List of capital ships of minor navies

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of capital ships (battleships, ironclads and coastal defence ships) of minor navies:

Argentina

Australia (Victoria colony until 1901)

Brazil

Summarize
Perspective

Ships of the line

  • Vasco da Gama 74–80 (1792, ex-Portuguese, captured 1822)
  • Medusa 68–74 (1786, ex-Portuguese, captured 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora do Monte do Carmo, renamed 1793)
  • Afonso de Albuquerque 62–64 (1767, ex-Portuguese, captured 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora dos Prazeres, renamed 1796/97) - Discarded, 1826
  • Principe Real 90 (1771, ex-Portuguese, captured 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora da Conceicão, renamed 1794)
  • Conde Dom Henrique 74 (1763, ex-Portuguese, captured 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora do Pilar, renamed 1793)
  • Dom Pedro I 64–74 (1763, ex-Portuguese Martim de Freitas, acquired 1822, ex-Infante Dom Pedro Carlos, renamed 1806, ex-Santo António e São José, renamed 1794, renamed Dom Pedro I)
  • Dom João de Castro 64–72 (1766, ex-Portuguese, acquired 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora do Bom Sucesso, renamed 1800)

Coastal defence ships

Dreadnoughts

Source:[1]

Chile

China

  • Dingyuan class
    • Dingyuan (1881) - Sunk 1895
    • Zhenyuan (1882) - Captured by Japan 1895, broken up 1910
  • Pingyuan (1890) - Captured by Japan 1894, sunk 1904

Colombia

  •  ? (1785, ex-Swedish Tapperheten 60, transferred 1825) - To Portugal by 1848

India (British colony)

  • Magdala (1870)

Finland

Mexico

Ship of the line

  • Congreso Mexicano (1789, ex-Spanish Asia, mutinied and handed over 1825) - Broken up 1830

Coastal defence ship

Norway

Coastal defence ships serving, or ordered for, the Royal Norwegian Navy:[2]

Peru

Thailand

Ukraine

All Ukrainian battleships were previously part of the Russian Black Sea Fleet and were subsequently taken over by the Soviet Union

Yugoslavia

Citation

Bibliography

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.