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HISTORY
HMS Sovereign of the Seas was built by Peter Pett (later a
Commissioner of the Navy), under the guidance of his father
Phineas, the king's master shipwright, and was launched at
Woolwich dockyard on October 13, 1637. As the second
three-decked first-rate (the first three-decker being Prince
Royal of 1610), she was the predecessor of Nelson's Victory,
although Revenge, built in 1577 by Mathew Baker, was the
inspiration providing the innovation of a single deck
devoted entirely to broadside guns.
She was the most extravagantly decorated warship in the
Royal Navy, completely adorned from stern to bow with gilded
carvings against a black background, and the money spent
making her, £65,586, helped to create the financial crisis
for Charles I that contributed to the English Civil War.
Charles had imposed a special tax, the 'Ship Money', to make
possible such large naval expenditure. The gilding alone
cost £6,691, which in those days was the price of an average
warship. She carried 102 bronze cannon (King Charles
explicitly ordered such a high number) and was thereby at
the time the most powerfully armed ship in the world. Until
1655, she was also exceptionally large for an English
vessel; no other ships of Charles were heavier than the
Prince Royal.
The Sovereign of the Seas was not so much built because of
tactical considerations, but as a deliberate attempt to
bolster the reputation of the English crown. Her name was in
itself a political statement as Charles tried to revive the
perceived ancient right of the English kings to be
recognised as the 'lords of the seas.' English ships
demanded that other ships strike their flags in salute, even
in foreign ports.
Rear-Admiral Sir William Symonds noted that after the ship's
launch she was "cut down" and made a safe and fast ship.
Referred to as 'The Golden Devil' (den Gulden Duvel) by the
Dutch, Sovereign, as she was named after 1651, when she was
again made more manoeuvrable by reducing the number of
cannon, served throughout the wars of the Commonwealth of
England and became the flagship of Admiral Robert Blake. She
was involved in all of the great English naval conflicts
fought against the United Provinces and France.
When, during the First Anglo-Dutch War, on 21 October 1652
the States-General of the Netherlands in a secret session
determined the reward money for the crews of fireships that
succeeded in destroying an enemy vessel, the Sovereign was
singled out: an extra prize of 3000 guilders was promised
'in case they should ruin the ship named the Sovereign'.
Although repeatedly occupied by the Dutch in the fiercest of
engagements the Sovereign was retaken every time and
remained in service for nearly sixty years as the best ship
in the English fleet. After the English Restoration she was
rebuilt as two-decker with flatter gundecks and renamed
Royal Sovereign.
She was smaller than Naseby (later renamed Royal Charles),
but she was in regular service during the three Anglo-Dutch
Wars, surviving the Raid on the Medway in 1667 by being
elsewhere at the time, and took part in the outset of the
War of the Grand Alliance against Louis XIV of France,
participating in the Battle of Beachy Head (1690) and the
Battle of La Hougue, when she was more than 50 years old. In
that period she was the first ship in history that flew
royals above her topgallant sails.
Sovereign became leaky and defective with age during the
reign of William III, and was laid up at Chatham,
ignominiously ending her days, on January 27, 1696, by being
burnt to the water line as a result of having been set on
fire either by accident, negligence or design.
In her honour, Naval tradition has kept the name of this
ship afloat, and several other subsequent ships have been
named HMS Royal Sovereign. |