Italian submarine Jantina (1932)

Jantina was one of seven Argonauta-class submarines built for the Regia Marina (Royal Italian Navy) during the early 1930s. She played a minor role in the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939 supporting the Spanish Nationalists, and was later sunk during World War II.

Design and description
The Argonauta class was derived from the earlier Squalo-class submarines. They displaced 650 LT surfaced and 800 LT submerged. The submarines were 61.5 m long, had a beam of 5.7 m and a draft of 4.7 m. They had an operational diving depth of 80 m. Their crew numbered 44 officers and enlisted men.

For surface running, the boats were powered by two 750 bhp diesel engines, each driving one propeller shaft. When submerged each propeller was driven by a 400 hp electric motor. They could reach 14 kn on the surface and 8 kn underwater. On the surface, the Settembrini class had a range of 5000 nmi at 8 kn; submerged, they had a range of 110 nmi at 3 kn.

The boats were armed with six 53.3 cm torpedo tubes, four in the bow and two in the stern for which they carried a total of 12 torpedoes. They were also armed with a single 102 mm deck gun forward of the conning tower for combat on the surface. Their anti-aircraft armament consisted of two single 13.2 mm machine guns.

Construction and career
Jantina was laid down by Odero-Terni-Orlando at their Muggiano shipyard in 1930, launched on 15 June 1932 and completed the following year. During the Spanish Civil War, she made one patrol off Barcelona on 12–27 August 1937 during which she unsuccessfully attacked a Republican destroyer with a pair of torpedoes. The destroyer was equally unsuccessful when she depth charged the submarine. In an unusual submarine vs. submarine confrontation, the Jantina was sunk by torpedoes on July 5, 1941, by HMS Torbay (N79); only six crew members survived from the Janita crew of 48. Her wreck was found in November 2021 near Mykonos, at a depth of 103 meters.