fredagsfisk t1_itpn3dz wrote
Reply to comment by rbajter in Archaeologists have found the 17th-century warship Applet: Maritime experts believe wreck is sister-ship of Vasa, which sank off Stockholm in 1629 by MeatballDom
Hmm, sounds very low, so I don't think that's correct. I know that the cannons apparently had a much longer service life than the ships themselves tho, and that they'd be salvaged and reused when one sank.
For Swedish "regalskepp" (the largest ships of the navy during the 1600s):
Äpplet - 3 years, sold
Vasa - 0 years, sank instantly
Äpplet - 29 years, sunk on purpose (the one in the article)
Kronan - 43 years, sunk on purpose
Göta Ark - 16 years, scrapped
Scepter - 39 years, sunk on purpose
Draken - 21 years, stranded during battle
Viktoria - 28 years, sunk on purpose
Saturnus - 45 years, though was rebuilt and renamed Bohus after 25 years
Riksäpplet - 15 years, sank during storm
Svärdet - 13 years, sank in battle
Wrangel - 49 years, though was rebuilt after 25 years
Nyckeln - 14 years, sank by own crew during battle to avoid capture
Mars - 12 years, captured by Denmark
Jupiter - 45 years, sank (not sure why)
Venus - 39 years, though was rebuilt and renamed Finland after 18 years
Kronan (aka Stora Kronan) - 4 years, exploded and sank during battle
Solen - 25 years, sunk on purpose
Mercurius - 48 years, though was captured by the Dutch 5 years after it was launched
Please note that these dates are the time that passed from launch to sinking or decommissioning, and that not all of them had a service life that long.
rbajter t1_itpup4b wrote
Source is Krigshistoriepodden episode 123 so it might have been abused for effect.
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