The epic clash of the German and British fleets commences off of Jutland. The end result is still debated, but that the British retained naval dominance in the Atlantic is not.
Of small interest here, Jutland is that Danish peninsula that juts into the North Sea and which some believe gave its name to the Jutes, once of the three Germanic tribes that immigrated to Great Britain in the 400s.
The 1916 naval battle has gone down as oddly contested in its recollections, which it still is today. The Germans immediately declared it a victory, but as British historians have noted, the end result was that the German fleet was bottled up for the rest of the war where it did nothing other than consume resources and, in the end, contribute to revolt against its employer.
The battle is seen this way as Admiral Jellicoe did not crush the German fleet and because the British lost more men and ships than the Germans did. In strategic terms, however, its clear that the British turned the Germans back and sent them back into port. . . forever. Strategically, therefore, it was a British victory. The debate otherwise is due to the lasting strong suspicion that the British could have actually continued the contest and demolished the German fleet, which would have ended any threat of German surface action for the remainder of the war. Admiral Jellicoe did not do that, but then as was pointed out by Winston Churchill he was the only commander in the war who was capable of loosing the war in a day, which no doubt factored in his mind. Had the British guess wrong in the battle, and the early stages of the battle were all guess work, the result may well have resulted in Allied loss in the war itself.
Jutland stands out as such a clash of naval giants that its somewhat inaccurately remembered as the "only" clash of dreadnoughts, which it isn't. It was, however, a massive example of a naval engagement between two highly competent massive surface fleets. It wasn't the first one of the war, but it would be the last one. In spite of the seeming ambiguity of the result, the battle effectively destroyed Germany's surface fleet abilities forever.
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