:''For the automobile, see
Chevrolet Corvette, or for the aircraft see
Aérospatiale Corvette.''
A 'corvette' is a small, maneuverable, lightly armed
warship, smaller than a
frigate and larger than a
coastal patrol craft. During the
Age of Sail, corvettes were smaller than frigates and larger than
sloops-of-war, usually with a single gun deck. Almost all modern
navies use ships smaller than frigates for coastal duty, but not all of them use the term ''corvette'' (from the French ''corvair''). The rank
Corvette Captain derives from the name of this type of ship.
Sailing vessels
During the
Age of Sail, corvettes were one of many types of smaller warships. They were very closely related to
sloops-of-war. The role of the corvette consisted mostly of coastal patrol, fighting minor wars, supporting large fleets, or participating in show-the-flag missions. The British Navy began using small ships in the 1650s, but described them as sloops rather than corvettes. The first reference to a corvette was with the
French Navy in the 1670s, which is where the term itself possibly originated. The
Royal Navy did not use the term until after the
Napoleonic Wars to describe a small
un-rated vessel similar to a sloop.
Most corvettes and sloops of the 17th century were around 40 to 60 feet (12 to 18 meters) in length and weighed 40 to 70
tons (36 to 64
metric tonnes). They carried 4 to 8 smaller guns on a single deck. Corvettes slowly increased in size and capability, until 1800 when they reached lengths over 100 feet (30 meters) and weight ranging from 400 to 600
tons (circa 365 to 544
metric tonnes). One of the largest corvettes during the Age of Sail was the American ship,
USS ''Constellation'', built in 1855. The ship was 176 feet (54 meters) long and carried 24 guns. It was so large that some naval experts consider it a
frigate. It has also been referred to as a sloop-of-war.
Steam ships
Ships during the steam era became much faster and more maneuverable than their sail ancestors. Corvettes during this era were typically used along side
gunboats during colonial missions.
Battleships and other larger vessels were unnecessary when subduing native peoples in the
Far East and Africa.
World War II
The modern corvette appeared during
World War II as an easily built patrol and
convoy escort vessel. The British naval designer William Reed drew up a small ship based on the single-
shaft Smiths Dock Company whale catcher ''Southern Pride'', whose simple design and mercantile construction standards lent itself to rapid production in small yards unused to naval work, and in large numbers. Future
Prime Minister,
Winston Churchill, then
First Lord of the Admiralty, had a hand in reviving the name "corvette". The first corvettes were the
Flower class (
Royal Navy ships were named after flowers, though ships in
Royal Canadian Navy service took the name of smaller Canadian cities and towns). Their chief duty was to protect
convoys in the
North Atlantic and on the routes from the UK to
Murmansk carrying supplies to the
Soviet Union.
The Flower corvette was originally designed for offshore patrol work, and was not an ideal design for an anti-submarine escort; they were really too short for open ocean work, lightly armed for AA defence, and little faster than the merchantmen they escorted (a particular problem given the faster
German U-boat designs then emerging). They were very seaworthy and maneuverable, but crew living conditions for ocean voyages were appalling. Because of this, the corvette was superseded in the Royal Navy as the escort ship of choice by the
frigate, which was larger, faster, better armed and had two shafts. However, many small yards could not produce vessels of frigate size, so an improved corvette design, the
Castle class, was introduced later in the war, some of which remained in service until the mid-1950s.
The
Royal Australian Navy built 60
Bathurst-class corvettes, including 20 for the Royal Navy crewed by Australians, and 4 for the
Royal Indian Navy. These were officially described as Australian Mine Sweepers, or as Minesweeping Sloops by the Royal Navy, and were named after
Australian towns.
Modern corvettes

South African frigate referred to by the SAN as a corvette ''SAS Mendi''
Modern navies have begun to see a trend in the late part of the 20th century and beginning of the 21st century towards smaller, more maneuverable surface combatants. Such vessels can theoretically operate close to shore, as well as at sea. With recent naval operations concentrated in littoral waters the desire for smaller vessels has increased considerably. Corvettes combine the ability to defend a country's assets and interests far away from its own shores, with sophisticated weapons and surveillance equipment while being smaller and cheaper to operate than frigates and destroyers. Corvettes surpass all current patrol craft/offensive missile-boats from an air-defence standpoint, as they are large enough to mount current air/self defence systems.
Typical corvettes today are between
patrol vessels and
frigates in both size and capability. They have a displacement between 540 and 2,750 tons (550 and 2,800 metric tons) and measure 180-330 feet (55-100 meters) in length. They usually are armed with medium and small caliber guns, surface-to-surface missiles, surface-to-air missiles, and underwater warfare weapons. Many can accommodate a small or medium
ASW helicopter.
Current Corvette Classes
Many countries today operate corvettes. Some of them include
Sweden,
Germany,
India,
China,
Israel,
Poland,
Turkey,
Greece, and
Russia. Countries that border smaller seas, such as the
Baltic Sea or the
Persian Gulf are more likely to build the smaller and more maneuverable corvettes. Spanish
Descubierta class frigates, in service with
Morocco's and
Egypt's navies, are actually 1400 tm corvettes.
Arguably, the most advanced corvette in service today is the
Swedish Navy's
Visby class corvette. It is the first operational warship to extensively utilize
stealth technology.
The
United States is developing a
Littoral Combat Ship, which will be very similar to a corvette. The LCS is slotted to replace the
Oliver Hazard Perry class frigate in American service.
The new
German Braunschweig class is designed to supplement Germany's
fast attack craft and also incorporates stealth technology and land attack capabilities.
Turkey began construction on the first of twelve
Milgem class corvettes in July 2005. The lead ship, named ''TCG Heybeliada'', is scheduled to begin
sea trials in October 2010. The design concept and mission profile of Milgem is similar to the Littoral Combat Ship of the United States.
The
Hellenic Navy currently operates the
Super-Vita class ships, which are 580 tons full load. The Hellenic Navy has categorised the class as fast attack missile craft. A similar vessel is the
Kılıç class fast attack missile boat of the
Turkish Navy which is classified as a corvette by
Lürssen Werft, the German designer of the ship.
The
Indonesian Navy will receive indigenously designed corvettes, called 104 M corvette in 2008. It is possible, the corvette will be armed with
C-802, which is already installed in the locally-built
Fast Patrol Boat FPB-57.
See also
★
List of corvette classes
★
List of corvette and sloop classes of the Royal Navy
★
HMAS ''Castlemaine'', a
museum ship,
Bathurst-class corvette
★
HMCS ''Sackville'', a museum ship, the sole remaining
Flower-class corvette
★
Braunschweig class corvette, the new class of corvettes of the
German Navy
★
Milgem class corvette, the next generation corvette class of the
Turkish Navy
Further reading
★ The collection ''Three Corvettes'' by
Nicholas Monsarrat recounts the writer's World War II experiences on corvettes, starting as an inexperienced small-boat sailor and ending as captain.
★ The novel ''
The Cruel Sea'' also by Nicholas Monsarrat, which is about the life and death of a Flower-class corvette and the men in her, is regarded as one of the classic naval stories of World War II.
★ The two books ''
The Corvette Navy'' and ''
On the Triangle Run'' by
James B. Lamb give an autobiographical and historical perspective of life on
Royal Canadian Navy corvettes in World War II. The author served on them for 6 years from Halifax to the beaches of D-Day.
External links
★
Bathurst Class Corvettes
★
Project 28 corvettes
★
Corvette Elisabeth German screw corvette Elisabeth of 1869: History and high resolution photos of a model