
Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons





























Battleships have always been a force of power and might of a nation. These massive vessels dominated naval warfare and were major intimidation factors in military strategy and highlighted the might of a nation's naval supremacy. These floating fortresses were hundreds of feet long, and many of the largest battleships in naval history were instrumental in major military operations.
The United States developed its first iron-clad battleship, the USS Monitor, which sank in a storm off Cape Hatteras in 1862. It wasn't until 1907 when President Theodore Roosevelt sent a group of 16 battleships, dubbed the Great White Fleet, around the world that the U.S. flexed its maritime muscle. It was the largest and most powerful flotilla to ever circle the globe.
In the aftermath of WWI, the world's most powerful nations tried to limit the size of fleets in a treaty called The Washington Naval Treaty, or the Five-Power Treaty, signed in 1922 that restricted the construction of battleships and battlecruisers. It lasted until 1936 when Japan terminated the treaty, and in WWII, legendary ships like Germany's pair of Bismarck-class vessels and Japan's two titanic 71,659-ton Yamato-class ships became the largest battleships ever constructed by far.
After WWII, the battleship eventually surrendered its naval preeminence to aircraft carriers, submarines, and amphibious warships. The last U.S. battleship to be built was the USS Missouri, commissioned in 1944 and decommissioned in 1992. The last battleship of any nation worldwide to be built was from the United Kingdom, the HMS Vanguard, commissioned in 1946.
Not only were they too costly to maintain, but they were also more susceptible to attack from both aircraft and subs. Many of these WWII-era battleships remain today as museums, like the USS Iowa, currently docked in Los Angeles, and the USS Massachusetts docked at Battleship Cove in Fall River, Massachusetts.
24/7 Tempo consulted sources including Navy General Board, Largest.org, Militaryfactory, PearlHarbor, and others to compile a list of floating fortresses: the largest battleships in naval history, using displacement tonnage as a measure.
Note that with three exceptions, the list is ordered not by individual ship but by battleship class, each including two or more ships with different names. The exceptions are the U.K.'s HMS Agincourt, HMS Hood, and HMS Vanguard. (Don't miss the biggest naval battles of all time.)
28. Kirov Class
- Displacement tonnage: 25,000
- Nation: Russia
- Commissioned: 1980
27. Moltke Class
- Displacement tonnage: 25,400
- Nation: Germany
- Commissioned: 1911
26. Florida Class
- Displacement tonnage: 25,400
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1911
25. New York Class
- Displacement tonnage: 27,435
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1914
24. Wyoming Class
- Displacement tonnage: 27,680
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1912
23. Nevada Class
- Displacement tonnage: 29,000
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1916
22. Rivadavia Class
- Displacement tonnage: 30,600
- Nation: Argentina
- Commissioned: 1915
21. HMS Agincourt Dreadnought
- Displacement tonnage: 31,360
- Nation: United Kingdom
- Commissioned: 1914
20. Revenge Class
- Displacement tonnage: 31,630
- Nation: United Kingdom
- Commissioned: 1916
19. Ise Class
- Displacement tonnage: 31,760
- Nation: Japan
- Commissioned: 1917
18. Pennsylvania Class
- Displacement tonnage: 32,429
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1916
17. Iron Duke Super Dreadnought Class
- Displacement tonnage: 32,635
- Nation: United Kingdom
- Commissioned: 1915
16. New Mexico Class
- Displacement tonnage: 33,350
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1918
15. Queen Elizabeth Class Super Dreadnought
- Displacement tonnage: 33,790
- Nation: United Kingdom
- Commissioned: 1915
14. Bayern Class
- Displacement tonnage: 35,500
- Nation: Germany
- Commissioned: 1917
13. Kongō Class Battlecruiser
- Displacement tonnage: 36,500
- Nation: Japan
- Commissioned: 1913
12. Fusō Dreadnought Class
- Displacement tonnage: 37,187
- Nation: Japan
- Commissioned: 1915
11. King George V Class
- Displacement tonnage: 45,360
- Nation: United Kingdom
- Commissioned: 1942
10. Littorio Class
- Displacement tonnage: 45,485
- Nation: Italy
- Commissioned: 1942
9. Nagato Class
- Displacement tonnage: 45,950
- Nation: Japan
- Commissioned: 1920
8. South Dakota Class
- Displacement tonnage: 46,200
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1942
7. HMS Hood
- Displacement tonnage: 46,680
- Nation: United Kingdom
- Commissioned: 1920
6. North Carolina Class
- Displacement tonnage: 46,700
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1941
5. Richelieu Class
- Displacement tonnage: 48,100
- Nation: France
- Commissioned: 1940
4. HMS Vanguard
- Displacement tonnage: 51,420
- Nation: United Kingdom
- Commissioned: 1946
3. Bismarck Class
- Displacement tonnage: 51,800
- Nation: Germany
- Commissioned: 1941
2. Iowa Class
- Displacement tonnage: 57,540
- Nation: United States
- Commissioned: 1943
1. Yamato Class
- Displacement tonnage: 71,659
- Nation: Japan
- Commissioned: 1942
