subfixer wrote: |
The Royal Navy has the best names for their ships by far. I mean names like Courageous, Audacity and my favorite: Indefatigable. I dare the US Navy to come up with a name like that one! It just rolls off the tongue like a load of boulders. |
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agreed!
not only that, but contemporary statesmen really knew it!!!! 'Parking' [!] a ship named Invincible or courageous offshore of a colony had quite an impact on the 'natives' (i apologise for the really rather crude terms, but this REALLY was how gun-boat diplomacy was perceived in London during the 19th century.) The connotations of imperial or grand-sounding western names were really rather important. I imagine Dutch and French ships did something similar too.
Indeed, even though today people think of HMS Hood purely in terms of her tragic loss during WWII, during the 20's and 30's there was a huge political statement to be made by sending 'Hood' out to foreign countries to fly the flag.
On the other hand, earlier Royal Navy practice seemed to name ships pretty much randomly from greek or Roman mythology. Today I suppose we can see this as Enlightenment era posturing. Few seemed to have any really strong allegorical reasons for choosing particular names. HMS Bellerophon being a particularly notorious example of a classical name meaningless to 99% of the British population, and therefore variously ended up called the 'billy ruffian' or 'billy ruff'n' by her crews and indeed the UK population as a whole.
In relation to RE-NAMING;
many a captured prize kept her original name, which in the Royal Navy at least seemed to serve to emphasise the achievemnt of winning her. Commerce De Marseille is a notable exmple of a prize captured from the French in 1793 that kept her French name simply to emphasise the political capital gained by her capture. It was certainly common for a Frenchname to be retained on capture, or perhaps anglicised slightly. I don't think the US navy took quite the same line, although I would like to know more- viz, did they rename captured ships after the man or action by which she was captured?
I must admit the renaming issue gets a bit confusing when studying a few 1-on-1 actions during the French Rev. wars, when sometimes the French ship had a Brtish-captured name and the British ship had a French-captured name, but it appears to have happened quite often!
All in all, a very interesting subject, and one that would tell a lot about the way a government perceived its political history- and of course, conception of it's position in the current world stage. Every country had its ships named for heros, notable actions, foreign prizes, or statements of intent.
Will