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Norwegian Gunships

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Norwegian Gunships
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The Norwegian Gunships were a class of ten schooners that served first in the Royal Dano-Norwegian Navy, and then after 1814 in the Royal Norwegian Navy. The first was launched in 1808 and the last was lost in 1872. Following the near total loss of the Dano-Norwegian navy at the Battle of Copenhagen in September 1807, the ensuing Gunboat War was fought primarily in the relatively confined seas around Denmark. The Danes built their naval strategy on small gunboats that rarely ventured very far from their sheltered harbours.

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As the British extended their blockade to the longer Norwegian coastline and up to Russia during the Anglo-Russian War, a different type of vessel became necessary. The result was the Norwegian Gunship, a class of ten pine schooner-rigged vessels all built to the same plan. Each was equipped with 30 oars to permit their crews to row them in calm weather; all were more or less identically armed. These ships had a reputation for seaworthiness, a characteristic much needed in the waters of the Norwegian Sea that was their main area of operations.[1]

The Dano-Norwegian navy stationed eight in Bergen and two in Trondheim, though this is a little deceptive. After the British Royal Navy captured two at the Battle of Silda, the Danes built two more to replace them. The two new schooners received the same names (Thor and Balder) as the lost schooners. Thus there was only a maximum of eight schooners on active duty at any one time. Eight of the schooners were still in service in 1814,[2] all of them based in the Norwegian ports of Bergen and Trondheim. Under the Treaty of Kiel, which provided for the separation of Norway from Denmark, those naval vessels in Norwegian ports automatically transferred to the new Norwegian navy. The schooners therefore continued their careers in the Norwegian navy, with the last serving until 1872.

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The Ten Schooners

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Notes

  1. The launch date of 10 August 1810, as recorded in Skibsregister is clearly wrong, as this vessel was in service in July.
  2. Disambiguation: There was a smaller gunboat, a kanonjolle with one 24 pound cannon, of the same name launched in 1808 stationed at Øster Risøer - see Larsen N.A. 1878 - Fra Krigens Tid (1807 - 1814)
  3. Names of the Trondheim-built ships are taken from the epic poem Axel og Valborg following the fortunes of the lovers Axel Thorsen and the Beautiful (Skiont) Valborg
  4. Names of the Bergen-built ships correspond with the Norse Gods Odin, Thor, Baldr and Hother plus Valkyrie and the Norse Fates Norns
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Citations

References

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