This is an incomplete list of people that have or had ships or ship classes named after them, or the name is associated with the person. The ships are currently or were previously in service with the Royal Navy, the United Kingdom's naval warfare force; or with predecessor fleets formally in the service of the Kingdom of England; or of the English Commonwealth. The list also includes fictional vessels which have prominently featured in literature about the Royal Navy.
Some people have had Royal ship classes named after them, the following are a list of people who had such classes named after them.
The following ship class was named after HMS Queen Elizabeth the first aircraft carrier commissioned in the class which was named after the dreadnought battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth in service from 1914 to 1948 which itself was named after the Tudor monarch Queen Elizabeth I.
Class | Preceded by | Type | Planned | Completed | Active | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Displacement | Homeport | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Queen Elizabeth class | Invincible class | Aircraft carrier | 2 | 2 | 2 | 2017–present | n/a | 65,000 | Portsmouth | [1] [2] [3] |
The following are British monarchs who have had Royal navy ships named after them.
There are no ships named after Queen Elizabeth II.
The following are ships named after King Charles III the former Prince of Wales and Duke of Cornwall and Edinburgh.
Ship | Class | Pennant No. | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Displacement | Type | Homeport | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HMS Prince of Wales | Queen Elizabeth class | R09 | 2019 | n/a | 65,000 tonnes | Aircraft carrier | Portsmouth | [3] |
The following are ships named after Dukes of Northumberland as well as the Percy Family, also known of the House of Percy.
The following are named after the title of Duke of Northumberland rather than any holder of that title.
Ship | Class | Pennant No. | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Displacement | Type | Homeport | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HMS Northumberland | Type 23 (Duke class) | F238 | 1994 | n/a | 4,900 tonnes | Guided missile frigate | Devonport | [4] |
The following are ships named Hotspur the nicknamed for the 14th century noblemen Sir Henry Percy.
Ship | Class | Pennant No. | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Displacement | Type | Homeport | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HMS Hotspur | Fifth-rate | n/a | 1810 | 1821 | n/a | Frigate | n/a | [5] [6] [7] |
HMS Hotspur | Fifth-rate | n/a | 1828 | 1902 | n/a | Frigate | n/a | [8] [9] |
HMS Hotspur | unknown | n/a | 1828 | 1902 | unknown | Ironclad Ram | n/a | [ citation needed ] |
The following are Dukes with ships named after them.
Named After | Ship | Class | Pennant No. | Commissioned | Homeport | Note | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington | HMS Iron Duke | Type 23 (Duke class) | F234 | 1993 | 4,900 tonnes | Portsmouth | [10] |
John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough | HMS Monmouth | Type 23 (Duke class) | F235 | 1993 | 4,900 tonnes | Devonport | [11] |
James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth | Type 23 (Duke class) | F235 | 1993 | 4,900 tonnes | Devonport | [12] [13] [14] |
The following are named after various Dukedom titles rather than any holder of those titles.
Named After | Ship | Class | Pennant No. | Commissioned | Displacement | Type | Homeport | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adam Duncan, 1st Viscount Duncan | HMS Duncan | Type 45 (Daring class) | D37 | 2013 | 8,500 tonnes | Guided missile destroyer | Portsmouth | [25] |
Named After | Class | Ship | Pennant No. | Commissioned | Displacement | Type | Homeport | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gaius Mucius Scaevola | Type 45 (Daring class) | HMS Daring | D32 | 2009 | 8,500 tonnes | Guided missile destroyer | Portsmouth | [26] [27] |
Named After | Class | Ship | Pennant No. | Commissioned | Displacement | Type | Homeport | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Robert Falcon Scott | Echo class | HMS Scott | H131 | 1997 | 13,500 tonnes | Ocean survey | Devonport | [28] |
The following fictional ships are named after deities.
Name | Ship | From | Created By | Medium | Published | Type | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pluto | HMS Pluto | A Ship of the Line | C. S. Forester | Novel | 1938 | ||
Venus | Venus | Good Ship Venus | Song |
Name | Ship | From | Created By | Medium | Published | Type | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hotspur | HMS Hotspur | Hornblower and the Hotspur | C. S. Forester | Novel | 1962 | Sloop | [29] |
Caligula | Caligula | A Ship of the Line | C. S. Forester | Novel | 1938 |
The Royal Navy (RN) is the naval warfare force of the United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies, and a component of His Majesty's Naval Service. Although warships were used by English and Scottish kings from the early medieval period, the first major maritime engagements were fought in the Hundred Years' War against France. The modern Royal Navy traces its origins to the early 16th century; the oldest of the UK's armed services, it is consequently known as the Senior Service.
The Type 23 frigate or Duke class is a class of frigates built for the United Kingdom's Royal Navy. The ships are named after British Dukes, thus leading to the class being commonly known as the Duke class. The first Type 23, HMS Norfolk, was commissioned in 1989, and the sixteenth, HMS St Albans was commissioned in June 2002. They form the core of the Royal Navy's destroyer and frigate fleet and serve alongside the Type 45 destroyers. They were designed for anti-submarine warfare, but have been used for a range of uses. Ten Type 23 frigates remain in service with the Royal Navy, with three vessels having been sold to the Chilean Navy, one being retired in 2021, and two being retired in 2023.
HMS Enterprise was a 28-gun sixth-rate Enterprise-class frigate of the Royal Navy. She was the name ship of her class of twenty-seven ships.
The first HMS Montrose was one of eight Admiralty-type destroyer leaders, sometimes known as the Scott class. They were named after figures from Scottish history; Montrose was named for the Graham Dukes of Montrose. She was built during the First World War, but was completed too late for service then. However, she had a long career in the inter-war years and saw extensive service during the Second World War.
HMS Montrose was the eighth of the sixteen-ship Type 23 or Duke class of frigates, of the Royal Navy, named after the Duke of Montrose. She was laid down in November 1989 by Yarrow Shipbuilders on the Clyde, and was launched on 31 July 1992 by Edith Rifkind, wife of Malcolm Rifkind, Secretary of State for Defence. She was commissioned into service in June 1994.
The third and current HMS Argyll is a Type 23 Duke-class frigate. She is currently the oldest serving Type 23 frigate in the Royal Navy. Like all of her class she is named after a British dukedom, in this case that of Argyll. HMS Argyll was laid down in March 1987 by Yarrow Shipbuilders at Glasgow, and launched in 1989 by Lady Wendy Levene, sponsored by the Worshipful Company of Paviors. She was commissioned in May 1991. Argyll is currently based at HMNB Devonport.
HMS Bellona was a 74-gun Bellona-class third-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy. Designed by Sir Thomas Slade, she was a prototype for the iconic 74-gun ships of the latter part of the 18th century. "The design of the Bellona class was never repeated precisely, but Slade experimented slightly with the lines, and the Arrogant, Ramillies, Egmont, and Elizabeth classes were almost identical in size, layout, and structure, and had only slight variations in the shape of the underwater hull. The Culloden-class ship of the line was also similar, but slightly larger. Thus over forty ships were near-sisters of the Bellona." Bellona was built at Chatham, starting on 10 May 1758, launched on 19 February 1760, and commissioned three days later. She was the second ship of the Royal Navy to bear the name, and saw service in the Seven Years' War, American Revolutionary War and the Napoleonic Wars.
HMS Lancaster is a Duke-class Type 23 frigate of the Royal Navy, launched by Queen Elizabeth II on 24 May 1990. The ship is known as "The Queen's Frigate", the Duke of Lancaster being a subsidiary title of the Sovereign. Being the third ship in the Type 23 class, Lancaster was originally allocated the pennant number F232 until it was noted that the 232 is the Royal Navy report form for groundings and collisions and therefore considered unlucky. She is one of the few ships left in the fleet with some female officers but mess decks which are men-only. It is quite common when she has returned from long operations that she is flown over by the Avro Lancaster bomber which is part of the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight based at RAF Coningsby.
HMS Iron Duke is a Type 23 frigate of the Royal Navy, and the third ship to bear the name.
HMS Monmouth was the sixth "Duke"-class Type 23 frigate of the Royal Navy. She was the seventh ship to bear the name and was launched by Lady Eaton in 1991, being commissioned two years later.
HMS Northumberland is a Type 23 frigate of the Royal Navy. She is named after the Duke of Northumberland. She is the eighth RN ship to bear the name since the first 70-gun ship of the line in 1679, and the ninth in the class of Type 23 frigates. She is based at Devonport and is part of the Devonport Flotilla.
HMS Kent is a Type 23 Duke class frigate of the Royal Navy, and the twelfth ship to bear the name, although formally she is named after the dukedom rather than the county. Sponsored by Princess Alexandra, The Hon. Lady Ogilvy, Kent was launched on 28 May 1998 and commissioned on 8 June 2000 under the command of then Commander John Clink. She was the first ship to enter Royal Navy service in the 21st century and the first Royal Navy warship with a female Executive Officer, Lt Cdr Vanessa Jane Spiller, appointed in April 2001.
The Type 14 Blackwood class were a ship class of minimal "second-rate" anti-submarine warfare frigates. Built for the Royal Navy during the 1950s at a time of increasing threat from the Soviet Union's submarine fleet, they served until the late 1970s. Twelve ships of this class served with the Royal Navy and a further three were built for the Indian Navy.
HMS Queen Elizabeth is the lead ship of the Queen Elizabeth class of aircraft carriers and the Fleet Flagship of the Royal Navy. Capable of carrying 60 aircraft including fixed wing, rotary wing and autonomous vehicles, she is named in honour of the first HMS Queen Elizabeth, a World War I era super-dreadnought, which in turn was named after Queen Elizabeth I. The carrier Queen Elizabeth carries her namesake ship's honours, as well as her Tudor rose-adorned crest and motto.
Standing Royal Navy deployments is a list of operations and commitments undertaken by the United Kingdom's Royal Navy on a worldwide basis. The following list details these commitments and deployments sorted by region and in alphabetical order. Routine deployments made by the Navy's nuclear-powered submarines and their location of operations is classified.
The Tacoma class was a class of 96 patrol frigates which served in the United States Navy during World War II and the Korean War. Originally classified as gunboats (PG), they were reclassified as patrol frigates (PF) on 15 April 1943. The class is named for its lead ship, Tacoma, a Maritime Commission (MARCOM) S2-S2-AQ1 design, which in turn was named for the city of Tacoma, Washington. Twenty-one ships were transferred to the British Royal Navy, in which they were known as Colony-class frigates, and twenty-eight ships were transferred under Lend-Lease to the Soviet Navy, where they were designated as storozhevoi korabl, during World War II. All Tacoma-class ships in US service during World War II were manned by United States Coast Guard crews. Tacoma-class ships were transferred to the United States Coast Guard and various navies post-World War II.
In the Royal Navy and other navies of Europe and the Commonwealth of Nations, ships are identified by pennant number. Historically, naval ships flew a flag that identified a flotilla or type of vessel. For example, the Royal Navy used a red burgee for torpedo boats and a pennant with an H for torpedo boat destroyers. Adding a number to the type-identifying flag uniquely identified each ship.
The UK Carrier Strike Group (UKCSG) is a carrier battle group of the Royal Navy. It has existed in various forms since the mid-2000s. Between 2006 and 2011, the formation centred around the Royal Navy's Invincible-class aircraft carriers until the retirement of their Harrier GR9 strike aircraft in 2011 as a result of the Strategic Defence and Security Review. The UKCSG subsequently returned in February 2015 ahead of the entry into service of the new Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carriers, HMS Queen Elizabeth and HMS Prince of Wales. The aim of the CSG is to facilitate carrier-enabled power projection.