@Uncrustable:
some more on the subject i found
…"There have been 2 battleships sunk by submarines:
HMS Royal Oak: sunk by Gunther Prien’s U-47 in Scapa Flow on 10/14/39.
HMS Barham: sunk by U-331 on 11/25/41.
There has only been one submarine sunk by a battleship:
Otto Weddigen’s U-29 sunk by HMS Dreadnought on 3/18/15 by ramming (ironically
enough)…."
On further research i found that 3 BBs were sunk by submarines; The Royal Oak, the Japanese Kongo, and the Barham
Subs 3; BB .5Â lol
For those who likes more details:
In October 1944, KongÅ departed Lingga in preparation for “Operation Sho-1”, Japan’s counterattack during the Battle of Leyte Gulf, the largest naval engagement in history.[33] On 24 October, KongÅ was undamaged by several near misses from American carrier aircraft in the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea. On 25 October, during the Battle off Samar, KongÅ—as part of Admiral Kurita’s Centre Force—engaged the US 7th Fleet’s “Taffy 3”, a battlegroup of escort carriers and destroyers. She succeeded in scoring numerous hits on the escort carrier Gambier Bay as well as the destroyers Hoel and Heermann. At 09:12, she sank the destroyer escort Samuel B. Roberts. After a fierce defensive action by the American ships, which sank three Japanese heavy cruisers, Admiral Kurita elected to withdraw, ending the battle.[34] While retreating, KongÅ suffered damage from five near misses from attacking aircraft. The fleet arrived at Brunei on 28 October.[5]
On 16 November, following a US air raid on Brunei, KongÅ departed Brunei alongside Yamato, Nagato and the rest of the First Fleet for Kure, in preparation for a major reorganization of the fleet and battle repairs. On 20 November, they entered the Formosa Strait. Shortly after midnight on 21 November, the submarine USS Sealion II made radar contact with the fleet at 44,000 yards.[35] Maneuvering into position at 03:00, Sealion II fired three stern torpedoes at Nagato and KongÅ. One minute later, two torpedoes were seen to hit KongÅ on the port side, while the third sank the destroyer Urakaze with all hands.[5] The torpedoes flooded two of KongÅ’s boiler rooms, but she was still able to make 16 knots (18 mph). By 05:00, she had slowed to 11 kn (13 mph) and broken off from the rest of the fleet.[35] At 05:20, she lost all power. Four minutes later, the blip indicating KongÅ on Sealion II’s radar disappeared.[36] KongÅ sank in 350 feet (110 m) of water with the loss of 1,200 of her crew, including the commander of the Third Battleship Division and her captain. She was the only Japanese battleship sunk by submarine in the Second World War, and the last battleship sunk by submarine in history.[32]
Her sinking was only one out of three battleships sinkings in World War II caused by a submarine attack, the two others were the British Revenge class battleship HMS Royal Oak (08) and the Queen Elizabeth class battleship HMS Barham (04).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_battleship_Kongō