After the defeat in the First World War , in accordance with the provisions of the New Treaty , Bulgaria was forbidden to have a submarine fleet.
After the defeat in the Second World War , in accordance with the provisions of the Paris Peace Treaty, Bulgaria was forbidden to possess, create or experiment with any underwater vehicles [1]
Submariner number 18
Type "M" series XV
Project 613
Project 633
| Tactical number | Name | In the fleet | Withdrawn from the fleet | condition | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Submarine number 18" | since May 25, 1916 [2] | Since February 1918 | the former | ||
| since August 18, 1954 [2] | 1958 year | former returned to the Soviet Navy | |||
| 1954 year [2] | 1958 year | former returned to the Soviet Navy | |||
| 1954 year [2] | 1958 year | the former returned to the Soviet Navy | |||
| "Glory" | 1958 year [2] | 1972 year | the former | ||
| "Victory" | 1958 year [2] | 1972 year | the former | ||
| "Victory" | since May 25, 1972 [2] | 1992 year | the former former | ||
| "Victoria" | December 5, 1972 [2] | September 5, 1990 [2] | the former former | ||
| "Hope" | since January 20, 1983 [2] | June 27, 2008 [2] [3] | the former | ||
| "Glory" | since December 28, 1985 [2] | November 1, 2011 [4] | the former | ||
See also
- Bulgarian Navy
Notes
- β Draft Peace Treaty with Bulgaria .
- β 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Submarine project 633
- β Flag spusk on the penultimate Bulgarian submariner
- β Bulgaria wrote off the last submarine
Links
- Bulgarian fleet (bulg.)