to unrestricted U-boat warfare,
which immediately brought the Americans into the First World War,
and ensured that they lost conflict.
So the consequences of Jutland are nowhere near as bad as the war.
they might have been, because within nine months, the war is effectively won by German
Yubo warfare, bringing the Americans in. Yes, and we should say that German high-seas fleet,
I mean, I think they do sneak out one more time, but effectively never leave with intent
ever again from their harbour. Yeah. They come out in August, and they try to set up a submarine
ambush again. They've got the Zeppelin out this time, because the day of Jutland, the weather
is so bad, they can't see anything from a zeppelin. They use the zeppelin on a much nicer day
a couple of months later, and they set up the ambush. Two small cruises are sunk, but there is no
contact between the fleet. Shear is so nervous of running into the Grand Fleet that he's,
as soon as he hears rumors that there's a Grand Fleet squadron approaching, he turns for home.
So what it's done to the Germans is giving them a shot in the arm, but it's made them very,
very well aware that if they get stuck in a serious fight with the British on a fine sunny day,
they're going to lose. And perhaps the little postscript is that they do order that fleet to
see one more time in the dying hours of the war. And that actually precipitates the final end of
the German Empire. The sailors on those ships refuse to go to sea. Yeah, the mutiny of the high seas
fleet is not just a disaster for the German Navy. It's a disaster for Germany. Because those sailors
come ashore at Keel and Villamshaven
where funnily enough, there are high-speed rail links to Berlin
and the revolution that overthrows the monarchy in Germany
is front-ended by sailors.
If you look at the photographs of that 1918 revolution,
most of them are sailors,
they're carrying rifles they brought with them from their ships,
they're making extemporized armored cars,
they are taking control.
The army's at the front.
The Navy is able to get to Berlin quickly.
So it's literally the High Seas fleet that brings down the German Empire.
And of course, remember that elements of the High Seas fleet can still be found at the
bottom of Scapa Flow.
Yes, they get in turn, don't they, by the Allies at the end of the war,
and then they sink themselves on the news at Versailles that they will be permanently handed over.
And to this day, those ships are still a reservoir of pre-1945 non-iradiated high-grade steel,
which is used for all kinds of scientific and medical purposes.
So they're a very useful legacy.
Such an extraordinary story.
Thank you for giving us that wonderful overview.
Andrew Lambert, thank you so much.
What is your latest book that people can go and buy?
My latest book is called No More Napoleons,
and it looks at how Britain managed and structured Europe
across the long 19th century to avoid any major wars,
because at the end of the Napoleonic Wars,
as at the end of all major wars,
it was flat broke and it desperately needed to rebuild the economy. So it's getting away from this
idea about high diplomacy and thinking more about the practicals of running a global empire,
raising funds and keeping everything liquid. Thank you so much, come on the podcast.
Pleasure then.
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