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https://www.projectrho.com/public_html/rocket/spacewarship.php#id--Ship_Types--Winchell_Chung%27s_Ship_Types
It should also be stated that "class" in nautical terms does't refer to the type of a ship, it refers to the ship's design (e.g. the battleship USS New Jersey is an Iowa-Class ship) In real space terms, Virgin Galactic applies this same use of the word "class" to their space planes.
TL;DR: Dreadnought is not a ship class or type. It refers to a period in capital ship design, of which was replaced by battleships, and subsequently, aircraft carriers. A battleship will defeat a dreadnought in a duel, and an aircraft carrier will defeat a battleship in a duel.
(though in modern water navies, most of the classes short of aircraft carriers have their lines blurred, due to missiles. Because of this, I consider frigates to be anti-submarine ships, destroyers to be ship hunters, and cruisers to be both defensive and offensive craft with the purpose of protecting their fleet from the enemy. Unfortunately, there isn't really a comparison to submarines in space, at least not without cloaking devices.)
Dreadnoughts had a really weird design where the guns were not superfiring, and also they had guns to the side of the superstructure as well (and I don't mean the flak guns on battleships, I mean full size guns in turrets), this layout meant they were mostly broadside fighting. Don't get me wrong, battleships are better in broadside battle, but dreadnoughts were particularly susceptible to "Crossing the T" (a naval maneuver where you broadside off to the front-most enemy's bow to limit their ability to fight back).
orbital (?) cannon ig