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17th Century Ship Design and the Sovereign of the Seas (1637)

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Hi All,

I am going to start posting about 17th century ship design and the Sovereign of the Seas (1637). I hope you’ll find it interesting.

Although the focus will be on the Sovereign, there will be a lot of material on how ships of its time were designed. This might interest folks who aren’t specifically interested in this ship.

The Sovereign of the Seas is a commonly modeled ship, yet what it looked like is controversial. The controversy is not resolved by the two published books about it. The first of them, which is authored by James Sephton, does not contain plans, so it isn’t as complete as many modelers would like. Unfortunately, this book also contains errors, and appears to be the source of several misconceptions about this ship. The second book is by John McKay. I won’t comment on it other than to direct you to the reviews of it by the naval historian, the late Frank Fox, and by Charles Aldridge. These reviews can be found at https://www.amazon.com/product-revi...r&reviewerType=all_reviews#reviews-filter-bar. Please also see the post on SOS by Darivs Architect at https://shipsofscale.com/sosforums/...elievable-boundaries.6365/page-99#post-383651.

I warn everyone that the posts to follow will be different from the posts usually seen on modeling forums. What I’m going to post is very academic. Also, I’ve been working on this project for about 10 years, so there is a lot of material. Since this was a lot of work, please treat it as you would treat copyrighted material, and give credit if you use it.

Some the material I’ll use is from 17th century writings that haven’t been published. Other information is from Frank Fox, whose advice I had the privilege to receive. Much of this hasn’t been published either. The first posts will be all text. It will take a few long posts to get to any figures. There will still be a lot of text even after these initial posts. I hope I don’t bore everybody too much. Nevertheless, please do not drive a motor vehicle or operate heavy machinery after reading.
 
Here is the Introduction.

Introduction​

The Sovereign of the Seas was a 3-decked ship launched in 1637. It was known for its size and its extravagant decorations. This made the ship controversial. It was so big that some thought it should not be built. It was so richly adorned with gilded decorations that some thought it too expensive. Controversy about this ship continues to this day but, now, it is about what this ship looked like.

Although widely understood by those who have studied this ship, it is seldom stated that the Sovereign cannot be reconstructed exactly as it was. We have too little information about its dimensions. However, to develop plans for this ship that are as accurate as possible, we should expect them to meet three requirements; (1) they should produce a result that agrees with the most reliable contemporary portrayal of this ship, (2) the dimensions specified by the plans should incorporate the few dimensions its designer gives us and, (3) when information from the two preceding sources is not available, the plans should reflect contemporary ship design practices, and particularly the practices followed for 3-decked ships. All three must be met. Meeting only one or two of them will not as portray the Sovereign as accurately as we might like.

Before we can meet the first requirement, we must establish which of the several portrayals of this ship is the most reliable. Existing plans of the Sovereign are based on portrayals of it by John Payne and/or Willem van de Velde the Elder. Text I will post later will discuss why the Payne engraving is problematic, and why the van de Velde drawing is not what it seems to be. Several errors in an often-used painting, (commonly attributed to Peter Lely) of the Sovereign’s stern will also be discussed. The argument is made that the most reliable depiction of this ship is a painting by its builder, Peter Pett, and that some aspects of the stern are best represented in a painting by Jakob Knyff, though it is also not without difficulties. The current plans use these paintings only to capture the ship’s gross appearance, because attempting to ascertain specific dimensions from any work of art is problematic.

We can begin to obtain the needed dimensions by beginning with the information provided by the Sovereign’s designer. That the designer’s identity is even a topic for conversation is curious. Historical sources consistently attribute this ship’s design to Phineas Pett. Nevertheless, plans for it typically rely on dimensions proposed by John Pennington in 1635. Doing so is partly a result of an oversight that occurred in the early 1900’s during an attempt to reconstruct the Sovereign’s midship bend (this bend is the “rib” of a ship from which the shape of all its other ribs is derived). As a result, no published plans for the Sovereign use the actual designer’s dimensions.

Even with the paintings and Pett’s dimensions in hand, much important information about the Sovereign’s design is still missing. This is why we need the third requirement. We must, however, be careful when applying it. The Sovereign was a 3-decked ship, but most of the information we have about how ships were designed in its time is about 2-decked ships. We should not expect the latter to directly apply to the former. Further, each shipwright did things his own way, so not all design practices were universal.

Two of the best-known works on 17th century ship design are the Treatise on Shipbuilding (ca. 1620-1625) and Sir Anthony Deane’s 1670 Doctrine of Naval Architecture. Because previous plans for the Sovereign have focused on these two works, it is reasonable to ask which of them most accurately describes this ship. The answer turns out to be “neither,” though the flexibility of the Treatise’s system allows us to modify the lines that describe where and how a ship narrows from its bow to its stern, and thus make it look more like those on a 3-decked ship.

I will also discuss other contemporary works. These include a manuscript copied by Isaac Newton in about 1600, writings by the 17th century shipwright Edmund Bushnell and, most importantly, information about 3-decked ships from William Keltridge’s 1675. Shipwright’s own words are frequently used to describe not only what they did, but also how they did it, and why they did it. The result of these discussions is a detailed description of 17th century ship design that puts material that is difficult to find and, because of its archaic wording, difficult to understand, in one place. The topics covered are wide-ranging enough to give insight into the design of almost any 17th century ship.

Assembling all this information into a set of plans for the Sovereign is not straightforward. Plans are nothing more than a collection of drawn lines, and nearly all the lines in all the plans for this ship, including the current plans, depict an assumption. It is not clear that this is widely understood. Also, authors of previously published plans, both published and unpublished, have not been clear about why they made their particular assumptions. Some of their plans are accompanied by only a little documentation, and others are not documented at all. As a result, it is impossible to completely understand why their authors drew them the way they did. The justification that a line looks like the corresponding line on an artistic representation of the Sovereign is insufficient. It does not assure us that either of the two other above-mentioned requirements have been met. One lesson from existing plans for the Sovereign is that different authorities who have heavily relied on artwork have arrived at different plans for this ship, and we have almost no means to tell which of them, if any, is correct. The present work addresses this by proposing a set of detailed dimensions for the Sovereign. These dimensions specify how long, how high, or how much each line curves on the present reconstruction.

The focus on specific dimensions is novel. It is driven by a statement made in 1883 by the British mathematician and physicist, Lord Kelvin; “When you can measure what you are speaking about, and express it in numbers, you know something about it, when you cannot express it in numbers, your knowledge is of a meager and unsatisfactory kind ….” The present approach is unlike any previously used for this ship. It uses mathematical modelling. One benefit of modelling is that it allows us to rapidly examine many dimensions without the tedium of drawing many plans. Modelling also ensures that all the plan’s dimensions are compatible with those of the Sovereign’s designer. It also helps us show that Deane’s system, which has been used on other plans for the Sovereign, could not have been used to design this ship. Finally, the model allows us to “stress test” our plans. This testing involves seeing whether a set of plans can plausibly give rise to the dimensions measured on the Sovereign after its repairs. Passing such a test provides strong evidence that the initial plans are a good approximation of this ship.

The mathematical model is simple enough to be set up in a spreadsheet, but it is not so simple to explain. Therefore, I will only discuss only some of its general features, and only because it serves as a “statement of the problem.” Instead, I’ll keep the focus on the Sovereign’s dimensions. Hopefully, though, my limited discussion of the model will, to quote the 17th century shipwright Edmund Bushnell, render it intelligible to All Capacities.”

I will touch upon other aspects of the Sovereign in addition to the design of its hull. One of them is its armament. This is because the placement of its guns is problematic in nearly every portrayal of this ship. I also provide some discussion of the mast’s positions. Their positions when the Sovereign was launched can be derived from measurements of this ship that were taken after it had been subsequently modified. Finally, I briefly discuss the Sovereign’s sails. Discussion of the Sovereign’s rigging is minimal, and there is no discussion of its decorations. Good information on these topics is already available from several other sources.

I do not claim that the present plans perfectly represent the Sovereign as it was when it was launched. Nobody can make this claim. We know so little about this ship that developing such plans is impossible. I can, however, claim that it meets the three requirements specified above. Hopefully, the detailed dimensions and extensive description of why these plans are the way they are will assist others in developing even more accurate plans.

I cannot overstate the importance of the considerable input from the expert naval historian of ships of the Sovereign’s era, the late Frank Fox. This work would have been impossible without him, and I will acknowledge each of his many contributions at the appropriate places in the posts that follow.
 
And now a question; How do you add tags to a thread? I can't figure it out, so I'd appreciate any help you can give me.
 
Hi Charlie,

Very interesting blog and looking forward to the development of your hull shape and the contemporary data you use.
Maybe you have seen my thread on her allthough not as scientifically as yours.

If you want to add a tag to another website you can just copy the web adress and paste it in your text, the link is than automatically created.
Like I did here below to my blog.

You can do that with any tag.
 
This build sounds like fun. Huge thanks for doing and sharing your research!

I will have some cheese and wine ready to go as I read along come evening.

Allan
 
Thanks for your replies and, yes, Maarten, I am indeed familiar with your thread. It is clear that I don't have the skills you have.

I think I used the wrong word when I said "tag". What I'm looking for is a way to make it easier to find my thread. It will contain a lot of information about 17th century ship design that I sure wish I knew when I begin this project, and others, like people who aren't interested in the Sovereign, may also find it useful. Any suggestions?
 
CharlieT, you have my full attention. I am grateful for your series of upcoming posts, which have started as one of the most complete bases for approaching the construction of the Sovereign of the Seas through the dissemination of extant sources and using sound judgement. I eagerly await your further discussion of this, my favorite of ships. Your information and the pieces of information passed down from Frank Fox which you post here are nuggets of gold to use modelers.
 
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Thanks for your replies and, yes, Maarten, I am indeed familiar with your thread. It is clear that I don't have the skills you have.

I think I used the wrong word when I said "tag". What I'm looking for is a way to make it easier to find my thread. It will contain a lot of information about 17th century ship design that I sure wish I knew when I begin this project, and others, like people who aren't interested in the Sovereign, may also find it useful. Any suggestions?
Just create a post letting the administrators know how you would like your build 'tagged' and they can add that for you as appropriate and consistent with the forum practices. They are watching us (don't be scared :D).
 
Now on to some preliminaries......

Section I: Background​

The Sovereign of the Seas​

The Sovereign of the Seas was one of several large, well-decorated warships built in the early seventeenth century. Others included the Danish Tre Kroner (1606), the English ship Prince Royal (1610), the Swedish ship Vasa (1628), Denmark’s Store Sophie (1627), and the French ship La Couronne (1636). The Vasa was built in response to the Store Sophie, the Prince Royal (also called the Royal Prince) was built in response to Tre Kroner (in fact, the Prince Royal was likely a copy of Tre Kroner), La Couronne was built in response to the Prince Royal, and the Sovereign of the Seas was built in response to the La Courone. This competition among monarchs to own the biggest and most highly decorated vessel caused warships to become symbols of cultural and political power. (Redding 2018) Indeed, King Charles I chose the name Sovereign of the Seas because of its political connotations. There was an ongoing debate over whether the sea should be open to all. The English considered the English Channel theirs, and the name Sovereign of the Seas emphasized the point. (Redding 2018) Unfortunately for the King, this ship also had other political connotations.

The Sovereign was controversial. Some thought it was too expensive. Others thought it was too big. Still others were angered by a new tax that was levied while it was being built, a tax whose purpose, they thought, was to raise money to pay for this ship.

No small amount of this ship’s expense was due to its decorations. The Sovereign was probably the most richly decorated ship of all time. Its decorations, unlike those of other ships, were gilded. This increased the expense. It was done at the command of the King, who ordered;

“The head with all carved work thereof, and the rails to be all gilt, and no other colour used thereupon but black. The stern and galleries to be gilt with gold and black in the same manner, with the rails on them to be all likewise gilt with gold. The sides to be all carved work, according to the draught, which was presented to his Majesty and that carved work to be all gilt with gold, and all the rails of the sides to be likewise gilt with gold and no other colour to be used on the sides but black. Also, the figures in the upper strake to be altered into badges of carved work answerable to the other strake, that runs fair with it, and to be gilt answerable to the rest.” (Sephton 2011, 37) (Ball and Stephens 2018, 45-46) (Hamilton and Lomas 1987).

The gilding was not limited to the ships’ outside. Thomas Baskerville, who visited the Sovereign, tells us that “The King’s cabin is richly painted and gilded, and so is the great cabin…” (Baskerville 1893, 277)

Among the Sovereign’s decorations were its large lanterns. Heywood describes them in a longwindedly entitled brochure “A True Description of His Majesties Royall Ship, Built this Yeare 1637 at Wooll-witch in KENT. To the great glory of our English Nation, and not paraleld in the whole Christian World.” (Heywood 1637) He tells us that “she beareth five Lanthornes, the biggest of which will hold ten persons to stand upright, and without shouldring or pressing one the other.”[1]

Entering the Sovereign’s stern lantern was apparently part of the tour given to those who visited it. Thomas Baskerville went inside of it and said “in the lanthorn, that erected in the midst of the stern, I stood upright, it being capacious enough to receive the properest man in England standing upright." (Baskerville 1893, 277) Samuel Pepys, noted diarist and lecher, also went in. His diary entry for Tuesday, April 9, 1661 reads “I put my Lady, Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Hempson, and the two Mrs. Allens into the lantern and I went in and kissed them, demanding it as a fee due to a principall officer…” (Fox 1980, 37).

These decorations, and particularly those that were inboard, may not have impressed the ordinary seamen who crewed the Sovereign. Experience taught the sailors of several ships that decorations could splinter when hit by enemy artillery, and casualties were the result. It was not unusual for their crews to chop the decorations away before going into battle. The Royal Navy eventually agreed (but only after a long delay), and forbade inboard decorations by the end of the 17th century. (Fox 1980, 36) The Admiralty took further steps to limit outlandish decorations in the early 1700’s by limiting the cost of decorations on a First-Rate ship to £500 (Howard 1979)

Although the decorations caused the Sovereign to be wildly expensive, this is not the only reason it was controversial. It was larger than any other ship of its time, coming in at 1522 tons as built, with three gun decks and a keel that was 127 feet long. Approximately 2,500 oak trees were felled to build it, and two smaller ships were created from its waste.

King Charles’ proposal to build a ship so big horrified the Masters of Trinity House. They had previously thought that the 3-decked Prince Royal was a mistake, and were even less happy about yet another 3-decker. Their opinion was that “neither can the art or wit of man build a ship well conditioned and fit for service with three tier of ordnance.” (Fox 1980, 33) They continued by saying;

"There is no port in the Kingdome that can harbour this shipp. The wild sea must bee her port, her anchors and cables her safety; if either fayle, the shipp must perish, the King lose his jewel, four or five hundred man must die, and perhaps some great and noble peer" (cited in (McKay 2020, 286)

The Masters were not alone in their feelings about large ships. The English had long known that smaller ships were more maneuverable and, under the reign of Elizabeth I, no warship over 800 tons was built. The Newton Manuscript (Barker 1994) written in about 1600 and copied by Isaac Newton, expands on the benefits of smaller ships:

“the fittest ships for war are ships of 4, 6 and 6 hundred tunns ffor ships of these burdens will be nimble to work with & will be able to give both their sides of ordinance to the greater ships once & to carry as good ordinance & then there may be two ships built to ye charge of one so great ship & yet one of these small ships able to do better service at most times then (sic) such great ships of so huge bigness & be able to pass in or out to any harbor with less danger on any sudden occasion, as it doth often times happen.”

The author of the Newton Manuscript had such disdain for large ships that he continued by saying:

“I know by experience that for those parts as in other seas, never make any ship longer than 110 foot by the keel nor broader then (sic) 40 foot[2] nor to draw more water than 18 foot. A ship of this proportion is the biggest that can be made, & to be fit for service ffor being of greater proportion it doth make them so great of burden that their masts yards sailes cables ankers & tackling wch must be answerable unto ye burthen to be so great & boysterous that it doth require great charge much help & long time to work with: by wch means they are oftentimes subject to greater danger of shipwrack. Wheras lesser ships are more free & yet better of service at most times.”

The Sovereign of the Seas exceeded all three dimensions mentioned by the Newton Manuscript’s author. It was not unique in this. It was part of a trend in English warships that continued until they essentially returned to the concept of the Elizabethan “race-built” galleon by introducing the frigate in the 1640’s. (Fox 1980)

The Sovereign’s large size allowed it to be heavily armed. It carried 102 guns (Caruna 1994, 63), making it the first ship in the English navy to carry more than 100 of them. It was originally planned to carry 90, but King Charles changed it while inspecting the ship on December 7, 1637. (Calendar of State Papers 18 Dec 1637) The addition appears to be impulsive. It happened two months after it was launched, and at about the time it was already being armed. Its guns were made of bronze, partly because the process of manufacturing guns made of iron had not yet been worked out. Also, bronze did not rust in the presence of sea water. Bronze was expensive. The guns’ expense increased because they were decorated. Each gun was inscribed with the initials “CR” which stands for Carolus Rex or “King Charles,” and “the [Tudor] rose and crown, the scepter and tridents, the anchor and cable, and a compartment under the rose and crown with this inscription: “Carolus Edgari sceptrum stabilivit aquarum” (Calendar of State Papers Domestic 1638), which translates as “Charles has firmly grasped Edgar's scepter of the seas.”

The large number of guns on the Sovereign did not convince everyone that it would be an effective warship. The Masters of Trinity House were among them. They noted that the “aim must be for three tier of ordnance.” There were, in their minds, only two outcomes to this, and both were bad. The first was that the lowest tier would be “so low that in every gale of wind the ports must be shut in, or else the ship will be in great danger, or sink, as the Mary Rose in King Henry the VIII’s time at Portsmouth.” Alternatively, the lowest tier could be laid at “5 or 5 ½ foot”[3] and, in this case, “must the third tier lie at a height as not to be serviceable, nay this third tier will rather endanger the quality of the ship (as the too high building hath in some of the kings’ ships lately built, made them unfit for any good service.”

The Masters’ opinions were not unfounded. The original Sovereign did not sail well, and this may have been part of the reason it was not used in battle until about 15 years after its launch, and only after it had been modified to make it more stable. We can therefore think of the Sovereign as two ships. (Redding 2018)The first was the original ship, which was more of an attraction meant to symbolize power and prestige than a warship. James Sephton may have best described the original ship’s purpose by saying “As she rode majestically in her moorings in the element for which she was designed, her colossal size and rich adornment must surely have created a focus of attention to all those who could travel to visit her or view her from a distance.” (Sephton 2011, 44) (Redding 2018) The focus of the present thread is on this version of the Sovereign. To repeat; this ship was never used in battle.

The second ship that was the Sovereign was the Sovereign ship modified, beginning in 1651, to be a functional warship. When used as such, it was an effective vessel. For example, it successfully fought off 20 ships in 1652, and sank one of them with a single broadside. (Sephton 2011, 146) Nevertheless, it was not used in battle as frequently as other ships. Part of this was because it had “embarrassingly short range” guns, and part was because large ships were not maneuverable. (Redding 2018) The fact that it was expensive to put this ship to sea may have also been a consideration. Putting it to sea meant a large crew had to be paid and fed. It meant that the ship had to be stocked with shot and gunpowder. These things were expensive. Putting it to sea also increased the wear and tear on this ship, particularly if it encountered rough seas. This would increase its maintenance costs. Although ships that were laid up were more prone to rot, ships at sea required repairs of their rudders, masts and yards, capstans, knees, beams, scuppers, hearths, and more. Because of all this wear and tear, ships of this era spent about half of their lifetimes undergoing repair. (Endsor 2020). This was also expensive. Putting the Sovereign into battle had the potential to be even more expensive than usual. It increased the possibility that its gilded decorations would be damaged, and they would have to be repaired or replaced.

The Sovereign cost £40,833 8s. 1½d., not including the cost of its ordnance, which cost an additional £24,753 8s. 8d. Contrary to common belief, and although it was built during the time of a “ship tax” levied by King Charles I, the Sovereign’s funding did not come from this tax. The ship tax was levied on a county-by-county basis in which each county paid for one ship. No single county could afford the Sovereign of the Seas so its funding came from royal funds. (Redding 2018)

Although this may be true, perception is often more important than reality, and contemporary perception was different. Diarist John Evelyn wrote in his diary in 1641:

On the 19th of July,[4] we made a short excursion to Rochester, and having seen the cathedral went to Chatham to see the Royal Sovereign, a glorious vessel of burden lately built there, being for defense and ornament, the richest that ever spread cloth before the wind. She carried an hundred brass cannon, and was 1,200 tons; a rare sailer, the work of the famous Phineas Pett, inventor of the frigate-fashion of building, to this day practiced. But what is to be deplored as to this vessel is, that it cost his Majesty the affections of his subjects, perverted by the malcontent of great ones, who took occasion to quarrel for his having raised a very slight tax for the building of this, and equipping the rest of the navy, without an act of Parliament; though, by the suffrages of the major part of the Judges the King might legally do in times of imminent danger, of which his Majesty was best apprised. But this not satisfying a jealous party, it was condemned as unprecedented, and not justifiable as to the Royal prerogative; and, accordingly, the Judges were removed out of their places, fined, and imprisoned.” (Evelyn 1901, 48)

Regardless of who is correct, the ship tax had previously been imposed only on coastal towns. King Charles extended it inland. He did so in a series of three writs that began in August of 1635. This tax played a part in causing the English Civil war, which resulted in King Charles losing his crown and his head.

The Puritans fought against King Charles in this war, and the Sovereign of the Seas must have been something of a public relations disaster with them. The gilding of this ship almost certainly angered them. They must have also been angered by the color black. Contrary to today’s contemporary films, the Puritans considered this color officious, not plain enough, and never wore it. (Fischer 1989, pg 140) Besides, black dye was expensive, and it faded quickly. The Puritans wore the “sadd colors,” which were earth tones, chosen because they were subdued. (Fischer 1989, pg 140) It seems likely that King Charles would be aware of the impact that the ornamentation and color of his ship would have upon the them.

The Sovereign was launched on October 14, 1637. “Launched” does not mean that the ship was finished at this time. It was unarmed when launched. In fact, its guns weren’t even proved until the spring of 1638 (Sephton 2011, 05) Its rigging was also not completed until about the same time. (Sephton 2011, 43)

On “2d February, 1696.[5] John Evelyn wrote in his diary “An extraordinary wet season, though temperate as to cold. The ‘Royal Sovereign’ man- of-war burned at Chatham. It was built in 1637, and having given occasion to the levy of ship money was perhaps the cause of all the after troubles to this day.” (Evelyn 1901, 356). Prevailing thinking is that the fire was accidently set, caused perhaps by a keeper who negligently left a candle burning his cabin, or a drunken watchman who knocked over a lantern.

References​

Ball, Nick, and Simons Stephens. 2018. Navy Board Ship Models. Barnsley (UK): Seaforth Publishing.

Barker, Richard. 1994. "A Manuscript on Shipbuilding, Circa 1600, Copied by Newton." The Mariner's Mirror. 80 16-29.

Baskerville, Thomas. 1893. Thomas Baskerville's Journeys in England. Vol. 2, in The Manuscripts of His Grace the Duke of Portland, by Historical Manuscripts Commission, 263-314. Londand.

Calendar of State Papers Domestic. 1638. Charles I, 1637-8. Vols. 387, April 1-17. Edited by John Bruce. Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1869. London: British History Online, Charles i - volume 387 April 1-17. Accessed June 20, 2020. British History Online, http://www.british-history.ac.uk/cal-state-papers/domestic/chas1/1637-8/pp341-369.

Calendar of State Papers, Domestic. 18 Dec 1637. Charles I. Vol. SP 18/374 No. 20.

Caruna, Adrian B. 1994. The History of English Sea Ordnance, 1523-1875, Vol 1. Rotherfield, England: Jean Boudroit Publications.

Endsor, Richard. 2020. The Master Shipwright's Secrets. New York: Osprey Publishing.

Evelyn, John. 1901. The Diary of John Evelyn. Edited by William Bray. Vols. 2 (1665-1706). 2 vols. New York and London: M. Walter Dunn.

Evelyn, John. 1901. The Diary of John Evelyn. Vols. 1 (1629-1664), edited by William Bray. New York and London: M. Walter Dunne.

Fischer, David Hackett. 1989. Albion's Seed. New York: Oxford University Press.

Fox, Frank. 1980. Great Ships. London: Conway Maritime Press.

Hamilton, William Douglas, and Sophie Crawford Lomas, 1987. "Calendar of State Papers Domestic: Charles I 1625 - 49, Addena." (Her Majesty's Stationery Office) 525-528.

Heywood, Thomas. 1637. A True Description of His Majesties Royall Ship, Built this Yeare 1637 at Wooll-witch in Kent. To the great glory of the English Nation and not paraleld in the whole Christian World. London: John Oakes.

Howard, Frank. 1979. Sailing Ships of War 1400 - 1860. New York: Mayflower.

McKay, John. 2020. Sovereign of the Seas 1637. Barnsley, South Yorkshire: Seaforth Publishing.

Redding, Benjamin W.D. 2018. "A Ship 'For Which Great Neptune Raves': The Sovereign of the Seas, La Couronne, and the Seventeenth Century International Competition over Warship Design." The Mariner' Mirror. 104: 402-422.

Sephton, James. 2011. The Sovereign of the Seas. Stroud: Amberly Publishing.







[1]Heywood’s leaflet was printed in 1637 by Iohn Okes, for Iohn Aston. This was before buildings had street numbers, so it was “to bee sold at his shop in Cat-eaten streete at the signe of the Buls-head.
[2] Despite the admonishments, the author of the Newton Manuscript tables data for ships with keels that are 120 feet long, and whose breadths range from 40 to 44 feet.
[3] We will later see that the Sovereign’s ports were five feet above the water.
[4] This date is expressed in terms of the Julian calendar. In terms of our present calendar, the Gregorian calendar, it is July 9.
[5] This date is a Julian calendar date. When expressed in terms of our current Gregorian calendar, the date is Sunday, February 12, 1696. Evelyn’s entry date suggest that he may not have heard about the fire for about two weeks. The Sovereign had actually burned in mid-January.
 
I look forward to following your research. I'm working on a version of the SoS right now and have wondered about a lot of the basic issues you raise.

I think some big questions will never be resolved. My understanding is that King Charles micromanaged Pett and the ship was well ahead of its time from a technological perspective. But that also raised a lot of design challenges with guns and weight distribution, etc., that were probably worked out on the fly and remain undocumented or open to debate.

Best of luck with your most interesting project!
 
Thomas, thanks for your comment. As I found out while working on this project, there is quite bit of "mythology" that surrounds the Sovereign and, while working on this project I found that I had to change my initial misconceptions a number of times.

One bit of the mythology is that King Charles I micromanaged the project. He certainly did keep a close eye on it, and made some choices about gilding and the number of guns it would have (these are mentioned in my previous post). However, the King simply did not know enough about ships to micromanage their designs. He probably wouldn't have even been able to understand the plans that Pett put in front of him.

Whether the Sovereign was technologically advanced relative to its time is also open to question. It's not much of an overstatement to say that any ship of this time that actually sailed without undergoing modification after its initial sea trials was something of a technological marvel. That the Sovereign did so is all the more impressive because it was so big. However Pett probably took a lot of the elements of the Sovereign's design from the design of his earlier 3-decked ship, the Prince Royal (1610)., You can get a feel for that ship's design from W.G. Perrin's introduction to the Autobiography of Phineas Pett, which you can download here https://ia801306.us.archive.org/15/items/autobiographyofp00pettuoft/autobiographyofp00pettuoft.pdf.

Pett's dimensions for the Sovereign and other material I'll post later (and particularly the material on the swimming line) also suggest that he wasn't doing anything radically different from what other shipwrights were doing. His design was, to be sure, "different", but every shipwright did things his own way.

Its also unlikely that any part of this ship was designed "on the fly." The Sovereign was designed to have 90 guns, and the King added more, but he did not do so until alter the hull, decks, etc. were already built. Pett probably had to think a lot about where to put the "extra" guns, but he didn't rip out decks or alter the lengths of existing decks to accommodate these additional guns.
 
Hi Charlie--thanks for the response, you're clearly way ahead of me! But I will take exception to one thing you said in your post:

"However, the King simply did not know enough about ships to micromanage their designs. He probably wouldn't have even been able to understand the plans that Pett put in front of him."

Although I don't have experience with kings, I've noticed that ignorance has never prevented executives, government officials or other "authorities" from offering "expert" and "helpful" guidance!:p

And we all know what happened to Charles I!
 
Well, that's certainly true. The fate of the Swedish warship Vasa provides a contemporary example of what happens when a King who does not know what he is doing interferes with a ship.

Perhaps a stronger point is that there is no evidence that the King micromanaged the design. Indeed, as I'll mention later. there is a record that King Charles approved Pett's design. There are also records that he changed the number of guns, dictated the color of paint on the Sovereign, and dictated that the decorations be gilt (these, are in the Colander of State Papers). Yet, there are no records that he micromanaged the design.

There are a lot of misconceptions about the Sovereign, so it's always best to ask what the evidence is for any particular claim.

.
 
Maybe I shouldn't have used the term micromanaged but Charles was definitely hands on. Of course our perceptions are based on what we've seen and read, but the story I've seen is that the king and Pett had a meeting and the king ordered Pett to build the largest ship ever built. It is assumed that they agreed to the dimensions because shortly after the meeting there is documentation that Trinity House, representing the naval authorities, sent a letter to the Secretary of State saying that a ship of the dimensions given would be unmanageable. Charles wouldn't back down and the actual SoS was larger than the specifications that the Trinity House letter quoted. I've also seen something that the Sovereign cost ten times what a typical ship would cost at the time and only the king would have had the ability to make that happen.
 
The fate of the Swedish warship Vasa provides a contemporary example of what happens when a King who does not know what he is doing interferes with a ship.
Probably could add this sentiment to your list of misconceptions. Dr. Fred Hocker (Vasa Museum) and others have pretty much dispelled this common thought.

I'm enjoying your treatise. Please forgive my intrusion...
 
Dockattner,
Thanks for your correction. It would be interesting for someone, or a group of people, to compile a list of these common misconceptions. I'm curious about how far they extend. I am reminded of Mark Twain's quote, "It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know for sure that just ain't so."
 
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