List of Russian steam frigates

This is a list of Russian paddle & screw frigates, corvettes and clippers of the period 1836-1892:
The format is: Name, number of guns (rank/real amount), launch year, fate (BU = broken up)
This list includes only non-armoured vessels.

Contents

Paddle frigates

This section contains paddle ships with one opened battery (except of Bogatyr‘) and three or (rarely) two masts. Therefore, to say the truth, they ought to be classified as paddle corvettes or paddle brigs, but all of them (except of Amerika) were officially classified as "parokhodofregat\пароходофрегат", which means exactly "steamer-frigate".

Paddle frigates of the Baltic Fleet (1836–1870)

Paddle frigates of the Black Sea Fleet (1843–1848)

Paddle corvette of the Siberian Flotilla

The only one ship of this type served here.

Screw frigates

All of them belonged to the Baltic Fleet in 1848–1892.

Ilya Muromets-class (2 units)

Dmitrii Donskoi-class (2 units)

Screw corvettes

Screw corvettes of the Baltic Fleet (1856–1892)

Boyarin-class (14 units in all, 8 at the Baltic Sea)

Displacement 885 tons.[1]

Bogatyr-class (4 units)

Late training ships for naval cadets

Screw corvettes of the Black Sea Flotilla (1856–1865)

Boyarin-class (last 6 units)

Sokol-class (3 units)

Pamiat‘ Merkuriya-class (2 units)

Screw clippers

This type of light seagoing cruisers was invented by Russians. All of them first belonged to the Baltic Fleet and served in 1856–1900s (decade), some were later transferred to the Siberian Flotilla (based on Nikolayevsk, since 1872 — on Vladivostok, since 1898 — on Port Arthur).

Razboinik-class (6 units)

Displacement 615 tons.[1]

Abrek-class (2 units)

Almaz-class (4 units)

Kreiser-class (8 units)

The «swan-song» of outgoing era of sailing fleet.

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Lehti, 2006

Bibliography