HNLMS Evertsen () was a of the Royal Netherlands Navy.
Evertsen was long, her beam was , her draught was , and she displaced 3,464 tons. She had two shaft reciprocating engines, which were rated at and produced a top speed of . She had belt armour, and barbette armour. Her main armament was three guns, in a double and single turret. Secondary armament included two single guns and six single guns.
The ship was laid down in 1893 at the Koninklijke Maatschappij De Schelde in Flushing and launched on 29 September 1894. In March 1895, her propellers were mounted while she was in Middelburg Drydock. She was commissioned on 1 February 1896. 4 February 1896 she and her sister ship left for practice in the Mediterranean Sea. On 11 May 1896, during the harbor strikes in Rotterdam, a ban on assembly was decreed. Two days later, Kortenaer patrolled the Meuse. She was later relieved by her sister ships Evertsen, , and the police schooner Argus. 300 grenadiers were deployed during the strikes. The strikes were ended on 21 May.
On 5 May 1898, she left van Den Helder for Lisbon. She was there to celebrate the discovery of the seaway to India by Vasco da Gama four centuries earlier. The Portuguese king Carlos I and his wife visited the ship while she was there.
From 1911 to 1913, Captain lieutenant Jean Jacques Rambonnet commanded the ship. He made several voyages on the North Sea with her. The ship was decommissioned in 1913.