The 'Greek frigate ''Hellas''' (
Greek '''Ελλάς''') was the flagship of the
Revolutionary Hellenic Navy. After an arbitration hearing in New York due to financial default by the Greek government, she was delivered to Greece in 1826. She was burned in 1831 by the Greek Admiral
Andreas Miaoulis when the government of
Ioannis Kapodistrias ordered her turned over to the
Russian navy.
Two ships ordered
In 1825, during the latter part of the
Greek War of Independence from the
Ottoman Empire, representatives of the Greek government in
London negotiated with an American shipyard in
New York for the construction of two
frigates to be named ''Hope'' and ''Liberator''.
[1] Ultimately, the Greek government defaulted and one of the ships, (''Liberator'') was sold and the proceeds were used to pay for the other ship to be delivered to Greece.
The frigate ''Hellas''
The ''Hope'' sailed from New York during the first days of October 1826, with the crew being mostly adventurers. An agent of the Greek government, K. A. Kontostavlos, was also on board.
The voyage was raucous as the crew attempted to murder both the Captain and the Greek government agent in a scheme to sell the vessel in
Colombia. The crew failed in their
mutiny, and the ship was delivered to
Nafplion about
November 25,
1826. The crew tried a second time to sell the vessel, this time to
Ibrahim Pasha, who at the head of an Ottoman-
Egyptian force had invaded the
Peloponnese. This time, Admiral Andreas Miaoulis and a force of 30 local mariners secured the vessel and dispatched the raucous delivery crew.
[2]
After her arrival in Nafplion, three Admirals (Miaoulis,
Nikolis Apostolis and one other) took official delivery of the frigate and brought her to the island of
Aegina, which had recently become capital of Greece.
The frigate, renamed ''Hellas'', became the flagship of the Greek Navy, as she was the most powerful ship in the navy.
[3] Under the command of
Konstantinos Kanaris,
[4] the frigate took part in various successful, but insignificant, naval battles in both the
Aegean and
Ionian Seas.
Sinking of the flagship
On
August 1,
1831, Admiral Miaoulis, who in the meantime had joined the
English Party that was opposed to Governor Kapodistrias'
Russian Party had established the navy on the island of
Hydra against Kapodistrias. When the government in Nafplion asked Miaoulis to deliver the Greek fleet to the Russian Admiral
Pyotr Ivanovich Ricord, Miaoulis refused to obey that order and threatened to scuttle the entire fleet under his command in the event of hostile movement by Ricord. When Ricord attempted to encircle Miaoulis and his fleet in the area near
Poros Island, Miaoulis carried out his threats, burning the small fleet with a fire ship. In addition to ''Hellas'', the other scuttled ships were the corvettes ''Hydra'' and ''Spetsai''.
[2]
References
1. Zubrod, Donald. "The History of Maritime Arbitration in New York" in ''The Arbitrator'' January, 2001.
2. Scorinis, Nicholas G. quoted in ''The Arbitrator'' April, 2001.
3. History of the Hellenic Navy (in English)
4. Battleships-Cruisers website
5. Scorinis, Nicholas G. quoted in ''The Arbitrator'' April, 2001.
External links
★
History of the Hellenic Navy (English)