HMS Thetis

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Twelve ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Thetis, named after the sea-nymph in Greek mythology:

  • HMS Thetis was a 22-gun storeship launched in 1717. Her fate is unknown.
  • HMS Thetis was a 44-gun fifth rate launched in 1747. She became a hospital ship in 1757 and was sold in 1767.
  • HMS Thetis was a 32-gun fifth rate launched in 1773 and wrecked entering the Careenage at St Lucia Bay in 1781.[1]
  • HMS Thetis was a 38-gun fifth rate launched in 1782 and sold in 1814.
  • HMS Thetis was an 8-gun schooner purchased in 1796 and listed until 1800.
  • HMS Thetis was a 24-gun sixth rate that the Royal Navy captured from the Dutch at Demerara in 1796 and later scuttled there. She was a Dutch 7th Charter frigate built at Amsterdam and launched in 1785. Her dimensions, in Dutch feet of 11 Rotterdam inches, were: 125' 7/11" x 34' x 13' 2/11".[2]
  • HMS Thetis was a 10-gun gun-brig launched in 1810 and on the lists until at least 1836.
  • HMS Thetis was a 46-gun fifth rate launched in 1817 and wrecked off Cape Frio in 1830.[3]
  • HMS Thetis was a 36-gun fifth rate launched in 1846 and transferred to Prussia in 1855 in exchange for two gunboats.
  • HMS Thetis was a Briton-class wooden screw corvette launched in 1871 and sold in 1887.
  • HMS Thetis was an Apollo-class second class protected cruiser launched in 1890. She was used as a minelayer from 1907 and was sunk in 1918 as a blockship at Zeebrugge.
  • HMS Thetis was a T-class submarine launched in 1938. She sank during trials but was salvaged and recommissioned as HMS Thunderbolt. The Italian corvette Cicogna sank Thunderbolt in 1943.

See also

Citations

  1. Hepper (1994), p.62-3.
  2. van Maanen.
  3. Hepper (1994), p.161.

References

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