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  1. Esta página de desambiguación enumera artículos que tienen títulos similares. Dos diferentes clases de destructores de la Armada Imperial Japonesa han recibido el nombre Kamikaze (神風 viento de los dioses?) La Clase Kamikaze de 1922, activos desde 1922 hasta 1946, compuesta por los: Asakaze. Asanagi. Harukaze. Hatakaze. Hayate. Kamikaze. Matsukaze.

  2. Clase: Kamikaze: Tipo: destructor: Operador: Armada Imperial Japonesa: Autorizado: 1918: Iniciado: 15 de diciembre de 1921: Botado: 25 de septiembre de 1922: Asignado: 19 de diciembre de 1922: Destino: Naufragio el 7 de junio de 1946: Características generales; Desplazamiento: 1.400 toneladas como estándar, 1.720 a plena carga ...

  3. De Wikipedia, la enciclopedia encyclopedia. La Clase Kamikaze (神風型 Kamikazegata?) fue una clase de destructores compuesta de nueve unidades, que sirvieron en la Armada Imperial Japonesa durante la Segunda Guerra Sino-Japonesa y la Segunda Guerra Mundial.

    • Background
    • Design
    • Operational History
    • Class Members
    • Naming History
    • References
    • External Links

    The Kamikaze-class vessels were an extension and improvement to the ongoing Minekaze-class program as part of the Eight-eight fleet Plan. They were ordered under the 1921-1922 fiscal budget. As with the Wakatake class, they were originally given only numbers rather than names, but were assigned individual names on 1 August 1928. Construction of the...

    The Kamikaze-class ships were visually identical to the earlier Minekaze class, apart from slight detail changes in the bridge. The Kamikaze class was the first destroyer class in the Imperial Japanese Navy to be built with a bridge strengthened by steel plating. This gave the vessels a higher center of gravity, and to counteract this they were bui...

    The Kamikaze-class vessels all saw combat during the Pacific War, with Hayate having the distinction of being the first Japanese destroyer to be lost in combat during that conflict. She was sunk during the Battle of Wake Island in December 1941. By 1944 four Kamikaze-class vessels had been sunk by American submarines and a fifth was lost in an air ...

    Note these vessels only carried numbers ("Dai") until 1 August 1928, when they were given meteorological names.

    The IJN originally planned that the Kamikaze-class ships should have names, but upon completion they were given numbers due to the projected large number of warships the IJN expected to build through the Eight-eight fleetplan. This proved to be extremely unpopular with the crews and was a constant source of confusion in communications. In August 19...

    Books

    1. Brown, David (1990). Warship Losses of World War Two. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-914-X. 2. Evans, David (1979). Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941. US Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-192-7. 3. Hara, Tameichi (1978). Japanese Destroyer Captain. Ballantyne Books, New York. ISBN 0-345-27894-1. 4. Howarth, Stephen (1983). The Fighting Ships of the Rising Sun: The Drama of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1895-1945. Atheneum. ISBN 0-689-11...

    Globalsecurity.org. "IJN Kiyokaze class destroyers".
    Jones, Daniel H. (2003). "IJN Minekaze, Kamikaze and Mutsuki class Destroyers". Ship Modeler's Mailing List (SMML). Archived from the originalon 2008-08-28.
  4. El término kamikaze (神風, ''? lit. 'viento divino') [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] de origen japonés fue utilizado originalmente por los traductores estadounidenses para referirse a los ataques suicidas , efectuados por pilotos de una unidad especial perteneciente a la Armada Imperial Japonesa contra embarcaciones de la flota de los Aliados a finales de la Segunda Guerra Mundial .

  5. Clase Minekaze. Apariencia. ocultar. La Clase Minekaze es una clase de destructores compuesta de 13 unidades de la Armada Imperial Japonesa que entraron en servicio tras la Primera Guerra Mundial y participaron en la Segunda Guerra Mundial. Historia.