HDMS Bellona

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The following ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Bellona: [1]

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Danmark may refer to:

At least five ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Triton:

HDMS <i>Peder Skram</i> (F352) Museum ship in Copenhagen, Denmark

HDMS Peder Skram (F352) was a Peder Skram-class frigate in the Royal Danish Navy which was in use until 1990. It is now docked at Holmen in Copenhagen where it serves as a privately operated museum ship along with the ships of the Royal Danish Naval Museum. The ship is named after Peder Skram, a 16th-century Danish admiral.

Five ships of the Danish Royal Navy have borne the name HDMS Springeren:

At least two ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Absalon:

Three ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Lougen. The name "Lougen" is derived from the river Laagen in Norway.

Several naval ships were named Helgoland after the island of Heligoland or the Battle of Helgoland, an action during the Second Schleswig War.

Four ships of the Danish Royal Navy have borne the name HDMS Niels Juel:

Several ships of the Swedish Navy have borne the name Najaden, including:

The following ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Diana:

HDMS <i>Bellona</i> (1830)

HDMS Bellona was a frigate of the Royal Danish Navy, which she served from 1835 to 1862.

HDMS <i>Havfruen</i> (1825)

HDMS Havfruen was a frigate of the Royal Danish Navy.

The following ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Flora:

The following ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Lossen:

At least three ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Galathea:

HDMS <i>Hauch</i> (1862)

HDMS Hauch was a Danish gunboat, launched in 1862 and under command the following year. It was named after the naval officer Jens Erik Hauch, who died during the Battle of Copenhagen, while bravely defending the decommissioned frigate Kronborg against three Royal Navy ships of the line. Hauch can be viewed as a scaled-down version of the preceding six gunboats of the Thura class. Hauch was built entirely in iron and the smaller size meant that it could only accommodate a single cannon. The 30 lb smoothbore cannon was not very accurate and was replaced by a smaller, but rifled 18 lb cannon in 1864. Towards the end of her career the armament consisted of two small smoothbore cannons (falconets), used for warning shots during fisheries inspection duties. The steam engine was reused from the scrapped gunboat Støren. This engine lasted until 1886, when it was replaced by a new Burmeister & Wain 200 HP steam engine.

HDMS Ingolf has been used as a name for three ships of the Royal Danish Navy:

The following ships of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name HDMS Valkyrien:

A number of vessels of the Royal Danish Navy have borne the name Iver Huitfeldt, after Iver Huitfeldt.

References

  1. "Danish Naval History". www.navalhistory.dk. Retrieved 7 September 2018.