Jupiter is a sailing ship of the Baltic Fleet of the Russian Empire . It was laid down on January 28 ( February 9 ), 1811, in the New Admiralty of St. Petersburg , and was launched on September 7 (19), 1812 . The construction was carried out under the guidance of the ship master G. S. Isakov. The ship took part in the Patriotic War of 1812 and the war with France in 1813-1814 [1] .
| "Jupiter" | |
|---|---|
| Service | |
| Class and type of vessel | Three Saints |
| Type of sailing weapon | Three mast ship |
| Organization | Baltic Fleet |
| Manufacturer | New Admiralty , St. Petersburg [1] |
| Ship master | G. S. Isakov |
| Construction started | January 28 ( February 9 ) 1811 |
| Launched | September 7 (19), 1812 |
| Commissioned | 1812 |
| Withdrawn from the fleet | disassembled in 1828 |
Content
- 1 Service History
- 2 Commanders
- 3 See also
- 4 notes
- 5 Literature
Service History
In October 1812, Jupiter, as part of Rear Admiral M.P. Korobki's squadron, left Kronstadt for England to work together with the English fleet against France . November 29 ( December 11 ), the ship arrived at the port of Shirness on Sheppy Island. Until May 1814, the Jupiter was in England cruising along with British ships. May 25 ( June 6 ), with the squadron of Vice Admiral R.V. Crown, the ship left Shirness and May 27 ( June 8 ) came to Cherbourg . There, the squadron took on board the Russian guard, which was delivered to Kronstadt on July 8 (20) . In August 1814, Jupiter, being part of the Crown squadron, transferred Russian troops from Lubeck to Kronstadt [1] .
In 1818, the ship escorted the frigates " Easy ", " Hasty " and " Agile " from Kronstadt to Cadiz and delivered their crews back to Russia [1] [2] [3] .
In 1821, Jupiter went on a practical voyage in the Gulf of Finland . During the flood on November 7 (19), 1824, the ship stood in the Kronstadt Military Harbor, was torn off anchor and stranded. On August 12 (24), 1827, the ship was taken aground and dismantled in 1828 [1] .
Commanders
The ship “Jupiter” was commanded by the following captains [1] :
- 1812-1814 - P. A. Boyle
- 1818 - M.I. Ratmanov
- 1821 - D. Gamelton
See also
- List of sailing battleships of the Russian Imperial Fleet
Notes
- ↑ 1 2 3 4 5 6 Chernyshev A. A. Russian sailing fleet. Directory. - M .: Military Publishing House, 1997. - T. 1. - P. 114. - 312 p. - (Ships and ships of the Russian fleet). - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 5-203-01788-3 .
- ↑ Chernyshev A. A. Russian sailing fleet. Directory. - M .: Military Publishing, 1997. - T. 1. - S. 209. - 312 p. - (Ships and ships of the Russian fleet). - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 5-203-01788-3 .
- ↑ Chernyshev A. A. Russian sailing fleet. Directory. - M .: Military Publishing, 1997. - T. 1. - S. 231. - 312 p. - (Ships and ships of the Russian fleet). - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 5-203-01788-3 .
Literature
- Veselago F.F. List of Russian warships from 1668 to 1860. - SPb. : Printing Ministry of the Ministry of the Sea, 1872. - 798 p.
- Chernyshev A. A. Russian sailing fleet. Directory. - M .: Military Publishing House, 1997 .-- T. 1. - 312 p. - (Ships and ships of the Russian fleet). - 10,000 copies. - ISBN 5-203-01788-3 .
- Shirokorad A. B. 200 years of the sailing fleet of Russia / Ed. A. B. Vasiliev. - 2nd ed. - M .: Veche, 2007. - 448 p. - ISBN 978-5-9533-1517-3 .