Pennant number
In the Royal Navy and other navies of Europe and the Commonwealth of Nations, ships are identified by pennant number. 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.
Royal Navy systems
The Royal Navy first used pendants to distinguish its ships in 1661 with a proclamation that all of his majesty's ships must fly a union pendant. This distinction was further strengthened by a proclamation in 1674 which forbade merchant vessels from flying any pendants.The system of numbering pendants was adopted prior to the First World War to distinguish between ships with the same or similar names, to reduce the size and improve the security of communications, and to assist recognition when ships of the same class are together. Traditionally, a pendant number was reported with a full stop "." between the flag superior or inferior and the number, although this practice has gradually been dropped, and inter-war photos after about 1924 tend not to have the full stop painted on the hull. The system was used throughout the navies of the British Empire so that a ship could be transferred from one navy to another without changing its pendant number.
Pennant numbers were originally allocated by individual naval stations and when a ship changed station it would be allocated a new number. The Admiralty took the situation in hand and first compiled a "Naval Pendant List" in 1910, with ships grouped under the distinguishing flag of their type. In addition, ships of the 2nd and 3rd fleets had a second flag superior distinguishing from which naval depot they were manned; "C" for Chatham, "D" for Devonport, "N" for Nore and "P" for Portsmouth. Destroyers were initially allocated the flag superior "H", but as this covered only one hundred possible combinations from H00 to H99 the letters "G" and "D" were also allocated. When ships were sunk, their pendant numbers were reissued to new ships.
The flag superior for whole ship classes has often been changed while the numbers stayed the same. For example, in 1940, the Royal Navy swapped the letters "I" and "D" around and in 1948, "K", "L" and "U" all became "F"; where there was a conflict, a 2 was added to the front of the pendant number.
During the 1970s, the service stopped painting pennant numbers on submarines on the grounds that, with the arrival of nuclear boats, they spent too little time on the surface, although submarines do continue to be issued numbers.
was initially allocated the pennant number F232, until it was realised that in the Royal Navy, form number 232 is the official report for ships that have run aground; sailors being superstitious, it was quickly changed to F229.
Second World War
No flag superior
Pendant number 13 was not allocated.- Capital ships, aircraft carriers, cruisers
Flag superiors
- D — destroyers, capital ships, aircraft carriers, cruisers
- F — destroyers and large auxiliary combatants
- G — destroyers
- H — destroyers
- I — capital ships, aircraft carriers, cruisers, destroyers
- J — minesweepers
- K — corvettes, frigates
- L — escort destroyers, sloops
- M — minelayers
- N — minesweepers
- P — sloops, boom defence vessels
- R — destroyers, sloops
- T — river gunboats, netlayers
- U — sloops
- W — tugs and salvage vessels
- X — special service vessels
- Z — gate, mooring and boom defence vessels
- 4 — auxiliary anti-aircraft vessels
- FY — fisheries
Flag inferiors
- C —
- F —
- H — H class
- L — L class
- M —
- P — O class, P class
- * 31P— U class, V class
- * 211P to 299P — S class
- * 311P to 399P— T class
- * 411P to 499P— A class
- * 511P to 599P— United States Navy lend-lease submarines
- * 611P to 699P— commandeered foreign construction
- * 711P to 799P— captured enemy submarines
- R — R class
- S — S-class submarines
- T — T-class submarines
Post-1948
- A — auxiliaries
- C — cruisers
- D — destroyers
- F — frigate
- H — shore signal stations ; survey vessels
- K — miscellaneous vessels
- L — amphibious warfare ships
- M — minesweepers
- N — minelayers
- P — patrol boats
- R — aircraft carriers
- S — submarines
- Y — yard vessels
Flotilla bands
1925–1939
From 1925, flotilla leaders were issued with but did not paint on pendant numbers. Instead, a broad band deep was painted round their fore-funnel. Divisional leaders wore a pendant number and had a narrower deep band on the fore-funnel, painted from the top. The Mediterranean Fleet wore black leader bands and the Atlantic – later Home Fleet wore white bands. The flotillas wore combinations of bands on their after funnel to identify them. From 1925 the following bands were worn;- 1st Destroyer Flotilla — one black band
- 2nd Destroyer Flotilla — two black bands
- 3rd Destroyer Flotilla — three black bands
- 4th Destroyer Flotilla — no bands
- 5th Destroyer Flotilla — one white band
- 6th Destroyer Flotilla — two white bands
- 8th Destroyer Flotilla — one black and one white band
Second World War
- 1st Destroyer Flotilla — 1 red, G class
- 2nd Destroyer Flotilla — 2 red, H class
- 3rd Destroyer Flotilla — 3 red bands, then none, I class
- 4th Destroyer Flotilla — none, Tribal class
- 5th Destroyer Flotilla — none, K class
- 6th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 white, Tribal class
- 7th Destroyer Flotilla — 2 white, J class
- 8th Destroyer Flotilla — 3 white, F class
- 9th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 black & 2 white, V and W class
- 10th Destroyer Flotilla — none, V & W class
- 11th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 black over 2 red, V and W class
- 12th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 white over 1 red, E class
- 13th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 white over 2 red, V and W class
- 14th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 red over 1 black, V and W class
- 15th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 red over 2 black, V and W class
- 16th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 red over 1 white, V and W class
- 17th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 red over 2 white, Town class
- 18th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 white & 1 black, A class
- 19th Destroyer Flotilla — 1 white over 2 black, B class
- 20th Destroyer Flotilla — 2 white over 1 black, C class
- 21st Destroyer Flotilla — 2 white over 1 red, D class
Post-war
Post-war Flotillas were no longer identified by bands, but by large cast metal numbers bolted to the funnels. Flotilla leaders continued to display a large band at the top of the funnel and half leaders would carry a thin black band around the funnel.Deck codes
Aircraft carriers and vessels operating aircraft have a deck code painted on the flight deck to aid identification by aircraft attempting to land. This is in a position clearly visible on the approach path. The Royal Navy uses a single letter for aircraft carriers and large vessels operating aircraft, and pairs of letters for smaller vessels. The United States Navy, with its larger fleet, uses the numeric part of the hull classification number. Deck codes used by contemporary major British naval warships include:- HMS Albion — AN
- — BK
- — DT
- HMS Ocean — O
- HMS Ark Royal — R
- HMS Invincible — N
- HMS Illustrious — L
- — Q
- HMS Prince of Wales — P
- RFA Argus — AS
- RFA Lyme Bay — YB
- RFA Cardigan Bay — CB
- RFA Mounts Bay — MB
International pennant numbers
Participating countries, with their assigned number ranges, include:
- Argentina —
- Australia
- Belgium —
- Denmark —
- France —
- Germany —
- Greece —
- Italy —
- Kenya
- Malaysia
- New Zealand
- Netherlands
- Norway
- Poland
- Portugal
- Spain
- Sri Lanka
- South Africa
- Turkey
- United Kingdom
International Deck Codes
Royal Navy
The Royal Navy uses a single letter for aircraft carriers and large vessels operating aircraft, and pairs of letters for smaller vessel.Albion class
- HMS Albion — AN
- HMS Bulwark — BK
- HMS Forth — FH
- HMS Medway — MY
- HMS Daring — DA
- HMS Dauntless — DT
- HMS Defender — DF
- HMS Diamond — DM
- HMS Dragon — DN
- HMS Duncan — DU
- HMS Argyll — AY
- HMS Lancaster — LA
- HMS Iron Duke — IR
- HMS Monmouth — MN
- HMS Montrose — MR
- HMS Westminster — WM
- HMS Northumberland — NL
- HMS Richmond — RM
- HMS Somerset — SM
- HMS Sutherland —
- HMS Kent —
- HMS Portland —
- HMS Ark Royal — R
- HMS Illustrious — L
- HMS Invincible — N
- HMS Prince of Wales — P
- HMS Queen Elizabeth — Q
- RFA Cardigan Bay — CB
- RFA Lyme Bay — YM
- RFA Mounts Bay — MB
- RFA Tideforce — TF
- RFA Tiderace — TR
- RFA Tidespring — TS
- RFA Tidesurge — TU
- HMS Ocean — O
- RFA Argus — AS
- RFA Fort Victoria — FV
Royal Netherlands Navy
- HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën — ZP
- HNLMS Tromp — TR
- HNLMS De Ruyter — DR
- HNLMS Evertsen — EV
- HNLMS Holland — HL
- HNLMS Zeeland — ZL
- HNLMS Friesland — FR
- HNLMS Groningen — GR
- HNLMS Rotterdam — RD
- HNLMS Johan de Witt — JW
- HNLMS Karel Doorman — KD
Royal Canadian Navy
- 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 —
- HMCS Ottawa — OA
Egyptian Navy
- ENS Anwar El Sadat — AS
- ENS Gamal Abdel Nasser — GN
- ENS Tahya Misr — TM
- ENS El Fateg — FT
German Navy
- Braunschweig — BS
- Magdeburg — MD
- Erfurt —
- Oldenburg —
- Ludwigshafen am Rhein —
- Sachsen — SN
- Hamburg —
- Hessen —
- Main — MA
- Mosel — MO
French Navy
- FS Charles de Gaulle - G
- FS Tonnerre — TO
- FS Dixmude — DX
- FS Mistral — MI
- FS Forbin — FB
- FS Chevalier Paul — PL
- FS Aquitaine — QN
- FS Provence — PC
- FS Languedoc — LD
- FS Auvergne — VG
- FS Bretagne — BT
- 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
- NRP Vasco da Gama - VG
- NRP Corte Real - CR
- NRP Álvares Cabral - AC
- NRP Bartolomeu Dias - BD
- NRP Dom Francisco de Almeida - FA