ÃÂtoile du Roy (English: "King's Star"), formerly Grand Turk, is a tall ship launched in 1997. Designed to represent a generic European warship during the Age of Sail, her design was modelled after HMS Blandford, a sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy. The ship was built in Marmaris, Turkey between 1996 and 1997 to provide a replica of a British frigate for the production of the ITV Network series Hornblower. In 2010, the French company ÃÂtoile Marine Croisières, based in Saint-Malo, purchased the ship and renamed her ÃÂtoile du Roy. Having been featured in several films or television series, she is currently used mainly in sailing events, for corporate or private charter, and for receptions in her spacious saloon or on her deck.
The model for the replica was the HMS Blandford, a sixth-rate frigate of the Royal Navy designed by Michael Turk of Turks Shipyard Ltd. of Chatham, Kent, which was established in 1710. The modern replica was constructed of iroko planking over laminated mahogany frames. She has an overall length of , and is at the waterline, with a beam of and a draught of . The frigate is square-rigged on three masts with a sail area of , and has two Kelvin TAS8 diesel engines, and a bow thruster, as well as four AC generators for electrical power.
The ship was originally fitted with six 9-pounder replica cannon constructed by the naval dockyard of Sevastopol, Ukraine. These guns consisted of a high tensile steel tube encased in moulded alloy to resemble the original weapons, and were designed only to fire black powder charges. On 24 August 2001 a crew member was injured after a premature explosion during the firing of a gun, while the ship was taking part in the International Festival of the Sea at Portsmouth. The Marine Accident Investigation Branch were obliged to consult the Keeper of Artillery from the Royal Armouries museum for technical assistance and advice.
Grand Turk is familiar as a stand in for in the TV series Hornblower, although the historical Indefatigable was a much larger ship. She also served in the same TV series as the French ship Papillon. In 2000, she undertook a voyage around Britain for the National Trust, calling at eight ports, where she was open to the public with the National Trust 'Coast Show' on board. On 28 June 2005 she stood in for , Nelson's flagship at Trafalgar, during the International Fleet Review off Portsmouth (GB), commemorating the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Trafalgar.
The frigate was purchased by Bob Escoffier of the ÃÂtoile Marine Croisières, which already operates a number of traditional sailing ships: ÃÂtoile de France, ÃÂtoile Molène, ÃÂtoile Polaire, Naire Maove and the schooner-aviso Recouvrance in Brest (in partnership with its owner, the SOPAB). The final sale price was not disclosed.
After being moored in Whitby for over a decade, Grand Turk sailed for her current location in France on 16 March 2010.