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Seven ships of the Royal Navy have been named Warspite.
The origins of the name are unclear, although it is probably a pun on
the word 'spite', in part embodying contempt for the Navy's enemies, but
also the common name for the green woodpecker, suggesting the
'Warspite' would poke holes in enemy ships' (wooden) hulls. Until 1919 a woodpecker was used as the ships' crest; the official
badge was a cannon, although the woodpecker continued to be used on the
ships' tompions or gun muzzle plugs.
- English ship Warspite (1596) was a 29-gun galleon, sometimes known as Warspight. She was launched in 1596 and sold in 1649.
- HMS Warspite (1666) was a 70-gun third-rate ship of the line launched in 1666. She was renamed HMS Edinburgh in 1721, rebuilt three times and broken up in 1771.
- HMS Warspite (1758) was a 74-gun third rate launched in 1758. She was on harbour service from 1778, was renamed HMS Arundel in 1800 and was broken up in 1801.
- HMS Warspite (1807) was a 76-gun third rate launched in 1807, razeed in 1840 and paid off in 1846. The ship was leant to The Marine Society and destroyed by fire in 1876.
- HMS Warspite originally a second rate named Conqueror and renamed Warspite after the previous one had been destroyed by fire.
- HMS Warspite (1884) was an Imperieuse-class first-class armoured cruiser launched in 1884 and scrapped in 1905.
- HMS Warspite (03) was a Queen Elizabeth-class battleship launched in 1913. She served in the First World War and in numerous operations in the Second World War, earning the most battle honours of any Royal Navy ship. She ran aground on her way to be broken up in 1947 and was scrapped in 1950.
- HMS Warspite (S103) was a Valiant-class nuclear-powered submarine launched in 1965 and decommissioned in 1991. She is currently awaiting disposal.
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