There are certainly enough references to the ship types, but I'm not sure if they should be discussed together. Things are now very blurry...
The distinctions, of course, were much more clear in WWII...
Where does one start? Should there be separate articles on older (as WWII) and modern definitions?
Yes, I agree that, without regard to what Navy Departments call contemporary vessels, there have been too many changes to shoehorn all the different kinds of vessels into one article.
Perhaps there should be an article entitled something like [[Warships called "Frigates"]], with sections like:
*"early sailing frigates";
*"sailing frigates of the Napoleonic era";
*"post Napoleonic sailing frigates";
*"world war 2 frigates";
*"missile armed frigates";
The earliest surviving sailing Frigate, USS Constitution, is over three times the size of the modern reconstruction HMS Surprise, and carried weapons close to ten times more powerful.
IIRC the earliest sailing frigates were the size of HMS Surprise, or smaller.
IIRC the appellation "frigate" was abandoned for a couple of generations -- correct? Same with "corvette", correct?
Depends on the navy, I suspect. I'm not sure about the RN; I can't remember the USN using it post-sail/steam until they had a period of temporary ship psychosis from 1950 to 1975. It clearly was a colonial term, with the RN speaking contemptuously about "fir built frigates".
Corvette was certainly a WWII RN term. I believe the Soviets used it for their larger missile boats (Nanushka, IIRC, rather than Osa). I've seen the Israeli Sa'ars called both corvettes and frigates.
The Royal Navy destroyers in use during World War 2 were (mainly(?)) in the range of 1500 to 2000 tons, IIRC. The Washington Naval Treaty limited Cruisers to under 10,000 tons. And almost all the Cruisers in 1939 were built to comply with that treaty. Some modern destroyers are almost as large as WW2 Cruisers. IIRC some WW2 cruisers were only 6,000 tons -- smaller than the largest USS guided missile destroyers.
I saw an article yesterday that the
Zumwalt class destroyers had been cancelled with two in construction. The last technical article I saw had them up to 14,000 tons;
Graf Spee was around 16,000. The news report said they couldn't fire Standard missiles, which filled me with considerable disbelief -- I suppose I could see them as super-
Spruances without full AEGIS, but still with VLS and I'd assume that they could fire Standards under the control of another vessel with Cooperative Engagement Control. If the news report got it right, I'm not sure if major Naval mental health examinations are in order.
I suggest being armed with missiles guided by digital computers rather than being armed with cannons controlled by crude analog computers and the "Mark One Eyeball" is a more significant change than being the vessels nominal role as escort, or air-defense.
Cheers!
Computer control is a quantum jump, especially with mature systems, but air defense gets to be an interesting issue in WWII -- while the CLAAs weren't that much of a success, battleships and cruisers did seem to have a major role of carrier close-in air defense, while the ASW screen had a very different role.
While I recognize there's been creep in terminology, some of it gets into science fiction I've enjoyed. Even something as amusing as E.E. Doc Smith, trying to figure out how to explain to the two planetary fleets, about to face off in 2 hours, could be taken on by the lightest vessel in the Galactic Patrol task force due to arrive in 2 hours and 10 minutes. Comparably, one
Burke vs. one
Yamato has the BB badly outnumbered, if one compares the energy, accuracy, and range of a SM-2 Block IV in surface-to-surface mode, vs. an 18.1 inch gun.
I suppose one can be cheered a bit to observe that current medicine has advanced about as much as has weaponry.
Returning to the specific issue, I'm rapidly concluding that there would be little point to having a "frigate" article. Convoy/utility escort, yes, and probably littoral combat (both oceangoing and not). Otherwise, it's easier to put a ship-of-the-line in the Battleship article than to figure out frigate.