Artemis-class Air-Defence Cruiser / Destroyer Leader
Fittingly named after the goddess of the hunt in Greek mythology Artemis was the lead ship of her class which comprised of: Artemis, Athena, Alala, Badhbh, Banbha and Brigid.
Armed with a quartet of rapid firing twin 120mm guns a pair of twin 57mm guns and four twin 40mm mounts the class represented the peak of modernity at the time of their introduction. Additional to the gun armament were a clutch of fixed 550mm torpedo tubes for anti-surface use, a pair of 375mm anti-submarine rocket launchers and an anti-torpedo system on the stern.
Each of the primary and secondary batter mounts had on-board directors whilst the tertiary battery were directed from separate tachymetric directors.
Propulsion, like most Banbhan warships of the 1940s and 50s came from Sural Indret-type boilers and Rateau Bretagne impulse turbines, in the case of the Artemis-class, four boilers feeding two turbines. A smaller turbo-generator for shoreside use was also present as well as a number of Paxman Vega diesel generators for pump and salvage use.
The class would survive until 1979/80 and the end of the Vinyan War, having been substantially altered in their later years with the addition of surface-to-air missiles, removal of the anti-torpedo system and changes to their sensors. An attempt was made to save Artemis for preservation upon her decommissioning but despite strong backing, funding fell through. A reprieve was found at the eleventh hour by the King Consort, a retired destroyer commander whom after protracted wrangling and discussion managed to persuade the Admiralty to part with Artemis for the princely sum of one crown.
After a period alongside she was moved to the newly redeveloped west-bay dockyard area which had been converted to the national maritime museum, where she resides in drydock to the present day alongside the only other major surviving warship of years past, Nemain.