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Tegetthoff-class battleship
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==== Outbreak of war ==== {{see also|Pursuit of Goeben and Breslau}} [[File:SMS Tegetthoff anchored.png|thumb|300px|''Tegetthoff'', the namesake ship of her class|alt=A large battleship sits still in the water near land. Several small boats can be seen in the foreground while a large hill appears behind the battleship in the background.|right]] Events unfolded rapidly in the ensuing days. On 30 July 1914 Russia declared full [[mobilization]] in response to Austria-Hungary's declaration of war on Serbia. Austria-Hungary declared full mobilization the next day. On 1 August both Germany and France ordered full mobilization and Germany declared war on Russia in support of Austria-Hungary. While relations between Austria-Hungary and Italy had improved greatly in the two years following the 1912 renewal of the [[Triple Alliance (1882)|Triple Alliance]],{{sfn|Sondhaus|1994|pp=232β234}} increased Austro-Hungarian naval spending, political disputes over influence in [[Principality of Albania|Albania]], and Italian concerns over the potential annexation of land in the [[Kingdom of Montenegro]] caused the relationship between the two allies to falter in the months leading up to the war.{{sfn|Sondhaus|1994|pp=245β246}} Italy's 1 August declaration of neutrality in the war dashed Austro-Hungarian hopes to use the ships of the ''Tegetthoff'' class in major combat operations in the Mediterranean, as the navy had been relying upon coal stored in Italian ports to operate in conjunction with the ''Regia Marina''. By 4 August Germany had already occupied [[Luxembourg]] and invaded [[Belgium]] after declaring war on France, and the United Kingdom had declared war on Germany in support of Belgian neutrality.{{sfn|Sondhaus|1994|p=246}} The assistance of the Austro-Hungarian fleet was called upon by the German [[Mediterranean Division]], which consisted of the [[battlecruiser]] {{SMS|Goeben||2}} and ''Breslau''.{{sfn|Halpern|1995|p=53}} The German ships were attempting to break out of [[Messina]], where they had been taking on coal prior to the outbreak of war. By the first week of August, British ships had begun to assemble off Messina in an attempt to trap the Germans. While Austria-Hungary had not yet fully mobilized its fleet, a force was assembled to assist the German ships. This consisted of the three ''Radetzky''s and the three ''Tegetthoff''s, along with the armored cruiser {{SMS|Sankt Georg||2}}, ''Admiral Spaun'', six destroyers, and 13 torpedo boats.{{sfn|Sondhaus|1994|pp=248β249}} The Austro-Hungarian high command, wary of instigating war with Great Britain, ordered the fleet to avoid the British ships and to only support the Germans openly while they were in Austro-Hungarian waters. On 7 August, when the Germans [[Pursuit of Goeben and Breslau|broke out of Messina]], the Austro-Hungarian fleet had begun to sail for [[Brindisi]] to link up with the Germans and escort their ships to a friendly port in Austria-Hungary. However, the German movement toward the mouth of the Adriatic had been a diversion to throw the British and French off their pursuit, and the German ships instead rounded the southern tip of Greece and made their way to the [[Dardanelles]], where they would eventually be sold to the [[Ottoman Empire]]. Rather than follow the German ships towards the [[Black Sea]], the Austrian fleet returned to Pola.{{sfn|Halpern|1995|p=54}}{{sfn|Sondhaus|1994|pp=249, 258β259}}
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