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Pennant number
Naval ship identifier in Europe
Naval ship identifier in Europe
In the Royal Navy and other navies of Europe and the Commonwealth of Nations, ships are identified by pennant number (an internationalisation of pendant number, which it was called before 1948). Historically, naval ships flew a flag that identified a flotilla or type of vessel. For example, the Royal Navy used a red burgee for torpedo boats and a pennant with an H for torpedo boat destroyers. Adding a number to the type-identifying flag uniquely identified each ship.
In the current system, a letter prefix, called a flag superior, identifies the type of ship, and numerical suffix, called a flag inferior, uniquely identifies an individual ship. Not all pennant numbers have a flag superior.
International pennant numbers
Several European NATO and Commonwealth navies agreed to introduce a pennant number system based on that of the Royal Navy. The system guarantees that, amongst those navies and other navies that later joined, all pennant numbers are unique. The United States and Canada do not participate in this system; their ships are identified by unique hull classification symbols.
Participating countries, with their assigned number ranges, include:
- Argentina — (D: 1x, 2x; P: 3x, 4x; S: 2x, 3x; C: x; V: x)
- Australia (formerly incorporated into the Royal Navy system until 1969; now uses a system based on the RN pennant number format and U.S. hull classification symbols)
- Belgium — (A:9xx; F: 9xx; M: 9xx; P:9xx)
- Denmark — (N: 0xx; A/M/P: 5xx; F/S/Y: 3xx; L: 0xx)
- France — (R: 9x; C/D/S: 6xx; F: 7xx; M/P/A: 6xx, 7xx; L: 9xxx)
- Germany — (A: 5x, 51x, 14xx; D: 1xx; F: 2xx; L: 76x; M: 10xx, 26xx; P: 61xx; S: 1xx)
- Greece — (D/P: 0x, 2xx; A/F: 4xx; L/S/M: 1xx)
- Italy — (5xx; D 5xx; F 5xx; P 4xx; 5xxx; A 5xxx; L 9xxx; Y 5xx; S 5xx)
- Kenya
- Malaysia
- New Zealand (F111-HMNZS Te Mana)
- Netherlands (8xx; Y: 8xxx)
- Norway (F/S/M: 3xx; P: 9xx; L: 45xx)
- Portugal (F/M: 4xx; S: 1xx; P: 11xx0)
- Spain (A: xx, F: 0x 1x 2x.., R: 01, 11, L: 0x, 1x.., P: 0x, 1x.., Y: xxx)
- Sri Lanka
- South Africa
- Turkey (D/S: 3xx; F: 2xx; N: 1xx; A/M: 5xx; P: 1xx, 3xx, L: 4xx; Y: 1xxx)
- United Kingdom (R: 0x; D: 0x & 1xx; F: 0x, 1xx, 2xx; S: 0x, 1xx; M: 0x, 1xx, 1xxx, 2xxx; P: 1xx, 2xx, 3xx; L: 0x, 1xx, 3xxx, 4xxx; A: any)
The NATO pennant number system added the Y (for yard) symbol for tugboats, floating cranes, docks and the like.
International Deck Codes
Royal Navy
The Royal Navy uses a single letter (typically the first letter of the ship's name) for aircraft carriers and large vessels operating aircraft, and pairs of letters (usually, letters from the ship's name) for smaller vessel.
Albion class
- HMS Albion — AN
- HMS Bulwark — BK
River–class
- HMS Forth — FH
- HMS Medway — MY
- HMS Trent — TT
- HMS Tamar — TM
- HMS Spey — SP
Daring–class
- HMS Daring — DA
- HMS Dauntless — DT
- HMS Diamond — DM
- HMS Dragon — DN
- HMS Defender — DF
- HMS Duncan — DU
Duke–class
- HMS Argyll — AY
- HMS Lancaster — LA
- HMS Iron Duke — IR
- HMS Montrose — MR
- HMS Westminster — WM
- HMS Northumberland — NL
- HMS Richmond — RM
- HMS Somerset — SM
- HMS Sutherland — SU
- HMS Kent — KT
- HMS Portland — PD
- HMS St Albans — SB
Invincible–class
- HMS Invincible — N
- HMS Illustrious — L
- HMS Ark Royal — R
Queen Elizabeth–class
- HMS Queen Elizabeth — Q
- HMS Prince of Wales — P
Bay–class
- RFA Cardigan Bay — CB
- RFA Lyme Bay — YB
- RFA Mounts Bay — MB
Tide class
- RFA Tidespring — TS
- RFA Tiderace — TR
- RFA Tidesurge — TU
- RFA Tideforce — TF
Wave–class
- RFA Wave Knight — WK
- RFA Wave Ruler — WR
Fort Rosalie–class
- RFA Fort Rosalie — FR
- RFA Fort Austin — FA
Individual ships
- RFA Argus — AS
- RFA Fort Victoria — FV
Royal Netherlands Navy
De Zeven Provinciën–class
- HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën — ZP
- HNLMS Tromp — TR
- HNLMS De Ruyter — DR
- HNLMS Evertsen — EV
Holland–class
- HNLMS Holland — HL
- HNLMS Zeeland — ZL
- HNLMS Friesland — FR
- HNLMS Groningen — GR
Amphibious support ships
- HNLMS Rotterdam — RD
- HNLMS Johan de Witt — JW
- HNLMS Karel Doorman — KD
Royal Canadian Navy
Halifax–class
- HMCS Halifax — HX
- HMCS Vancouver — VR
- HMCS Ville de Québec — VC
- HMCS Toronto — TO
- HMCS Regina — RA
- HMCS Calgary — CY
- HMCS Montréal — ML
- HMCS Fredericton — FN
- HMCS Winnipeg — WG
- HMCS Charlottetown — CN
- HMCS St. John's — SJ
- HMCS Ottawa (FFH 341) — OA
Harry DeWolf-class
- HMCS Harry DeWolf — HF
- HMCS Margaret Brooke — ME
- HMCS Max Bernays — MS
- HMCS William Hall — WL
- HMCS Frédérick Rolette — FE
- HMCS Robert Hampton Grey — RY
(Deck codes of decommissioned ships)
St. Laurent-class
- HMCS St. Laurent — ST
- HMCS Saguenay — SY
- HMCS Skeena — SA
- HMCS Ottawa (DDH-229) — OA
- HMCS Margaree — ME
- HMCS Fraser — FR
- HMCS Assiniboine — AE
Annapolis-class
- HMCS Annapolis — AS
- HMCS Nipigon — NN
Iroquois-class
- HMCS Iroquois — IS
- HMCS Huron — HN
- HMCS Athabaskan — AN
- HMCS Algonquin — AL
HMCS Provider — PR
Protecteur-class
- HMCS Protecteur — PT
- HMCS Preserver — PS
Egyptian Navy
- ENS Anwar El Sadat — AS
- ENS Gamal Abdel Nasser — GN
- ENS Tahya Misr — TM
- ENS El Fateg — FT
German Navy
Braunschweig–class
- Braunschweig — BS
- Magdeburg — MD
- Erfurt — EF
- Oldenburg — OL
- Ludwigshafen am Rhein — LR
Sachsen-class frigate
- Sachsen — SN
- Hamburg — HA
- Hessen — HE
Auxiliary ships
- Main — MA
- Mosel — MO
French Navy
Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier
- FS Charles de Gaulle - G
Mistral–class
- FS Tonnerre — TO
- FS Dixmude — DX
- FS Mistral — MI
Horizon-class frigate
- FS Forbin — FB
- FS Chevalier Paul — PL
Aquitaine–class
- FS Aquitaine — QN
- FS Provence — PC
- FS Languedoc — LD
- FS Auvergne — VG
- FS Bretagne — BT
La Fayette–class
- FS La Fayette — YE
- FS Surcouf — SF
- FS Courbet — CO
- FS Aconit — AT
- FS Guépratte — GT
Royal New Zealand Navy
- HMNZS Otago — OTA
- HMNZS Canterbury — CAN
Portuguese Navy
Vasco da Gama–class
- NRP Vasco da Gama — VG
- NRP Corte Real — CR
- NRP Álvares Cabral — AC Bartolomeu Dias–class
- NRP Bartolomeu Dias — BD
- NRP Dom Francisco de Almeida — FA
Indonesian Navy
The Indonesian Navy uses a three letter deck code only for frigates and LPDs. The letters usually consist of first letter, third letter, and fourth letter (or last letter) of the ship's name
Ahmad Yani–class
- KRI Ahmad Yani — AMY
- KRI Oswald Siahaan — OWA
- KRI Karel Satsuit Tubun — KST
- KRI Abdul Halim Perdanakusumah — AHP
- KRI Slamet Riyadi — SRI
- KRI Yos Sudarso — YSO Martadinata–class
- KRI Raden Eddy Martadinata — REM
- KRI I Gusti Ngurah Rai — GNR Bung Tomo–class
- KRI Bung Tomo —BTO
- KRI John Lie — JLI
- KRI Usman Harun — USH Fatahillah–class corvette
- KRI Fatahillah — FTI
- KRI Malayahati — MLH
- KRI Nala — NLA Makassar–class
- KRI Makassar — MKS
- KRI Banda Aceh — BAC
- KRI Surabaya — SBY
- KRI Banjarmasin — BJM
- KRI Semarang — SMR Cakra–class
- KRI Cakra — CKA
- KRI Nanggala — NGA Nagapasa–class
- KRI Nagapasa — NPS
- KRI Ardadedali — ARD
- KRI Alugoro — AGR Diponegoro–class
- KRI Diponegoro - DPN
- KRI Sultan Iskandar Muda - SIM
- KRI Frans Kaisiepo - FKO
- KRI Sultan Hasanuddin - HSN
References
References
- (2021). "Pendant Numbers of the Royal Navy". Seaforth.
- (2024). "The Development of the British Royal Navy's Pennant Numbers Between 1919 and 1940". Warship International.
- (1922). "British Flags, Their Early History, and Their Development at Sea: With an Account of the Origin of the Flag as a National Device". Cambridge University Press archive.
- (2024). "The Development of the British Royal Navy's Pennant Numbers Between 1919 and 1940". Warship International.
- (1998). "British and Empire Warships of the Second World War". Greenhill Books.
- (2002-04-28). "sci.military.naval FAQ, Part B – General Terminology & Definitions". Hazegray.org.
- (January 2012). "ACP 113 (AI) Call Sign Book for Ships". [[CCEB]].
- Jones, Peter. (2001). "The Royal Australian Navy". Oxford University Press.
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