Hms Ocean

Six ships that were built for the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS ''Ocean. But the name Ocean entered the list from which names are selected for British ships because, in 1759, the Royal Navy captured the French ship named Ocan''. The British studied the French technology of this ship and admired it. But the ship had to be in bad shape before it would be replaced by a new-build. The name seems blankly prosaic because the British generally usually use the word "sea", while the French the word "mer". The French ship wasn't named for any of these, but for the Roman mythological giant river, or giant snake Oceanus, which encompassed the flat earth in their mythology. Thus the ships are instead named poetically, but this fact was lost in translation.
  • The third Ocean was originally ordered to be built as a wooden screw ship intended to carry 91 guns. However, the order was changed and she was eventually launched in 1863 as an ironclad of 24 guns. In the late 1860s she served as flagship to the Commander in Chief of the China Station and after an active life of only six years, was paid off in 1872.

 

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