Aleksandr Nevsky was a of the Soviet Navy.
TheÃÂ Sverdlov-class cruisers, Soviet designation Project 68bis, were the last conventional gunÃÂ cruisersÃÂ built for theÃÂ Soviet Navy. They were built in the 1950s and were based on Soviet, German, and Italian designs and concepts developed prior to theÃÂ Second World War. They were modified to improve their sea keeping capabilities, allowing them to run at high speed in the rough waters of theÃÂ North Atlantic. The basic hull was more modern and had better armor protection than the vast majority of the post Second World War gun cruiser designs built and deployed by peer nations. They also carried an extensive suite of modernÃÂ radarÃÂ equipment andÃÂ anti-aircraft artillery. The Soviets originally planned to build 40 ships in the class, which would be supported by theÃÂ sÃÂ andÃÂ aircraft carriers.
TheÃÂ SverdlovÃÂ classÃÂ displacedÃÂ 13,600 tons standard and 16,640 tons at full load. They wereÃÂ ÃÂ long overallÃÂ andÃÂ ÃÂ long at the waterline. They had aÃÂ beamÃÂ ofÃÂ ÃÂ andÃÂ draughtÃÂ ofÃÂ ÃÂ and typically had a complement of 1,250. The hull was a completely welded new design and the ships had a double bottom for over 75% of their length. The ship also had twenty-threeÃÂ watertight bulkheads. TheÃÂ Sverdlovs had six boilers providing steam to two shaftÃÂ gearedÃÂ steam turbinesÃÂ generatingÃÂ . This gave the ships a maximum speed ofÃÂ . The cruisers had a range ofÃÂ ÃÂ atÃÂ .
Sverdlov-class cruisers main armament included twelveÃÂ /57 cal B-38 guns mounted in four triple Mk5-bis turrets. They also had twelveÃÂ /56 cal Model 1934 guns in six twin SM-5-1 mounts. For anti-aircraft weaponry, the cruisers had thirty-twoÃÂ ÃÂ anti-aircraft guns in sixteen twin mounts and were also equipped with tenÃÂ ÃÂ torpedo tubesÃÂ in two mountings of five each.
TheÃÂ Sverdlovs had ÃÂ ÃÂ belt armorÃÂ and had a ÃÂ ÃÂ armoredÃÂ deck. TheÃÂ turretsÃÂ were shielded byÃÂ ÃÂ armor and theÃÂ conning tower, byÃÂ ÃÂ armor.
The cruisers' ultimate radar suite included one 'Big Net' or 'Top Trough' air search radar, one 'High Sieve' or 'Low Sieve' air search radar, one 'Knife Rest' air search radar and one 'Slim Net' air search radar. For navigational radar they had one 'Don-2' or 'Neptune' model. For fire control purposes the ships were equipped with two 'Sun Visor' radars, two 'Top Bow' 152 mm gun radars and eight 'Egg Cup' gun radars. For electronic countermeasures the ships were equipped with two 'Watch Dog' ECM systems.
The ship was built at Admiralty Shipyard in Leningrad and was launched on 30 May 1950 and commissioned on 31 December 1952. From 1956 to 1962 she was part of the 2nd Cruiser Division in the Northern Fleet. In February 1962, the light cruiser Aleksandr Nevsky was assigned to the newly formed 6th (Missile) Surface Ship Division.
On 15 February 1953, she was commissioned into the Red Banner Northern Fleet. In May 1953, she made the transition to Leningrad, where she took part in festivities in honor of the 250th anniversary of the city.
In 1954-1956, the cruiser practiced combat training tasks at sea and at the base, completing a number of cruises in the Arctic Ocean as part of a ship formation. On 31 March 1956, together with the cruisers Murmansk and Oktyabrskaya Revolyutsiya, it became part of the newly formed 2nd Cruiser Division.
In the summer of 1957, she made the transition from the Baltic Sea to Leningrad, where she took part in the celebration of the Day of the Navy. In the fall of 1957, the cruiser returned to Leningrad again in connection with scheduled repairs and modernization. After the repairs carried out at the Shipyard No. 194, she, on 7 November 1957, represented the Red Banner Northern Fleet during the naval parade on the Neva dedicated to the 40th anniversary of the October Revolution.
On 25 December 1964, decommissioned from the Navy, mothballed and put in the Kola Bay, in Sayda-Guba. In 1968, the cruiser was taken out of storage and towed to Murmansk (ROSTA) to the plant for repair and recommissioning.
On 15 December 1970, she was recommissioned.
In 1971, the ship received board number 813.
In 1988, she starred in the film Operation Wunderland based on the real life operation during World War II and played as the fictional German cruiser Admiral Steiner (real name, Admiral Scheer).
On 30 May 1989, she was disarmed and decommissioned from the navy.
On 31 December 1989, she was struck and transferred to the Department of Funds and Property (ÃÂÃÂôõû ÃÂþýôþò ø øüÃÂÃÂõÃÂÃÂòð - OFI) for dismantling and implementation.
From 1 January 1990, the crew of the Aleksandr Nevsky began to be removed. By the fall of 1990, 6 officers remained.
In 1991, the ship was motheballed.
In October 1991, the cruiser under the tug Dikson, was towed around the southern coast of Africa to India. The final dismantling took place in Alan Beach (near Bombay).