Christianshavn (DAC Ship)
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''Christianshavn'' was an East Indiaman of the
Danish Asiatic Company Danish Asiatic Company ( Danish: Asiatisk Kompagni) was a Danish trading company established in 1730 to revive Danish trade on the Danish East Indies and China following the closure of the Danish East India Company. It was granted a 40-year mon ...
, which she served from 1800 until 1834. The poet
Poul Martin Møller Poul Martin Møller (21 March 1794 – 13 March 1838) was a Danish academic, writer, and poet. During his lifetime, he gained renown in Denmark for his poetry. After his death, his posthumously published fiction and philosophical writings were wel ...
served as a ship chaplin on board the ship on an expedition to Canton and Manilla in 181920. She was renamed ''Frederik VI'' (''Frederik den Siette'') after undergoing a complete overhaul at the Royal Dockyard in Copenhagen in 1828. She completed the Danish Asiatic Company's last expedition to China in 183434.


Origins

The ship was a British frigate taken as a prize by the French Navy at Ile de France in 1798. She was first acquired by Selbye & Terboch and then in 1800 sold to the Danish Asiatic Company in 1800 and subsequently renamed Christianshavn. She was renamed ''Frederik VI'' circa 1828.


DAC service


''Christianshavn''

;180102 ''Christianshavn'' completed its first DAC expedition in 1801-02. It was in
Batavia Batavia may refer to: Historical places * Batavia (region), a land inhabited by the Batavian people during the Roman Empire, today part of the Netherlands * Batavia, Dutch East Indies, present-day Jakarta, the former capital of the Dutch East In ...
. ;180305 Captain Poul Christensen and Master (''styrmand'') Jens Jensen sailed from Copenhagen on 8 July 1703m bound for Canton. ''Christianshavn'' arrived back in Copenhagen on 1 July 1805. ;180607 Captain Svend Wilhelm Ørgaard and Master (''styrmand'') J. A. Ponsaing sailed from Copenhagen on 24 February 1806, bound for Canton and Manilla. ''Christianshavn'' arrived back in Copenhagen on 15 June 1807. ;181921 ''Christianshavn'' was one of only two ships still owned by the Danish Asiatic Company at the war ended in 1914. The other one was ''Kronprindsessen''. Captain Georg Gottlob Stage (1766–1826) and Master (''styrmand'') J. S. Hørgensen sailed from Copenhagen on 1 October 1819, bound for Canton. ''Christianshavn'' arrived back in Copenhagen on 16 July 1821. The poet
Poul Martin Møller Poul Martin Møller (21 March 1794 – 13 March 1838) was a Danish academic, writer, and poet. During his lifetime, he gained renown in Denmark for his poetry. After his death, his posthumously published fiction and philosophical writings were wel ...
served as chaplin on the expedition. Møller wrote in his diary and created drawings in his sketchbook during the expedition. ;182627 Master (''styrmand'') J. A. Thellesen sailed from Copenhagen on 7 April 1826m bound for Canton. ''Christianshavn'' arrived back in Copenhagen on 23 September 1827.


''Frederik VI''

;182930 The sale of ''Kronprindsessen'' in 1827 had left ''Christianshavn'' as the last ship still owned by the Danish Asiatic Company. ''Christianshavn'' was subject to a complete overhaul at the Royal Dockyard in 1828. She was subsequently renamed ''Frederik CI'', Captain Christian Carl Tronier sailed from Copenhagen on 21 April 1728, bound for Canton. ''Frederik VI'' arrived back in Copenhagen on 12 September 1830. ;183334 ''Frederik VI'' was sent to Canton and Manilla on the last DAC expedition. Captain , a naval officer, was appointed as captain of the ship on her last voyage. Richard Bentley served as supercargo on the expedition. It was Bentley's eighth DAC expedition to China. Theodor Emil Ludvigsen, another experienced company trader, was also part of the crew. ''Frederik VI'' arrived back in Copenhagen in 1834. Ludvigsen was after the expedition entrusted with organizing the Danish Asiatic Company's archives.


Fate

''Frederik VI'' was sold to CEO in 1830. In 1841, she was sold to J. Owen in Copenhagen. in 1845, she was sold to the UK. She wrecked off Bintang Island at
Sumatra Sumatra is one of the Sunda Islands of western Indonesia. It is the largest island that is fully within Indonesian territory, as well as the sixth-largest island in the world at 473,481 km2 (182,812 mi.2), not including adjacent i ...
in 1846.


References

{{reflist Ships of the Danish Asiatic Company Frigates of Denmark