I’m talking about the TNG staff’s decision to name a shuttle after him, a mere 40 or so years after the end of the Reich, when many veterans and survivors were still living.
In the American cases you're listing exceptions that prove the rule.Naval tradition for the US and UK, at least, is that you can't always tell anything about a class just by the names. Minotaur class cruisers Shannon, Defence. Warrior class cruiser Natal. Arethusa class cruisers Inconstant, Royalist, Undaunted. Orion class battleships Monarch, Conqueror, Thunderer. Kearsarge class battleship Kentucky. King George V class battleships Centurion, Ajax, Audacious. Queen Elizabeth class battleships Warspite, Valiant, Malaya. Indefatigable class battlecruisers Australia, New Zealand. Lion class battlecruiser Princess Royal. Independence class carrier Langley. Saipan class carrier Wright. Midway class carrier Franklin D. Roosevelt. Sturgeon class submarines William H. Bates, L. Mendel Rivers, Richard B. Russell. Los Angeles class submarine Hyman G. Rickover. Seawolf class submarines Connecticut, Jimmy Carter. Wasp class LHDs Bataan, Iwo Jima. America class LHA Tripoli. San Antonio class LPDs John P. Murtha, Richard M. McCool Jr. And so on.
In the FASA Trek universe, they name ships for everyone:USS Jean-Luc Picard. It's only a matter of time. There is already ships named USS James T. Kirk and USS Chekov. I guess people have to be dead or missing....
In the American cases you're listing exceptions that prove the rule.
For instance, yes, one Midway-class carrier is named after a president, but so is one Kitty Hawk-class carrier, and as it's been the norm since the Nimitz-class started it to name carriers after presidents, chances are if you're naming a ship named after a president, it's a carrier.
And yes, Jimmy Carter is an exception to the above, but the problem with creating a naming tradition based on the name Seawolf is that there's no clear definition of what a "sea wolf" is (which was the least of the program's problems) so adhering to it wasn't a priority. That said, one Seawolf is named Connecticut, which proves you can name an attack sub after a state without lightning striking, which is probably why the latest class of attack subs is called the Virginia-class.
Bataan, Iwo Jima and Tripoli were all famous battles in US Marine Corps history, and as the job of LHDs and LHAs is to carry US Marines into battle, the names are perfect indicators of the ship types even if they don't immediately identify their individual classes.
Langley follows a general Navy tradition of naming new ships after old, in this case after the US Navy's first carrier. And there were only two Saipans. Not finding a naming scheme for a run of two escort carriers is not a huge deal.
The rest are actual exceptions to individual naming tradition, but they're just that, exceptions, and one tradition they do follow is a long-standing US Navy tradition of honoring those who offer support for or service to the Navy's mission by naming ships after them.
My point is, you've listed a relative handful of names in a Navy with hundreds of ships, and those ships generally follow their own naming traditions. Ticonderogas are named after battles, Arleigh Burkes are named after notable figures in Navy history, Los Angeleses are named after cities, Ohios and Virginias are named after states, carriers are named after presidents and famous figures in american history. For every ship you bring up that doesn't follow naming traditions I can give you twenty that do, so you can tell class and type from the name more often than not if you're paying attention.
That's the problem I have with starship names. There is a difference between breaking tradition and utterly ignoring it. Unlike ships in real life, starships aren't all that distinguishable. They all use the same propulsion, same power source and same weapons. The only real differences they have are in size and layout, and no, you can't figure a thing like that out just by the name...unless the name adheres strictly to the theme established by the first ship of the class. A Sovereign with a name like Regal or Monarch will immediately tell you it's a Sovereign. A Nebula with a name like Witch Head or Mutara will immediately tell you it's a Nebula. A Nova class with the name Sacagewea tells you jack shit. See what I'm saying?
How many of today's Navy's have naming traditions such as the ones you mention for the US?
And why would a fleet made up of members of dozens of worlds follow Earth Naming traditions?
And in the case of the Starfleet ship USS Enterprise, whenever that name has been used it always seems to on the class which would be considered the top of the line capital ship when the ship was commissioned.
You could also make an argument that having ship names that too easily identify the class isn't a good thing from a tactical point of view as it could allow enemies to too easily identify fleet make-up.
Several, around the world, because naming traditions have existed siince navies started naming ships. It's not like the US Navy made up the concept.
It wouldn't have to, but it might easily come up with its own traditions, and they would still be recognizable as such.
Which would make that a general naming tradition, wouldn't it? That makes two.
Dude, not having naming traditions won't stop an enemy from figuring out how your fleet is made up. Spies and spy satellites can do that without names.
Several, around the world, because naming traditions have existed since navies started naming ships. It's not like the US Navy made up the concept.
It wouldn't have to, but it might easily come up with its own traditions, and they would still be recognizable as such.
It seemed odd to have the USS Hathaway (TNG: Peak Performance), presumably named after Shakespeare's wife Anne Hathaway. But you could just say it was anyone called Hathaway in the next 350 years. Maybe our Anne Hathaway does something amazing at some point in the near future..![]()
Most "naming conventions" are just cheap cop-outs in the end. If you project on building five dozen escorts, you don't want to come up with the names for those. So you either just number them, or pull a "theme" out of your ass (be it flowers or intestinal bacteria) and then cross name after name from some preexisting list. Trek runabouts would be a perfect example.
Big ships draw attention, though. And folks and organizations compete for that attention. So you give names that make political sense at the end of the day. Tradition won't translate to themes there, unless you happen to be able to afford a bunch of ships at once.
How could they be recognizable?
But didn't you originally say that name Enterprise should not be used on a Galaxy Glass or Sovereign Class because it doesn't follow naming traditions.
But I did find this article if we want to talk naming traditions.
https://www.everything2.com/title/ship+naming+conventions
I fail to see the point of this question.But how are these ships related the USN Wasp Class
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wasp-class_amphibious_assault_ship
Zhuvov isn't that insane a name; it respects the Russians/Soviets who died fighting the Nazis, while sidelining Stalin.What names would you like to be seen be used?
What names have you liked?
Are there any names you hated?
One ship name that doesn't seem to fit the Starfleet ethos is the USS Zhukov. No doubt he was an influential Marshall, however, he was very ruthless, had no problem throwing away lives and served a totalitarian regime. Seems strange that a Federation starship would be named after him. (And, of course, Jason Isaacs was very funny playing him in The Death of Stalin).
I have no issue with other navies using that name, it just seems strange for Starfleet.
My Enemy My Ally has Ael asking which particular enterprise the ship was named for, and on hearing it's for the entire concept, laughs and says "So that's why it's always in trouble." (Paraphrasing)I blame lazy writing. USS Intrepid would not be a name the Vulcan race would choose, unless they took it over from the humans and just kept the name
I would assume the ship would be named by the fleet and not by the crew.I blame lazy writing. USS Intrepid would not be a name the Vulcan race would choose, unless they took it over from the humans and just kept the name
As Kira says in one episode of DS9, "Lucky Earth has so many rivers." And they never got to Thames, or anything else from Britain...It's not any specific names that I want so much as proper adherence to a naming convention. I don't care how famous the name is, a Galaxy-class should not be named Enterprise. Neither should a Sovereign. And naming Intrepid-classes Voyager and Bellerophon just says "I give no f***s about naval tradition." Names of subsequent ships should have some bearing on the name of the first ship of the class, so you know exactly what type of ship you're talking about without needing pictures or detailed descriptions.
The only type this is done for in canon is the runabout. All of these are named after rivers. Great. So...you just need to brush up on geography...every M-class planet's geography that is...
It's named for Jane Hathaway.^ I thought it was named after the kid who played Boxey on BSG.
And the fleet should reflect the galatic races that work, live and die in its name. Not just its human contingent, just as United Earth Starfleet should/would have ships to reflect Earth and not just English speaking nations.I would assume the ship would be named by the fleet and not by the crew.
After reading Malcom Reed's memoirs all British citizens of United Earth decided to boycott the organisation Starfleet for its biased Americancentricness and joined the Risian space fleetAs Kira says in one episode of DS9, "Lucky Earth has so many rivers." And they never got to Thames, or anything else from Britain...
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