List of capital ships of minor navies

This is a list of capital ships (battleships, ironclads and coastal defence ships) of minor navies:

Argentina

Australia (Victoria colony until 1901)

Brazil

Barco de Guerra N. Snrª do Bom-Sucesso.

Ships of the line

  • Vasco da Gama 74-80 (c. 1792, ex-Portuguese, captured 1822)
  • Medusa 68-74 (c. 1786, ex-Portuguese, captured 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora do Monte do Carmo, renamed 1793)
  • Afonso de Albuquerque 62-64 (c. 1767, ex-Portuguese, captured 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora dos Prazeres, renamed 1796/97) - Discarded, 1826
  • Principe Real 90 (1771), ex-Portuguese, captured 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora da Conceicão, renamed 1794)
  • ? 74 (c. 1763, ex-Portuguese Conde Dom Henrique, captured 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora do Pilar, renamed 1793)
  • Dom Pedro I 64-74 (c. 1763, ex-Portuguese Martin de Freitas, acquired 1822, ex-Infante dom Pedro, renamed 1806, ex-Santo António e São José, renamed 1794; renamed Pedro I)
  • ? 64-72 (c. 1766, ex-Portuguese Dom Joao de Castro, acquired 1822, ex-Nossa Senhora do Bom Sucesso, renamed 1800)

Coast defence ships

  • Barrozo (1864) - Broken up 1885
  • Brasil (1864) - Broken up 1905
  • Tamandare (1865) - Broken up 1885
  • Lima Barros (1865) - Intended as Paraguayan Bellona, renamed 1865, broken up 1905
  • Rio de Janeiro (c. 1865) - Mined 1866
  • Bahia (1865) - Intended as Paraguayan Minerva, renamed 1865, broken up 1895
  • Silvado (1866) - Intended as Paraguayan Nemesis, renamed 1865, discarded c. 1885, broken up 1895
  • Mariz e Barros class
    • Mariz e Barros (1866) - Discarded 1890, broken up 1892
    • Herval (1866) - Discarded 1885, broken up 1887
  • Cabral class
    • Cabral (1866) - Discarded 1885, broken up 1887
    • Colombo (1866) - Discarded 1885, broken up 1887
  • Sete de Setembro (1874) - Discarded, broken up 1895
  • Javary class
    • Javary (1873) - Sank 1893
    • Solimoes (1874) - Broken up during the 1890s
  • Independencia - Confiscated by Britain before delivery, renamed HMS Neptune
  • Riachuelo (1883) - Sunk 1910
  • Aquidabã (1885) - Renamed Vinte Quatro de Mayo 1894, renamed Aquidabã 1900, sunk 1906
  • Marechal Deodoro class
    • Marechal Deodoro (1898) - To Mexico 1924, renamed Anahuac
    • Marechal Floriano (1899) - Discarded, broken up 1936

Dreadnoughts

  • Minas Geraes class
  • Rio de Janeiro - laid down in 1911 with seven main turrets; cancelled in 1912; sold to the Ottoman Navy as Sultân Osmân-ı Evvel in 1914 but seized by the Royal Navy in 1914 and named HMS Agincourt (scrapped 1924)
  • Riachuelo - planned super-dreadnought, ordered but canceled after the beginning of the First World War

Chile

  • Almirante Cochrane class
  • Huáscar (1865, ex-Peruvian Huáscar, captured 1879) - preserved at Talcahuano
  • Capitan Prat (1890)
  • Constitución class (not handed over)
    • Constitución (1903) - Confiscated by Britain 1903, renamed HMS Swiftsure, sold for breaking up 1920
    • Libertad (1903) - Confiscated by Britain 1903, renamed HMS Triumph, torpedoed 1915
  • Almirante Latorre class
    • Almirante Latorre (1913) - purchased by Britain 1914 and renamed HMS Canada, repurchased 1920, broken up 1959
    • Almirante Cochrane (1913) - purchased by Britain 1918, renamed HMS Eagle and converted to aircraft carrier, sunk 1942

China

  • Dingyuan class
    • Dingyuan (1881) - Sunk 1895
    • Zhenyuan (1882) - Captured by Japan 1895, broken up 1910
  • Pingyuan (1890) - Captured by Japan 1894, sunk 1904

Colombia

  • ? (1785, ex-Swedish Tapperheten 60, transferred 1825) - To Portugal by 1848

India (British colony)

  • Magdala (1870)

Finland

  • Väinämöinen-class

Mexico

  • Asia 64 (1789, ex-Spanish Asia, mutinied and handed over 1825) - Broken up 1830
  • Anahuac (1898, ex-Brazilian Marechal Deodoro, obtained 1924)

Norway

Coastal defence ships serving, or ordered for, the Royal Norwegian Navy:

Peru

  • Independencia (1865) - Wrecked 1879
  • Huáscar (1865) - Captured by Chile 1879, preserved at Talcahuano

Thailand

Ukraine

All Ukrainian battleships were previously part of the Russian Black Sea Fleet and were subsequently taken over by the Soviet Union

Yugoslavia

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