Dutch Cruisers (1877 – 1974)

HNLMS De Zeven Provincien

A cruiser is a warship that can perform many tasks such as fighting enemy warships, patrolling, protecting trade routes, reconnaissance tasks and strengthening the attack power of fleet units.In order to perform these tasks, it must have a large range and provide good accommodation for its crew for longer periods. The term cruiser was already used in the age of sail and did not so much refer to a specific type of ship, but rather to a task to be performed. Due to the introduction of the steam engine, armour plating and modern artillery, armoured ships, armoured cruisers, armoured deck cruisers and various variants such as ram tower cruisers appeared in the course of the 19th century. Later, the first battleships emerged from these.

Two Dutch cruisers HNLMS De Ruyter and HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën on either side of the Dutch aircraft carrier Hr.Ms. Karel Doorman (1968)


During World War II, Britain, France, the Netherlands, Russia, the United States, Germany, Italy and Japan built a total of 87 cruisers, while at the beginning of the war they had 191 of these ships. A total of 113 were lost.

Types of cruisers:

Screw steamer or Unprotected cruiser: a ship without armor.
Protected cruiser: a type of ship with an armored deck that was replaced by the light cruiser.
Armored cruiser: a ship with an armored deck and armor along the sides. This type was replaced by the battle cruiser.
Armored ship: a type of ship with heavy guns intended to knock out enemy cruisers in coastal waters. Often used by smaller navies that could not afford or needed battleships.
Light cruiser: a lighter version of the armored cruiser.
Battle cruiser: a ship with similar armament to that of a battleship but with lighter armor
Heavy cruiser: a type of light cruiser with approximately 200mm guns.

The Royal Netherlands Navy has used three types of cruiser classes over the years (unprotected, protected and light class).

Unprotected cruisers

Atjeh class

Hull

Name

Class

Type

Commisioned

Decommisioned

Status

--

HNLMS Atjeh

Atjeh

Unprotected cruiser

01-11-1877

1921

Unknown

--

HNLMS Tromp

Atjeh

Unprotected cruiser

01-09-1882

1904

Sold for scrap

--

HNLMS Koningin Emma

Atjeh

Unprotected cruiser

01-12-1880

23-06-1900

Capsized 1942, salvaged and scuttled in April 1943

--

HNLMS de Ruyter

Atjeh

Unprotected cruiser

01-08-1885

27-05-1899

Sold 29 May 1900

--

HNLMS van Speyk

Atjeh

Unprotected cruiser

16-07-1883

--

Instruction vessel, Sold for scrap 1946

--

HNLMS Joahn Willem Friso

Atjeh

Unprotected cruiser

01-02-1888

16-09-1897

Sold for scrap in 1899

HNLMS Johan Willem Friso

No images available

Protected cruisers

HNLMS Sumatra and Koningin Wilhelmina der Nederlanden

Hull

Name

Class

Type

Commisioned

Decommisioned

Status

--

HNLMS Sumatra

--

Cruiser

01-04-1891

10-05-1902

Sold for scrape in 1907

--

HNLMS Koningin Wilhelmina

--

Cruiser

17-04-1894

05-03-1910

Sold for scrape in 1910

Holland class

Hull

Name

Class

Type

Commisioned

Decommisioned

Status

--

HNLMS Holland

Holland

Cruiser

01-07-1898

1920

Unknown

--

HNLMS Zeeland

Holland

Cruiser

01-06-1898

1924

Unknown

--

HNLMS Friesland

Holland

Cruiser

16-01-1898

1913

Unknown

--

HNLMS Gelderland

Holland

Cruiser

15-07-1900

17-05-1940

trainingship 1920

--

HNLMS Noordbrabant

Holland

Cruiser

01-03-1900

17-05-1940

Sunk by own personel on 17-05-1940

--

HNLMS Utrecht

Holland

Cruiser

01-03-1901

1913

Unknown

Light cruisers

Java class

Hull

Name

Class

Type

Commisioned

Decommisioned

Status

--

HNLMS Java

Java

Light cruiser

01-05-1925

--

Torpedoed and sunk by Japanese, 27-02-1942

--

HNLMS Sumatra

Java

Light cruiser

26-05-1926

--

Scuttled on 09-06-1944

--

HNLMS Celebes

Java

Light cruiser

--

--

Canceled

--

HNLMS De Ruyter

No class

Light cruiser

03-10-1936


Sunk by Japanese cruiser, Haguro on 27-02-1942

Tromp class

The Tromp class was a class of ships of the Royal Netherlands Navy. The hull shape was also known as the Argonaut 600. They were designed as “flotilla leaders” and their intended role was to be the backbone of a squadron of modern destroyers that was planned at the same time.

Hull

Name

Class

Type

Commisioned

Decommisioned

Status

--

HNLMS Tromp

Tromp

Light cruiser

18-08-1938

20-12-1968

scraped 1969

--

HNLMS Jacob van Heemskerk

Tromp

Light cruiser

10-05-1940

20-11-1969

Scuttled on 23-06-1970

De Zeven Provinciën class

There were two ships in the class: HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën (renamed De Ruyter in 1947) and Kijkduin (renamed Eendracht c. 1940, De Ruyter in 1944 and De Zeven Provinciën in 1947). Both ships enjoyed long service lives, first in the Koninklijke Marine (until the early 1970s) and then in the Marina de Guerra del Perú.

Hull

Name

Class

Type

Commisioned

Decommisioned

Status

C801

HNLMS De Ruter

Zeven Provincien

Light cruiser

18-11-1953

12-10-1972

Sold to Peru 1973, museum ship, scraped july 2022

C802

HNLMS De Zeven provincien

Zeven Provincien

Light cruiser

18-11-1953

16-10-1975

Sold to Peru, 1976, scraped 2000

References:
https://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lijst_van_scheepsklassen_van_de_Nederlandse_marine
https://laststandonzombieisland.com/
https://www.tracesofwar.nl/
https://www.navypedia.org/ships/netherlands
https://maritimedigital.nl/