Flying Dutchman

The Flying Dutchman is an old ship from maritime folklore. In the series, the ship and its surrounding legends were revealed to be real.

Appearance
The Flying Dutchman is the stereotypical representation of a ghost ship: old, broken down and worn from time. There are boards missing from the hull, the sails are torn and tattered, moss is growing out from various spots of the ship and the mast seems to be like a clock tower in design. On the bottom front sail is the name "FLYING DUTCHMAN", and the top one bears the crew's Jolly Roger, a fanged skull with cutlasses, their blades pointing down in place of crossbones. The ship's figurehead bears the same skull and swords. The Flying Dutchman is the one largest ship ever appeared in the series, being as large as Wadatsumi, a sea giant who dwarfs the Thousand Sunny.

Legend and Backstory
The Flying Dutchman is described as a ship that is unable to make port, and must wander the endless oceans forever. This was due to its deranged captain committing atrocious crimes, and God's wrath punished him and cursed the ship for it. It is a bad omen when the ship does appear. The captain of the "Flying Dutchman", in both sailing lore and in the series is named Vander Decken.

However, the legend tends to be exaggerated, so some of the facts are debatable. Decken eventually died on Fishman Island, and his descendants would go on to pilot the Flying Dutchman, with the current captain being the ninth generation grandson of the original Decken.

Fishman Island Arc
When the Straw Hat Pirates entered the Deep Sea with their coated ship, the Thousand Sunny, they eventually met the Flying Dutchman at 7000 feet below the surface. The haunted ship with its crew attacked the Sunny in an attempt to steal the treasure on board, but were impeded by underwater volcanic activity. Ankoro and Wadatsumi, serving as "advanced sea navigation", dragged the ship away, only to be blown away by the explosion.

Trivia

 * This so far appears to be the only ship able to travel under the sea and resist the intense pressure without any form of coating. How this is possible has yet to be revealed.