At launch the corvette was armed with one No. 1 and 16 No. 2 model 1855 cannons (ru).[1] These 60-pounder smoothbore cannons were developed by the Russian artillery general N.A. Baumgart (ru) and adopted by the Imperial Russian Navy in 1855. By 1870, the original guns had been replaced with newer rifled guns, including five 1867-model 6-inch guns, four 1867-model 9-pounder cannons, and three rapid fire guns.[1]
Service
In 1863 and 1864, Vityaz participated in an expedition to North America as part of the squadron of Rear Admiral S.S. Lesovsky (ru).
Vityaz was overhauled at Kronstadt in 1874 and again in 1881.[1] In 1877, Lieutenant Commander P. A. Bolotnikov (ru) was appointed commander of the corvette.
On June 27, 1882, the corvette was renamed Skobelev in honor of Mikhail Skobelev, a Russian general who had died that year.
From 1883 to 1885, Skobelev, now under the command of Captain V.V. Blagodarev (ru), made a second circumnavigation. During this voyage, Skobelev transferred Miklouho-Maclay from Batavia to New Guinea.
Scholars have argued that both of these voyages, which were supported by the Imperial Russian Geographical Society and the Russian naval ministry, were aimed at establishing Russian colonies in the Pacific, although nothing came of any such plans.[4] The 1870s expedition contributed to fears from British settlers in New Zealand that Russia might attack the colony,[7] while the appearance of Russian ships in the area in 1883 contributed to the United Kingdom, Germany, and the Netherlands partitioning New Guinea.[4]
In February 1892, Skobelev was converted into a training ship.[1] In 1895, it was removed from the Russian navy and scrapped.
Legacy
A second steam corvette of the Russian navy named Vityaz (ru) launched in 1883, when the older vessel remained in operation as Skobelev. This corvette also served as a research ship. The name was later assigned to a Bogatyr-classcruiser that was destroyed by fire while under construction in 1901. The Soviet research ship RV Vityaz, active from 1946 to 1979 and since preserved as a museum ship, was named in honor of both the 1862 and 1884 vessels.[8] A second Soviet research ship named Vityaz operated from 1981 to 1992.
During construction of the Oceanographic Museum of Monaco, Prince Albert I personally selected 20 noteworthy oceanographic research vessels to be inscribed on the new building's frieze. Vityaz, transliterated as "Vitiaz", was included on the basis of its two circumnavigatory expeditions.[9]
In 1971, a new theater named Vityaz opened on Miklouho-Maclay Street of Moscow, named to commemorate the ethnographer's ship.[10] This theater closed in 2018 and was demolished so a shopping center could be built on the site.[10][11]
In 1987, Papua New Guinea issued a stamp depicting Vityaz, part of a series of stamps featuring sailing vessels of significance to the country's history.[12][13]
^Cotter, Charles H.; Dean, J. R. (December 1966). "Down to the Sea: A Century of Oceanography". The Geographical Journal. 132 (4): 560. doi:10.2307/1792593. ISSN0016-7398. JSTOR1792593.