The East Indiaman 'Hindostan' [Hindustan] and Other Vessels
Ship portrait. The East Indiaman 'Hindostan' (sic) had a varied career in both Company and naval service. The original 1,248 ton vessel was built to replace, or 'on the bottom of', the 'Nassau' for Robert Williams by Messrs Barnard and Company in 1789. The 'Hindostan' undertook its first voyage for the Company to China at the start of 1790 returning just over a year later in January 1791. The vessel's second voyage, to Canton, was less quickly completed but much more significant. On 1 October 1792 the ship departed Torbay as part of Lord Macartney's trading embassy to the Chinese Emperor, Chien-lung, it did not return to British waters until September 1794. The embassy was not particularly successful but the painting depicts the vessel during that voyage. With the commencement of hostilities in 1795 the 'Hindostan' was sold to the government, to become the 4th-rate Royal Naval warship 'Hindostan'. After various operations in the Atlantic and Mediteranean it was burnt by accident on 2 April 1804 in Rosas Bay, near Girona. (That vessel was apparently also replaced by a ship purchased from the East India Company in 1804). This painting is one of a series of five of the 'Hindostan' painted by Thomas Luny, the others are BHC 3404 to 3407. The National Maritime Museum also holds a ko'ssu (tapestry) which provides a Chinese interpretation of the embassy (TXT0107). The Museum also holds the log book of HMS 'Hindostan' for the period 1795-6 and 1803, [ADM/L/H/158], and naval papers related to the salvage of the wreck [MSS/81/108.1].
Object Details
ID: | BHC3403 |
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Collection: | Fine art |
Type: | Painting |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Luny, Thomas |
Vessels: | Hindostan (1795) |
Date made: | 1792 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London. Caird Fund. |
Measurements: | Painting: 559 mm x 864 mm |