List of Zeppelins


This is a complete list of Zeppelins constructed by the German Zeppelin companies from 1900 until 1938. Other rigid airships that are also sometimes referred to as zeppelins but not built by Zeppelin are not included.
The Zeppelin company based in Friedrichshafen, Germany, numbered their aircraft LZ 1/2/ ..., with LZ standing for "Luftschiff Zeppelin". Additionally, craft used for civilian purposes were named, whereas military airships were usually given "tactical numbers":
Since 1997, airships of the new type Zeppelin NT have been flying. They are not included here, as they are not rigid airships and do not represent a continuity of design from the ones listed here.

Zeppelins finished before World War I

Production numberClassName/
tactical number
UsageFirst flightRemarksFateImage
LZ 1A experimental2 July 1900Three flights, during which the prior speed record achieved by La France was exceeded, dismantled in 1901 due to lack of funds.Dismantled in 1901
LZ 2B experimental17 January 1906First departed hangar on 30 November 1905 but failed to lift from Lake Constance; flew on second attempt, but damaged beyond repair after emergency landing.Destroyed in Germany
LZ 3BZ I experimental; Army9 October 1906The first Zeppelin to be truly successful. Made a number of flights of significant duration before being enlarged and bought by the German Army in 1908. Used for training until decommissioned in 1913.Decommissioned in 1913
LZ 4CArmy 20 June 1908Completed a 12-hour flight on 1 July 1908; attempted 24-hour endurance flight on 4 August 1908, but landed near Echterdingen after 12 hours to repair an engine. Destroyed when strong winds broke its mooring cables.Destroyed in storm
LZ 5CZ II Army26 May 1909Torn from moorings during a storm and wrecked near Weilburg on 25 March 1910.Destroyed in storm near Weilburg, Germany on 25 March 1910
LZ 6DZ III Army, DELAG25 August 1909First experiments with wireless communication; first airship operated by DELAG ; accidentally destroyed by fire in its hangar at Oos, Baden-Baden on 14 September 1910.Burnt in its hangar at Baden-Baden, Germany on 14 September 1910
LZ 7EDeutschlandDELAG19 June 1910Damaged beyond repair after crashing during a thunderstorm over the Teutoburg Forest on 28 June 1910Destroyed in a storm in German Teutoburg Forest on 28 June 1910
LZ 8EDeutschland IIDELAG30 March 1911Caught by a strong crosswind while being walked out of its hangar and damaged beyond repair on 16 May 1911Destroyed in storm in Germany on 16 May 1911
LZ 9FErsatz Z II Army2 October 1911Decommissioned 1 August 1914
LZ 10FSchwabenDELAG26 June 1911Carried 1,553 passengers in 218 commercial flights. On 28 June 1912 the Schwaben caught fire after a strong gust tore it from its moorings near Düsseldorf, injuring some of the ground handling party.Destroyed in a storm in Germany on 28 June 1912
LZ 11GViktoria LuiseDELAG; later military19 February 1912After used by DELAG, taken over as a training airship by the German military upon the outbreak of World War I; broke apart while being hangared on 1 October 1915.Destroyed in German hanger on 1 October 1915
LZ 12FZ III Army25 April 1912Decommissioned 1 August 1914
LZ 13GHansa/
LZ 13
DELAG; later Navy then Army30 July 1912travelled in 399 flights; first passenger flight outside Germany, commanded by Graf von Zeppelin for visit to Denmark and Sweden on 19 September 1912; Impressed by the German Army at the start of World War I; decommissioned mid-1916
LZ 14HL 1 Navy7 October 1912Helgoland Island Air Disaster: brought down into the North Sea during a thunderstorm on 9 September 1913, drowning 14 crew members. These were the first Zeppelin fatalities.Destroyed in a storm over the North Sea on 9 September 1913
LZ 15HErsatz Z I Army16 January 1913Destroyed in a forced landing on 19 March 1913.
LZ 16HZ IV Army14 March 1913Accidentally crossed the French border on 3 April 1913 due to a navigational error in poor visibility, and landed on the parade ground at Lunéville, allowing the French to examine it in detail. Used for reconnaissance over East Prussia in August 1914 and bombed Warsaw on 24 September 1914. Later used for training before being decommissioned in the autumn of 1916.Decommissioned in the autumn of 1916
LZ 17HSachsen/
LZ 17
DELAG; later Navy then Army3 May 1913Transported 9,837 passengers in 419 flights, travelling ; taken over by German military at the start of World War I in 1914; this was Captain Lehmann's first command; it had bomb racks and bombardier's station fitted, together with an improved radio room, machine guns in the cars below and a gunners' nest in the tail; In its first attack on Antwerp it carried of bombs and spent 12 hours in the air.Decommissioned in autumn of 1916
LZ 18IL 2Navy9 September 1913Johannisthal Air Disaster: destroyed by an explosion caused by escaped hydrogen being sucked into an engine compartment during a test flight on 17 October 1913; entire crew killed.Destroyed by an explosion on 17 October 1913
LZ 19HSecond Ersatz Z I Army6 June 1913Damaged beyond repair after a forced landing 13 June 1914.
LZ 20HZ V Army8 July 1913Used early in World War I for reconnaissance missions in Western Poland; forced landing due to damage from ground fire after an attack on Mława during the Battle of Tannenberg: crew captured.Crashed Near Allenstein, East Prussia during 26–30 August 1914
LZ 21KZ VI Army10 November 1913Carried out first airship bombing mission of World War 1 on 6 August 1914 when it bombed Liège, using artillery shells instead of bombs. Inadequate lift restricted it to low altitude so bullets and shrapnel from defending fire holed the gasbags. The ship limped to Cologne but grounded in a forest near Bonn, wrecking it.Crashed in Cologne, Germany on 6 August 1914
LZ 22LZ VII Army8 January 1914Limited to a ceiling of around, on 21 August 1914 Z VII was sent to find the retreating French Army around the Vosges mountains in Alsace, and drop bombs on the camps. After passing through clouds Z VII found itself right above the main army, whose small-arms fire penetrated many gas cells. Leaking heavily, the crew force-landed the airship near St. Quirin, Lorraine.Crashed in Germany on 21 August 1914
LZ 23LZ VIII Army11 May 1914Under the same orders as Z VII on 21 August 1914, Z VIII engaged the French army while at an altitude of a few hundred feet. According to Lehmann Z VIII received "thousands of bullets and shell splinters", forcing it to drift and make a forced landing in no man's land near Bandonvillers. The crew destroyed documents and tried to ignite the wreck but so little gas remained it would not burn: the crew were captured by the French.Crashed in France on 21 August 1914
LZ 24ML 3 Navy11 May 1914After 24 reconnaissance missions over the North Sea, L 3 participated in the first raid on England on 19 January 1915. On 17 February 1915 abandoned after a forced landing in Denmark, caused by engine failure compounded by strong headwinds and insufficient fuel. The wind was so strong it blew the airship, now unmanned but with engines still running, out to sea.Last seen over North Sea on 17 February 1915
LZ 25MZ IX Army13 July 1914Used for reconnaissance and bombing missions in northern France; on 25 August 1914 nine bombs dropped on Antwerp killed or wounded 26 people and damaged a royal palace. The Belgian royal family were in residence and the attack was widely condemned. Destroyed in its hangar at Düsseldorf on 8 October 1914 by bombs dropped by Flt Lt. Reginald Marix, RNAS flying a Sopwith Tabloid.Burnt in its hangar at Düsseldorf, Germany on 8 October 1914

Zeppelins constructed during World War I

Usage: military
shows Navy Zeppelin captains: Manger, von Freudenreich, Schwonder, Prölss, Bockholt, Peter Strasser, Gayer, Stabbert, Ehrlich, Dietrich, Hollender, Dose and Friemel.

Zeppelins constructed after World War I