Amelia (ship)

Several ships have born the name Amelia:

  • Dutch ship Aemilia (1632) was Admiral Maarten Tromp's flagship during part of the Eighty Years' War.
  • Amelia (1795 ship) was a ship launched in 1787 in France that the British captured. Under her British owners she made one voyage as a whaler and one voyage as a slave ship. She is last listed in 1806.
  • Amelia (1796 ship) was a ship built in Demaun that the French Navy captured in 1796 as Amelia was carrying rice to Britain.
  • Amelia (1800), of 200 tons (bm),[1] was a government transport built in Bristol that a French privateer captured in 1800, and that the Guernsey privateer cutter Maria recaptured and sent into Gibraltar.[2] She was captured a second time and this time her captors took her into Algeciras.[3]
  • Amelia (1813 ship) was built in Massachusetts in 1809 probably under another name. The British captured her in 1813 and she was a British merchantman until she foundered in 1829.
  • Amelia (1816 ship) was a ship that disappeared in 1816 after leaving Sydney for China.
  • Amélia IV was a passenger ship built in 1900, and Royal yacht for the Portuguese monarch until 1910.

See also

References

  1. Register of Shipping (1800), Seq..no.A305.
  2. "The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 4134. 17 March 1801. hdl:2027/uc1.c2735020.
  3. "The Marine List". Lloyd's List. No. 4147. 1 May 1801. hdl:2027/hvd.32044105233084.
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