Draught of Stora Sofia
History
Danish Navy EnsignDenmark & Norway
NameStora Sofia
BuilderSlottö shipyard in Nakskov
Launched1627
FateSank on 25 May 1645 near Buskär
General characteristics
Length147½ Danish feet[1]
Beam34 Danish feet[1]
Draught14⅓ Danish feet[1]
Complement
  • 1644: 280
  • 1627: 334[1]
Armament54-58 guns

Stora Sofia (Danish: Grand Sofia)[Note 1] was a Danish ship of the line that sank on 25 May 1645 near Buskär outside the harbour of Gothenburg.

Construction and design

The ship was built in 1627 on the Slottö shipyard in Nakskov in Denmark after a design of Scottish shipbuilder Daniel Sinclair. Stora Sofia was the flagship of the navy of the Danish king Christian IV. She was armed with 44 cannons on three decks; according to contemporary sources, she had four 48-pounders, eighteen 24-pounders, twenty 8-pounders and several smaller cannons.

Service

During the short Torstenson War between Denmark-Norway and Sweden in 1645, Denmark put an embargo on the young city of Gothenburg, founded in 1621. Stora Sofia was the flagship of a Danish fleet under admiral Ove Gjedde that was ordered to enforce the embargo. Shortly after the arrival of the fleet, a storm broke loose and threw the Stora Sofia onto the rocks. The ship sank to a depth of 27 metres; her crew was saved.

Discovery of the wreck

The wreck was rediscovered only in 1961. More thorough explorations and archeological studies began in the 1980s.

See also

Notes

  1. The name is also sometimes spelled Sophia or Sancte Sophia

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Sailing Warships website". Retrieved 2011-02-26.

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