List of ships of the line of the Dutch Republic

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This is a list of Dutch (the United Provinces of the Netherlands) ships of the line , or sailing warships which formed the Dutch battlefleet. It covers ships built from about 1623 (there are few reliable records of individual earlier warships) until the creation of the Kingdom of the Netherlands on March 1815, including the period of the French-controlled Batavian Republic, nominal Kingdom of Holland and direct French annexation between 1795 and 1813. It excludes frigates and lesser warships.

Contents

The Dutch were often handicapped by the smaller size of their ships relative to the vessels of other nations, particularly those of England and France. This was partly due to the shallow home waters of the Netherlands, which limited the maximum draft with which ships could operate. Consequently, the Dutch did not build large three-deckers such as were found in the navies of England and France, except for a brief period from 1682 to 1695 (and a very few much later on during the Napoleonic era). However, during the period up to 1650 the Dutch made up in sheer quantity of ships for what they lacked in terms of the size of vessels; the list below is incomplete and does not include some of the many hundreds of Dutch warships belonging to the United Provinces between 1579 (when the Netherlands effectively became independent from Spanish control) and 1795 (in which latter year the French invaded and established the puppet state of the Batavian Republic).

The Five Admiralties

Administratively and politically, until 1795 there was not a single Dutch Navy but five distinct Admiralties. In the south was the Admiralty of Zeeland covering the Province of Zeeland (indicated by "(Z)" preceding a ship's name in the list below). Next were three covering the Province of Holland - the Admiralty of the Maas (or "Maze") in the south of Holland, centred on Rotterdam (indicated by "(M)"), the Admiralty of Amsterdam in the centre of the Province (indicated by "(A)"), and the Admiralty of the Noorderkwartier in the north of Holland (indicated by "(N)"). The fifth was the Admiralty of Friesland covering the Province of Friesland (indicated by "(F)"), albeit with fewer ships than the other four Admiralties. Each Dutch warship belonged exclusively to one or other of the five Admiralties, although in the 17th century the Dutch fleet included many ships of mercantile ownership, particularly those belonging to the Dutch East India Company (VOC). The names of Dutch warships were often common to several Admiralties, so that there were vessels bearing the same name in different Admiralties at the same time.

Armament was often changed, so the number of guns mounted in any ship frequently varied from year to year. During the 1650 - 1680 period, many Dutch ships of the line were "up-gunned", ending with significantly more guns (or guns of larger calibres) than when they first came into service.

The Dutch Rating System

Prior to 1632, the Dutch did not have a system of categorising vessels beyond a simple functional division into "ships", "frigates" and lesser ship-rigged "three-mast yachts". [1] On 11 March 1632, the Dutch government approved three standard designs (which they termed "charters") to which all new warships should be built. These set the requirement for low-built ships without castles, an uninterrupted deck, slim hulls and light construction; the three designs were of 100 (Amsterdam) feet, 120 feet and 128 feet length (measured on the uppermost continuous deck) respectively, and future charter divisions retained this classification by length rather than by tonnage or number of guns (as used by England and France). However, later in the 17th century, the Dutch moved towards using a Rating system similar (but not identical) to the English or French system, while retaining the terminology of "Charters" well into the 18th century. To provide flagships for the battlefleet, two two-decked ships were built in this period, both at Rotterdam for the Admiralty of the Maas - the Aemilia of 1632 and the Brederode of 1644; each was 144 (Amsterdam) feet in length and 35 feet in breadth.

The system coincided with the English categories of 1st to 4th Rates, i.e. they comprised the battlefleet units. In 1652 the Dutch - under pressure from their naval commander Maarten Tromp to build larger ships to combat the English - revised this rating system which was still based on a series of Charters, initially grading the battlefleet units by length of ship with classes of 130 (Amsterdam) feet, 136 feet and 140 feet; this was at a time when the largest ship in the Dutch navies measured 134 feet in length. Subsequently, having won the Battle of Dungeness in November 1652, Tromp persuaded the Staten-Generaal to add a further class of 150 feet ships as the "1st Charter", although only two of this length were built initially - the Eendracht and Groot Hollandia, both launched at Rotterdam for the Admiralty of the Maas in 1653 and 1654 respectively with 58 guns each.

Between 1652 and 1680 the "Charters" underwent drastic revision, but it was still more appropriate to classify ships of the line during this era by their (gundeck) length than by the number of guns carried. The lengths remained the basis of the Charters. By 1680, following the end of the later Anglo-Dutch Wars, the Staten-Generaal divided the warships of the five Admiralties into eight charters. The first four charters comprised the battlefleet, while the next three (5th to 7th Charters) covered frigates down to 20 guns, and the 8th Charter included smaller cruising warships.

The 1st Charter comprised the largest two-deckers before 1680, together with 'partial' three-deckers (i.e. ships with only a partial battery on the third deck, without any guns in the waist), then subsequently covered the full three-deckers (for which see note below). These were ships carrying more than 70 guns, although this had risen to about 80 guns by 1670 and by 1680 to encompass ships of 90 guns or more. They generally (but not always) carried a mix of 36-pounder and 24-pounder guns on their primary (lower) gun deck, with lighter cannon (18-pounders and 12-pounders) on the upper deck and 6-pounders on their quarterdecks.

The other battlefleet Charters were all two-decked warships. By the 1670s the 2nd Charter were all two-decker warships with a number of guns initially around 60 to 74, although by 1680 the 60-gun and 64-gun ships had been relegated to the 3rd Charter. They usually carried 18-pounders (or a mixture of 24-pounders and 18-pounders) on the lower deck. The 3rd and 4th Charter ships usually carried 18-pounders or 12-pounders as their main battery. The 4th Charter ships by 1680 carried between 44 and 56 guns; by 1714 a minimum of 50 guns applied.

Dimensions

All lengths quoted in this article are measured in Amsterdam feet, taken as the length of the uppermost continuous deck from stem to stern. The Amsterdam foot (Amsterdamse voet) was equivalent to 28.3133 cm, and thus equated to 0.9289 of an English foot, a factor to bear in mind in any comparisons. It was divided into eleven inches (Amsterdamse duim) equal to 2.57393 cm, compared with 2.54 cm for an English inch. Thus 150 Amsterdam feet equated to 139 ft 4 inches in English measurement. The Rotterdam foot was considerably longer - 31.39 cm (equal to almost 1.03 English feet) - and was divided into twelve inches, each of 2.615 cm. However in 1653 all the Admiralties adopted the Amsterdam foot, and this has been employed throughout this article except where otherwise stated.

Tons

The system of weights was similarly united in the Netherlands, with the Amsterdam pound (pond) equal to 494.1 grams, compared with the English pound of 453.6 grams. Thus the Amsterdam pound (in which all ordnance calibres are quoted below) was 8.93% greatr than the English pound (e.g the Dutch "24-pounder" was equivalent to 26 lb 2.3 oz.

Three-deckers

Most of the Dutch ships of the line, for reasons given above, were built with two decks of guns. However, in the 1660s four ships of the Amsterdam Admiralty were built which were structurally three-deckers (the Spiegel of 1663, followed by the Gouden Leeuw, Witte Olifant and Dolphijn of 1666), but these had only partially-armed upper decks, with guns mounted forwards and aft (under the quarterdeck) but not in the waist at this level. From 1682 twenty complete three-deckers were built, the last in 1721; these comprised the 1st Charter issued on 15 February 1680, and provided for these to have dimensions of 170 (Amsterdam) feet on the gundeck (146 ft 3 in on the keel) x 43 feet x 16 ft. After these twenty, no further 1st Charter ships were built by the Netherlands.

Ships of the "Old Navy" (1579 to 1648)

This is the period during which the Dutch provinces consolidated their independence from Spanish rule, forming the United Provinces of the Netherlands, and took part in the Eighty Years' War. Almost all of these ships were relatively small, with only a single gun deck, and were owned by the five Admiralties. The majority were between 120 and 130 feet in length as measured on the upper deck, the exceptions being the fleet flagships built in 1632 and 1644, which are separately listed below; the warships built for the Admiralties were supplemented frequently by ships hired from the VOC (East India Company, established 1602), WIC (West India Company, established 1621) or other mercantile source (this was particularly true in 1652, at the outbreak of the 1st Anglo-Dutch War), but only a few of these are mentioned.

Fleet flagships

The Aemilia and Brederode, although entering service 12 years apart, had identical dimensions of 144 ft x 35 ft 3 in x 14 ft 2 in, in Amsterdam feet (equating to 132 ft x 32 ft x 13 ft 6 in in Rotterdam feet). Both were built for the Maas Admiralty in the naval shipyard at Rotterdam by Jan Salomonszoon van den Tempel. Each was a two-decked ship, with 13 pairs of gunports on the lower tier in Aemilia and 12 pairs in Brederode. Although no dimensions are known for the Maagd van Dordrecht, she was quoted as being 300 lasts (the same as Aemilia) so was probably of similar size.

Ships of between 120 and 130 feet

Ships of the "New Navy" (1650 to 1682)

This is the period during which the United Provinces fought three Anglo-Dutch Wars – conflicts of 1652-1656, 1665-1667 and 1672-1674; although England withdrew from this contest in 1674, the Dutch remained at war against the French until 1678. The Charter (rating) system was introduced in 1652 - initially defined by ships' lengths - but was radically revised during this era (see notes above).

At the start of the 1st Anglo-Dutch War, the Dutch navies relied heavily on hired ships to expand their fleet, but a programme to build thirty new ships of the line was promptly started. This comprised a flagship of 150 (Amsterdam) feet in length (the Eendracht of 1653), and twenty-nine other ships of 130 feet or more. It was followed within a year by a second thirty-ship programme, again consisting of a flagship of 150 (Amsterdam) feet in length (the Groot Hollandia of 1654), and twenty-nine other ships of 130 feet or more.

1st Charter

The first two of these were launched for the Maas Admiralty in 1653 and 1654. While structurally three-deckers, on these two ships the upper deck was only armed forward (under the forecastle) and aft (under the quarterdeck), with no guns in the waist (this system was also common to other navies in the mid 17th century). Each measured 150 × 38 × 15 Amsterdam feet, and was initially armed with 58 guns. The first ship was originally intended to be named Prins Willem, but Willem himself ruled that it should bear the name Eendracht ("Concord") to honour the relationship between the seven provinces which constituted the United Netherlands.

Other ships of 130 feet or more

Built 1648-1652

  • (A) Jaarsveld. 44 guns (1648), 130 ft x 32 ft x 13 ft – flagship of Johan van Galen at the Battle of Montecristo (September 1652); wrecked 9 February 1653 on a rock when leaving Livorno.
  • (A) Vrede. 44 guns (1650) 13112 ft x 3212 ft x 13 ft - the precursor of the numerous 130-ft ships built in the First Anglo-Dutch War building programme; she took part in the Battles of Dover (June 1652), Dungeness (Dec 1652), Portland (Feb/March 1653) and the Gabbard (June 1653), all under Gideon de Wildt; later she took part in the Battle of Lowestoft (May 1665) under Hendrik Gotskens, and was broken up 1667.
  • (A) Vrijheid. 46 guns (1651), 134 ft x 34 ft x 13.25 ft – the largest ship built for the Admiralty of Amsterdam since the early part of the 17th Century. she took part in the Battle of Portland (Feb/March 1653) and was Vice-Adm Witte de With's flagship in the Battle of Scheveningen (Aug 1653); she blew up and sank in action at the Battle of Palermo on 2 June 1676.
  • (A) Huis van Nassau. 36 guns (1651). Formerly the Portuguese Sao Bartholemeu, captured in 1651. Sold 18 August 1651.
  • (F) Groenwald. 44 guns (1652), 13212 ft x 31 ft. Deleted 1655.

The 1653 Programme

The Dutch had learnt by late 1652, following their defeats in the first year of the Anglo-Dutch War, that a haphazard collection of warships and armed merchantmen could not prevail against a professional naval force. In October 1652 discussions began with a view to producing specially-designed warships. In February 1653 the States-General authorised the building of thirty new warships, financed by two million guilders. Tromp's plea that these should all be as big as or bigger than the equivalent English ships was ignored, but the programme was completed in 1653, comprising the flagship Eendracht (1st Charter, 150 ft in length) and 29 lesser ships.

  • (M) Prins Hendrik 44 guns (130 ft). Built by Jacon Hermanszoon Wittert. Last mention in 1656 for expedition to Danzig, under command of Aert van Nes.
  • (M) Utrecht (130 ft)
  • (F) Prinses Albertina (130 ft)
  • (F) Westergo (134 ft)
  • (F) Oostergo (140 ft)
  • (F) Stad en Lande (134 ft)
  • (F) Elf Steden (130 ft)
  • (N) Wapen van Holland 50 guns (134 ft)
  • (N) Jozua 50 guns (136 ft)
  • Seven ships were built for the Admiralty of Zeeland, two each in Middelburg, Veere and Zaandam, and one in Vlissingen.
    • (Z) Dordrecht. 46 guns (Middelburg, 1653) 130 ft x 34 ft x 1312 ft. Not mentioned after 1673.
    • (Z) Middelburg. 46 guns (Middelburg, 1653) 130 ft x 33 ft x 1312 ft. Not mentioned after 1693.
    • (Z) Veere (also called Ter Veere, or Wapen van Ter Veere, or Kampveere). 44 guns (Veere, 1653) 130 ft x 33 ft x 1312 ft. Captured by the English in 1673, and renamed Arms of Terver.
    • (Z) Vlissingen. 44 guns (Vlissingen, 1653) 130 ft x 33 ft x 1312 ft. Not mentioned after 1674.
    • (Z) Zeelandia (also called Hof van Zeeland, or Groot Zeelandia). ? guns (Veere, 1653) 136 ft x 34 ft x 1334 ft. Burnt in action 1666.
    • (Z) Zierikzee (also called Wapen van Zierikzee). 40 guns (Zaandam, 1653) 130 ft x 31 ft x 1312 ft. Not mentioned after 1674.
    • (Z) Utrecht. ? guns (Zaandam, 1653) 134 ft x 33 ft x 1312 ft. Not mentioned after 1673.
  • Ten ships were built for the Admiralty of Amsterdam, all in that port.
    • (A) Amsterdam. (140 ft)
    • (A) Burcht van Leiden. (13212 ft)
    • (A) Landman. (130 ft)
    • (A) Maarseveen (or Huis te Maarseveen) (130 ft)
    • (A) Oosterwijk (or Huis te Oosterwijk) (140 ft)
    • (A) Stad en Lande (130 ft)
    • (A) Stavoren. (130 ft)
    • (A) Zuiderhuis. (130 ft)
    • (A) Jaarsveld (or Huis te Jaarsveld). (130 ft)
    • (A) Dom van Utrecht. (130 ft)
  • (A) Huis te Kruiningen (140 ft) – originally ordered for Genoa, and purchased by the Amsterdam Admiralty on the stocks.
  • (A) Huis te Zwieten (146 ft) – originally ordered for Genoa, and purchased by the Amsterdam Admiralty on the stocks. Given to the VOC, rearmed with 70 guns, captured by England at the Battle of Lowestoft, 1665

Armaments were significantly increased over the lifetimes of these ships. As an example, the Zeeland ships of 130 (Amsterdam) feet in length were designed to each carry 44 guns - comprising four bronze 24-pounders, ten iron 18-pounders and four bronze 12-pounder on the lower deck; eight iron 12-pounders and ten iron 8-pounders on the upper deck; and eight bronze 6-pounders on the quarterdeck; but all ended up carrying a heavier armament or up to 50 guns or even more.

The 1654 Programme

A second set of thirty warships was ordered in 1653 by the States-General, again comprising a flagship (the Groot Hollandia, similar to the Eendracht) and 29 smaller ships. In January 1654 the States-General decreed that, since it - rather than the provincial Admiralties - had financed these programmes, all sixty ships would be considered national property, so that the Admiralties were unable to sell them off at the conclusion of hostilities, as had been the practice in the past.

  • (M) Prins Willem 44 guns (134 ft)
  • (A) Doesburg (130 ft)
  • (A) Duivervoorde (130 ft)
  • (M) Klein Hollandia 52 guns (134 ft) - sunk in action 1672, defending the Smyrna convoy
  • (A) Prins te Paard (136 ft)
  • (A) Gouden Leeuw (134 ft)
  • (N) Alkmaar (or Burgh van Alkmaar) 32 guns (130 ft)
  • (N) Caleb 42 guns (132 ft)
  • (N) Hollandsche Tuin 56 guns (134 ft)
  • (N) Gelderland (136 ft)
  • (N) Wapen van Nassau (134 ft) – (also called Gouden Leeuw)
  • (N) Drie Helden Davids (130 ft)
  • (F) Omlandia (130 ft)
  • (A) Dom van Utrecht (130 ft)
  • (A) Tromp (130 ft)
  • (A) Tijdverdrijf (136 ft)
  • (A) Stad Gouda (130 ft)
  • (M) Gelderland (134 ft) – later renamed Prins Mauritz
  • (A) Raadhuis van Haarlem (130 ft)

Other ships of the line (less than 130 ft)

Note that this list is incomplete and will be extended.

Hired East India Company (VOC) ships

Built 1660 to 1680

With the outbreak of the Second Anglo-Dutch War, the Staten-Generaal ordered the construction of twenty-four large ships, with a second group of twenty-four being added soon after. [2] This programme, which was all built in the period 1664 to 1667, included ten ships of 160 (Amsterdam) feet length or more, now forming the 1st Charter.

1st Charter

2nd Charter and below

This list includes ships of the line built (all for the Amsterdam Admiralty) in the period 1661 to 1663, prior to the outbreak of the Second Anglo-Dutch War.

  • (A) Liefde 70 (1661, 140 ft) – broken up 1666
  • (A) Geloof 60 (1661, 140 ft) – broken up 1676
  • (A) Wakende Boei 48 (1661, 130 ft) – broken up 1675
  • (A) Harderwijk 46 (1662, 133 ft) – broken up 1693
  • (A) Provincie van Utrecht 60 (1663, 145 ft) – broken up 1691
  • (A) Waasdorp 68 (1663, 150 ft) – broken up 1666
  • (A) Spiegel. 66 guns (1663, 156 ft x 41 ft x 15 ft) – Built at Amsterdam by Jan van Rheenen, this was the first three-decker in Dutch service, although on the upper deck she was not armed in the waist; the name means either "mirror" or "transom" in Dutch. This fairly 'short' three-decker (classed as 2nd Charter) was armed with 6 × 24-pdrs and 16 × 18-pdrs on the lower deck, 24 × 12-pdrs on the middle deck, and 20 × 6-pdrs on the upper and quarter decks. Served as flagship of Vice-Admiraal Michiel de Ruyter from 1664 until August 1665, including his expedition to the Caribbean and West Africa from 1664 to 1665; broken up in 1676.
  • (A) Akerboom 60 (1664, 140 ft) – wrecked 1689
  • (A) Gideon 60 (1664, 140 ft) – broken up 1689
  • (A) Steenbergen 64 (1664, 150 ft) – sunk at Battle of Palermo in 1676
  • (N) Monnikendam 62 (1664, 140 ft) – wrecked 1683
  • (N) Noorderkwartier 60 (1664, 136 ft) – sold 1686
  • (A) Kalandsoog 68 (1665, 150 ft) – broken up 1691
  • (A) Deventer 62 (1665, 148 or 150 ft) – wrecked 1673
  • (F) Vredewold 60 (1665, 140 ft)
  • (A) Gouden Leeuwen 50 (1665, 141 ft)
  • (A) Beschermer 54 (1665, 14134 ft)
  • (A) Essen 50 (1665, 142 ft)
  • (Z) Zierikzee 60 (1665, 145 ft)
  • (M) Delfland 70 (1665)
  • (F) Frisia (or Groot Frisia) 74 (1665, 150 ft)
  • (F) Prins Hendrik Casimir 74 (1665, 150 ft)
  • (A) Wapen van Utrecht 62 (1665, 152 ft)
  • (A) Gouda 72 (1665, 15712 ft)
  • (A) Komeetster 70 (1665, 15212 ft))
  • (A) Reigersbergen (or Blauwe Reiger) 74 (1665, 156 ft)
  • (Z) Walcheren 70 (1665, 155 ft)
  • (Z) Gekroonde Burgh 70 (1666, 150 ft)
  • (M) Ridderschap 72 (1666, 150 ft)
  • (N) Wapen van Enkhuizen 72 (1665, 150 ft)
  • (F) Groningen 72 (1666, 150 ft)
  • (F) Zevenvolden 76 (1666)
  • (F) Sneek 65 (1666, 150 ft)
  • (Z) Tholen 60 (1666, 145 ft)
  • (Z) Domburg 60 (1666, 145 ft)
  • (N) Alkmaar 62 (1666, 140 ft)
  • (M) Schieland 54 (1666, 140 ft)
  • (M) Wassenaar 56 (1666, 140 ft)
  • (M) Gelderland 72 (1666, 150 ft)
  • (M) Maagd van Dordrecht 68 (1666, 150 ft)
  • (N) Prins van Oranje (or Jonge Prins) 62 (1666, 150 ft)
  • (N) Eenhoorn (or Wapen van Hoorn) 70 (1667)
  • (A) Woerden 72 (1667, 150 ft)
  • (N) Monnikendam 70 (1671)
  • (A) Oudshoorn 70 (1672)

Note the earlier Oudshoorn of 70 guns was the prize Swiftsure captured from the English at the Four Days Battle in 1666

Prizes and purchases

  • Carolus Quintus (Charles V) (East Indiaman) 52 (1665)
  • (Z) Zwanenburg 48 (ex-English St Patrick , captured on 5 February 1667)

Ships of the "Expanded Navy" (1682 to 1714)

This is the period during which the United Provinces fought in alliance with the English Navy against the French fleet of Louis XIV. By the start of the 1680s, the ships of the 1660s were wearing out, and in 1682 a programme of 36 new ships was authorised by the Staten-Generaal. In 1685 a long-term plan for a battlefleet of 96 ships was agreed in principle (to comprise 20 of the 1st Charter, 28 of the 2nd, 24 of the 3rd and 24 of the 4th), although this target was never fully achieved.

1st Charter

These were all three-deckers, with standard dimensions (all in Amsterdam feet) of 170 ft on the upper deck, 146¼ ft on the keel, 43 ft in breadth and 16 ft depth in hold. In later ships this standard was stretched to a greater length. The typical armament for one of these ships was 28 × 24-pdrs on the lower deck, 28 × 18-pdrs on the middle deck, 28 × 12-pdrs on the upper deck and 8 × 6-pdrs on the quarterdeck; however, this varied sometimes.

Note that, although the 1685 long-term Plan had called for twenty ships of the 1st Charter to be built, the twentieth and last Dutch three-decker - the Amsterdam Admiralty's 96-gun Haarlem (of 177 ft) was not built until 1721.

2nd Charter

These were all two-deckers, with standard dimensions (all in Amsterdam feet) of 156 ft on the upper deck, 13312 ft on the keel, 41 ft in breadth and 15 ft depth in hold. In later ships this standard was stretched to a greater length. A typical armament for one of these ships was 26 × 18-pdrs on the lower deck, 26 × 12-pdrs on the upper deck, 18 × 6-pdrs on the quarterdeck and 4 × 3-pdrs on the poop

3rd Charter

These were also all two-deckers, with standard dimensions (all in Amsterdam feet) of 145 ft on the upper deck, 12312 ft on the keel, 3712 ft in breadth and 14¼ ft depth in hold. In later ships this standard was stretched to a greater length. A typical armament was 24 × 18-pdrs on the lower deck, 24 × 12-pdrs on the upper deck, and 16 × 6-pdrs on the quarterdeck.

4th Charter

These too were two-deckers, with standard dimensions (all in Amsterdam feet) of 135 ft on the upper deck, 115 ft on the keel, 35 ft in breadth and 14 ft depth in hold. In later ships this standard was stretched to a greater length. A typical armament for one of these ships was 22 × 18-pdrs on the lower deck, 22 × 8-pdrs on the upper deck, and 8 × 4-pdrs on the quarterdeck.

Uncertain

Ships of the Dutch Navies 1715 to 1770

This is the period during which the reduced Dutch forces maintained their strength at a lesser level from the conclusion of the War of the Spanish Succession. Although ships below are shown according to the 'Charter' classification, this system was in the process of being replaced by a Rating system similar to that in other countries' naval forces.

1st Charter

2nd Charter

3rd Charter

4th Charter

5th Charter

These two-decked small ships of the line were classed as 4th Rates.

Ships of the Dutch Navies 1771 to 1795

In the period of higher international tension, culminating in the Fourth Anglo-Dutch War, a massive effort to renew the Dutch navies was undertaken. No three-deckers were built, hence no "1st Charter" is listed. This period continues until the French occupation of December 1794 to February 1795, following which the five separate Admiralties were replaced on 27 February 1795 by a single committee dealing with all navy affairs. The list below is continued beyond 1795 to include other ships originally ordered for the United Netherlands but subsequently brought into service for the (French dominated) Batavian Republic.

2nd Charter

The ships of the 2nd Charter each carried 74 guns. In general, they measured 179 (Amsterdam) feet on the upper deck (equivalent to 166 ft on the upper deck (equivalent to 166 ft 2 in in British units of measurement), with a breadth of 49 Amsterdam feet (4512 British feet) and a depth in hold of 20 Amsterdam feet (1812 British feet).

Note a further 74-gun ship begun at Amsterdam in 1795 (and thus not for the pre-1795 United Provinces) was launched on 9 August 1796 for the Batavian Republic as Washington – captured by the British in the Vlieter (off Texel) on 28 August 1799 and became HMS Princess of Orange.

3rd Charter

The ships of the 3rd Charter each carried between 64 and 68 guns. In general, they measured between 167 and 168 (Amsterdam) feet on the upper deck (equivalent to 155 ft to 156 ft in British units of measurement), with a breadth of 4634 to 47 Amsterdam feet (about 42 ft 10 in to 43 ft 7 in British feet) and a depth in hold of 19 Amsterdam feet (1712 British feet).

4th Charter

The ships of the 4th Charter each carried from 50 to 56 guns. In general, they chiefly between 154 and 156 (Amsterdam) feet on the upper deck (equivalent to between 143 ft and 144 ft 10 in in British units of measurement. However, the larger Brakel and Tromp measured about 160 (Amsterdam) feet on the upper deck (equivalent to 148 ft 7 in in British units of measurement), with a breadth of about 45 Amsterdam feet (4134 British feet) and a depth in hold of 20 Amsterdam feet (1812 British feet).

5th Charter

Although no longer considered ships of the line, these two-decked small ships were still classed as 4th Rates by the Dutch.

Dutch Warships of the Batavian and French-controlled Period (1795-1815)

While these 20 years are here treated together, they actually comprise four distinct political eras:
(A) The Batavian Republic (a French 'client state') - February 1795 to July 1806.
(B) The (Napoleonic) Kingdom of Holland - July 1806 to July 1810.
(C) The Annexation by France - July 1810 to 1813.
(D) The restored United Provinces of the Netherlands - 1813 to March 1815.

2nd Rate (80/90-gun ships)

The eight ships of the Wrecker Class were built at Amsterdam and Rotterdam between 1797 and 1811. They were the largest sailing warships built in the Netherlands up to that time. The five Amsterdam-built ships (by master shipwrights R. Dorsman and P. Schuijt Jnr.) had ports for 80 guns, with 30 on the lower deck, 30 on the upper deck and 20 on the quarterdeck and forecastle - they actually mounted (in French service) twenty-eight 36-livre guns, thirty 30-livre guns, fourteen 12-livre guns, two 60-livre and six 30-livre carronades. The three Rotterdam-built ships (by master shipwright Pieter Glavimans Jnr., who probably produced the overall design for the class) were initially assigned 10 more ports on the quarterdeck and forecastle (with 10 guns behind ports and 20 in the open), causing them to be rated as 90-gun ships.

The class measured 195 (Amsterdam) feet in length, 51 feet in breadth, and 22 feet in depth in hold.

All eight ships were incorporated into the French Imperial Navy on 9 July 1810, and received French names. All were rated as 80-gun ships by the French, armed as mentioned above. All were returned to Dutch service and renamed in 1814, except for the Admiraal Piet Hein (ii) which had been re-worked as a 74-gun ship on the stocks at Rotterdam and was seized by the Dutch in their December 1813 uprising.

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Dutch ship <i>Eendracht</i> (1655)

The Eendracht or Eendragt was the flagship of the confederate navy of the United Provinces between 1655 and 1665. Eendragt was the more common spelling in the 17th century; Eendracht is the modern Dutch standard spelling.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jacob van Wassenaer Obdam</span> Dutch nobleman and naval officer (1610–1665)

Jacob, Banner Lord of Wassenaer, Lord Obdam, Hensbroek, Spanbroek, Opmeer, Zuidwijk and Kernhem was a Dutch nobleman who became lieutenant admiral, and supreme commander of the navy of the Dutch Republic. The name Obdam was then also spelled as Opdam. British contemporaneous sources typically refer to him as Admiral Opdam or Lord Obdam because it was not until 1657 that he bought the Wassenaar Estate from relatives and thus acquired its title. Modern Dutch sources sometimes less correctly insert a second "van" between "Wassenaer" and "Obdam" or use the modern spelling "Wassenaar".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Order of battle at the Battle of Lowestoft</span>

The ships that participated in the Battle of Lowestoft, a naval engagement between the English and Dutch off the English port of Lowestoft on 13 June 1665 during the Second Anglo-Dutch War. 95 English ships, commanded by James Stuart, Duke of York, faced 107 Dutch ships led by Jacob van Wassenaer, Baron Obdam. The battle ended in a victory for the English, capturing 9 Dutch ships and sinking 8 others, for the loss of only one ship.

Dutch ship <i>Gouden Leeuw</i>

The Gouden Leeuw was a Dutch ship of the line armed with 80-82 cannon. The ship was built for the Admiralty of Amsterdam in 1666 during the Second Anglo-Dutch War. The Gouden Leeuw was for a time the largest Dutch warship. During the Third Anglo-Dutch War, the ship served as the flagship of Lieutenant Admiral Cornelis Tromp. She was Tromp's flagship at the Battle of Texel in 1673, with the Irishman Thomas Tobiasz as his flag captain. She was broken up in 1686.

Dutch ship <i>Aemilia</i> (1632)

The Aemilia was the flagship of Lieutenant-Admiraal Maarten Harpertszoon Tromp during part of the Eighty Years' War. She was a Dutch 46-gun ship of the line. Built by Jan Salomonszoon van den Tempel for the Admiralty of Rotterdam in 1632, the ship was the largest Dutch warship built up to that time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John May (shipwright)</span> English shipwright

John May Sr or Jan Maij was an English shipwright from Chatham who served from 1758-1779 as Master Shipbuilder of the Amsterdam Admiralty.

The Admiralty of Rotterdam, also called the Admiralty of de Maze, was one of the five Dutch admiralties in the Dutch Republic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Admiralty of Friesland</span> One of the five admiralties of the Dutch Republic

The Admiralty of Friesland or Frisian Admiralty was one of the five Dutch admiralties of the Dutch Republic. Set up on 6 March 1596, it was dissolved in 1795 during the reforms by the Batavian Republic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Admiralty of the Noorderkwartier</span> One of the five admiralties of the Dutch Republic

The Admiralty of the Noorderkwartier, also known as the Admiralty of West Friesland, was one of the five admiralties of the Dutch Republic, made up of West Friesland, a region in the north of the province of Holland.

HMS <i>Adventure</i> (1646) Ship of the line of the Royal Navy

HMS Adventure was a 34-gun fourth-rate of the English Navy, built by Peter Pett II at Woolwich Dockyard and launched in 1646. With the outbreak of the English Civil War she served on the Parliamentary side until 1649. She was incorporated into the Commonwealth Navy in 1650. She partook in the Battle off Dover in 1652, the Battle of Portland and the Battle of Gabbard in 1653. Adventure was employed on Bulstrode Whitelocke's embassy to Sweden, 1653–1654. After the Restoration she was incorporated into the Royal Navy. She was present at the Battle of Lowestoft (1665) and the Battle of Solebay (1672). She also participated in the Golden Horse and Two Lions actions in 1681. She was in the Battle of Barfleur in 1692. She captured several ships in the later part of her career, before being captured by the French in 1709.

HMS Dragon was a 38-gun fourth rate of the English Navy; she became part of the Royal Navy after the Restoration, built by the Master Shipwright Henry Goddard at Chatham and launched in 1647. She was the first frigate to be built at Chatham.

English ship <i>Fairfax</i> (1653) Naval frigate of the Commonwealth of England

Fairfax was a third rate frigate of the navy of the Commonwealth of England from 1653 to 1660. With the restoration of the English monarchy in 1660 she was recommissioned as HMS Fairfax and served with the Royal Navy until 1674.

Dutch ship<i> Beschermer</i> List of ships with the same or similar names

Six Dutch ships of one or other of the five regional Admiralties within the United Provinces of the Netherlands have borne the name Beschermer or Schermer:

Dutch ship <i>Brederode</i> (1644) Dutch ship

Brederode was a ship of the line of the Maas Admiralty, part of the navy of the United Provinces of the Netherlands, and the flagship of the Dutch fleet in the First Anglo-Dutch War. Throughout her career, she carried from 49 to 59 guns. She was named after Johan Wolfert van Brederode, the brother-in-law of stadtholder Frederick Henry, Prince of Orange.

The English ship Drake was a 14-gun sixth rate vessel built under the 1651 Programme at Deptford Dockyard for the Commonwealth of England in 1651/52. During her time in the Commonwealth Navy she spent her time patrolling Home Waters and did not participate actively in the First Anglo-Dutch War. On the restoration she was incorporated into the Royal Navy as HMS Drake. During the Second Anglo-Dutch War she fought in the Battle of Lowestoft. She spent the rest of her career patrolling Home Waters before going to Jamaica. She was sold in Jamaica in 1691.

The English ship Martin was a 14-gun sixth rate vessel built under the 1651 Programme at Portsmouth Dockyard for the Commonwealth of England in 1651/52. Her service in the Commonwealth Navy was very active. She participated in the Battles of Dover, Portland and the Gabbard. She was with Robert Blake at Porto Farina. She was the main vessel at the Capture of Jamaica in 1655. With the Restoration she became HMS Martin. During the Second Anglo-Dutch War she was in the initial battle of Lowestoft then the Battle of Vagen. She was sold in February 1667.

References

  1. Frank Fox, The Four Days' Battle of 1666.
  2. Frank Fox, The Four Days' Battle of 1666, p.131.