Construction drawing by Stibolt.
History
Danish Navy EnsignDenmark
NameThetis
OwnerRoyal Danish Navy
BuilderRoyal Danish Naval Dockyard
Launched7 August 1790
Commissioned1790
FateSold in auction
General characteristics
Class and typeFrigate
Length46.4 m
Beam11.76 m

HDMS Thetis was a frigate of the Royal Dano-Norwegian Navy, which she served from 1790 to 1850. She is remembered as the ship that carried a young Bertel Thorvaldsen to Malta in 1796. The sculptor ended up living and working in Rome the next more than forty years. He created a large number of small portrait drawings of the officers on board the ship.

Construction and design

Thetis was built at Nyholm to a design by Ernst Wilhelm Stibolt She was laid down on 19 August 1789 and the construction was completed on 19 May 1792. She was launched on 7 August 1790.[1]

Thetis was 46.45 metres (152 ft 5 in) long, with a beam of 11.76 metres (38 ft 7 in) and a draught of 5.17 metres (17 ft 0 in).She displaced 658 12 læster. Her complement was approximately 380 men. Her armament was 26 x 18-pounder guns, 14 6-pounder guns, 4 x 12-pounder howitzers and 6 x one-pounder falconettes.[2]

Career

Thetis was sent on a diplomatic mission to the Mediterranean in 1796–97. She was under command of captain Lorentz Fisker and with Captain lieutenant Claus Hvidtfeldt Blom as second-in-command. Fisker had two missions: first, to escort the annual "gift ship" to Algiers, and second, to arrange for the freeing of two Danish vessels and their crews in Tripoli. The other officers were Gerhard Sievers Bille (first lieutenant), Laurits Jensen Grove (first lieutenant), Johannes Krieger (1773-1818, second lieutenant), Andreas Christian Lütken (second lieutenant), Johan Joachim Uldall (second lieutenant), Johan Christian Gustav Hohlenberg (second lieutenant), Peder Pavels (chaplin), Christian Georg Hansen (chief surgeon), Blankfordt (junior surgeon), G. Rørbye (Skibsproviantforvalter), Hassing (død 28.4.1797, Underproviantskriver), H. A. Schmidt (Skibssekretær), Hans Jørgen Tronsen )chief mate) and Gregorius (hovmester).[3]

The sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen was granted permission to travel to Rome with the ship. He visited Fisker and his wife in their home on Toldbodvej several times prior to the ship's departure. He boarded the ship on 29 August 1796.

Thetis set sail from Copenhagen on 30 August, On 68 September, she fired some warning shots at some British naval ships in the North Sea. On 9 September, she anchored off Dover due to heavy fog. On 2 October, she exchanged some gun shots with a couple of Portuguese naval vessels off the coast of Portugal. On 8 October, Thetis anchored at the Roads of Malaga. Her departure from Malaga was delayed by lack of wind. Thorvaldsen and some of the officers spent the time touring the town, visiting some of its churches and coffee houses. Thetis departed from Malaga on 11 October, bound for Algiers. On 16 October, she left the tribute ship Laurentius behind in Algiers, continuing alone to Malta.[4]

At Valetta, on 24 October, Thetis was placed under a 40-day plague quarantine. On 3 November, Malta's health commission decided to maintain the 40-day quarantine plus an extra 20 days in case the ship decided to call at Tripoli in the meantime.[4]

On 7 November, Thetis continued to Tripoli. On 14 November, Fisker engaged in diplomatic, but unsuccessful, negotiations with the old Pasha of Tripoli, Yusuf Karamanli. A storm forecast forced Thetis to exit the Port of Tripoli, leaving behind her captain. On 23 November, she was finally able to return to Tripoli.[4]

Thetis left Tripoli again on 25 November, bound either for Sicily or Malta. On her arrival at Valetta, on 2 December, she was placed under plague quarantine until 18 December. On 17 January 1797, Thetis departed from Valetta.[4]

Legacy

Thorvaldsen created a number of miniature portrait drawings of the officers on board the Thetis en route to the Mediterranean in 1796.[5]

References

  1. "Thetis (1790)" (in Danish). Trap Danmark. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  2. "THETIS (1790-1805)". navalhistory.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  3. "Thetis". Thorvaldsens Museum (in Danish). Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "År for år: Thetis". Thorvaldsens Museum (in Danish). Retrieved 16 June 2022.
  5. "A la Carvelle". Thorvaldsens Museum. Retrieved 16 June 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.