Order of battle of the Royal Dano-Norwegian Navy in Norway (1808)
The following is a List of the Royal Dano-Norwegian naval order of battle in Norway in 1808[1][Note 1] after the capture of the British brig Seagull on 19 June 1808.
Following the loss of the Danish-Norwegian fleet at the Battle of Copenhagen in 1807 and of the last ship-of-the line, Prinds Christian Frederick, at Zealand Point in March 1808, Denmark-Norway were forced to adopt the method of defence later known as the Gunboat War. Lacking the time and resources to build a new battle fleet, they concentrated on smaller craft capable of carrying heavy, long range cannon viz. gunboats that were effective in the calmer, narrower inshore waters, but could not challenge enemy warships in rougher seas.[2] For the rougher waters of the Norwegian Sea from 1808 onward, a new class of gunship, the seaworthy 50-man pine-built Norske Kanonskonnert were to be built in Bergen and Trondheim. Ten such gunships were constructed before 1814, and more after Norway achieved independence from Denmark.[3]
Smaller Gun Boats (named in list, by station) - Kanonjolle each with one 24 pound cannon[1]
Arendal 2;
Frederiksværn 6 (two with two 4-pounder howitzers in addition);
Langesund 4;
Stavanger 2 (plus one very small gunboat armed with one 8-pounder cannon);
Øster-Risøer 4;
Christianssand 7;
Hvaløerne 13;
Mandal 2;
Bergen 5 (plus three under construction);
Trondhjem (4 under construction)
Batteries
Fixed Coastal Batteries:
Slesvigs Batteri on the eastern side of the entrance to Christiana (Oslo) fjord. 14 × 18-pounder cannon. Lieutenant in the land forces v. Lemvig, in command.
Vallø Saltverks defence works near Tønsberg on the western side of Oslo fjord 10 × 24-pounder cannon, 3 × 18-pounder cannon, 4 × 6-pounder cannon, 2 × 4-pounder cannon Acting Lieutenant V. Lerche, in command.
Svelvigens Batterier (probably near Svelvik, closer to Oslo) 22 × 12-pounder cannon, 12 × 3- or 4-pounder cannon Kapteinløitnant van Deurs, in command.
Sandvigens Batteri near Arendal 12 × 12-pounder cannon Head of the Coastguard Division Lind, in command.
Flekkerø Batteri on the approaches to Kristiansand 4 × 24-pounder cannon. (Occupied and defended in the event of enemy action with manpower from the gunboat flotilla.[1])
(in Danish)T. A. Topsøe-Jensen og Emil Marquard (1935) “Officerer i den dansk-norske Søetat 1660-1814 og den danske Søetat 1814-1932“. Two volumes. (Danish Naval Officers) Download here.
Fra Krigens Tid (From the wartime 1807-1814) edited by N A Larsen, Christiana 1878 (Index PageArchived 2016-05-22 at the Wayback Machine)