Téméraire-class ship of the line
The Téméraire-class ships of the line were a class of a hundred and twenty 74-gun ships of the line ordered between 1782 and 1813 for the French navy or its attached navies in dependent (French-occupied) territories. Although a few of these were cancelled, the type was and remains the most numerous class of capital ship ever built to a single design.[1]
Scale model of Achille, a typical French seventy-four of the Téméraire class at the beginning of the 19th century. | |
Class overview | |
---|---|
Name: | Téméraire |
Builders: | Toulon, Rochefort, Brest, Lorient, Antwerp, Genoa, Amsterdam, Cherbourg, Flushing, Venice |
Operators: | |
Preceded by: | Centaure class |
Succeeded by: | Tonnant class |
Subclasses: |
|
In commission: | 1782 (Téméraire)–1862 (Couronne) |
Planned: | 120 |
Completed: | 107 |
Cancelled: | 13 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Ship of the line |
Displacement: | 1,900 tonnes |
Length: | 55.87 metres (183.3 ft) (172 pied) |
Beam: | 14.90 metres (48 ft 11 in) (44.5 pied) |
Draught: | 7.26 metres (23.8 ft) (22 pied) |
Propulsion: | Up to 2,485 m2 (26,750 sq ft) of sails |
Complement: | 700 men |
Armament: |
|
The class was designed by Jacques-Noël Sané in 1782 as a development of the Annibal and her near-sister Northumberland, both of which had been designed by him and built at Brest during the 1777-1780 period. Some thirteen ships were ordered and built to this new design from 1782 to 1785, and then the same design was adopted as a standard for all subsequent 74-gun ships (the most common type of ship of the line throughout the period from ca.1750 to 1830) built for the French Navy during the next three decades as part of the fleet expansion programme instituted by Jean-Charles de Borda in 1786.[2][3]
The design was appreciated in Britain, which eagerly commissioned captured ships and even copied the design with the Pompée and America class.
Variants from basic design
While all the French 74-gun ships from the mid-1780s until the close of the Napoleonic Wars were to the Téméraire design, there were three variants of the basic design which Sané developed with the same hull form of Téméraire. In 1793 two ships were laid down at Brest to an enlarged design; in 1801 two ships were commenced at Lorient with a slightly shorter length than the standard design (with a third ship commenced at Brest but never completed); and in 1803 two ships were commenced at Toulon to a smaller version (many more ships to this 'small(er) model' were then built in the shipyards controlled by France in Italy and the Netherlands) - these are detailed separately below.
Ships in class
Téméraire group (18 ships)
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered: 15 February 1782
- Laid down: May 1782
- Launched: 17 December 1782
- Completed: July 1783
- Fate: Condemned, November 1801. Broken up, 1803.[4]
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered: 15 February 1782
- Laid down: July 1782
- Launched: 28 October 1784
- Completed: 1785
- Fate: Condemned, November 1802. Broken up, 1803.[5]
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered: 15 February 1782
- Laid down: July 1782
- Launched: 11 November 1784
- Completed: 1785
- Fate: Wrecked off Brest, 30 January 1795.[6]
- Builder: Rochefort shipyard
- Ordered: 15 February 1782
- Laid down: July 1782
- Launched: 21 June 1785
- Completed: October 1785
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy at Toulon in August 1793, but retaken by the French in December 1793; captured again by the Royal Navy in February 1800 and served as HMS Généreux. Broken up in 1816.[7]
- Commerce de Bordeaux, renamed Bonnet Rouge in January 1794 and then Timoléon in February 1794.
- Builder: Toulon shipyard
- Ordered: 1784
- Laid down: September 1784
- Launched: 15 September 1785
- Completed: 1786 or 1787
- Fate: Destroyed in action at the Battle of the Nile, August 1798.[8]
- Ferme, renamed Phocion in October 1792.
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered: 1784
- Laid down: December 1784
- Launched: 16 September 1785
- Completed: 1786
- Fate: Surrendered to Spain by her officers at Trinidad in January 1793.[9]
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered: 1782
- Laid down: August 1782, but work stopped in February 1783 and she was demolished.
- Re-laid down: November 1784
- Launched: 19 September 1785
- Completed: late 1785
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy at Trafalgar on 21 October 1805, and subsequently wrecked.[10]
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered: 1784
- Laid down: September 1784
- Launched: 3 October 1785
- Completed: April 1786
- Fate: Condemned in May 1820 and became Pontoon No.4 in April 1821.[note 1] Broken up at Rochefort in late 1832.[11]
- Commerce de Marseille, renamed Lys in July 1786 and then Tricolore in October 1792.
- Builder: Toulon shipyard
- Ordered: 1784
- Laid down: September 1784
- Launched: 7 October 1785
- Completed: September 1787
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy at Toulon in August 1793, then destroyed during the Siege of Toulon in December 1793.[12][13]
- Borée, renamed Ça Ira in April 1794 and then Agricola in June 1794.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered: 1784
- Laid down: January 1783, but work stopped in February 1783 and she was demolished.
- Re-laid down: November 1784
- Launched: 17 November 1785
- Completed: August 1787
- Fate: Broken up at Rochefort, 1803.[14]
- Orion, renamed Mucius Scaevola in November 1793, then Mucius in same month.
- Builder: Rochefort shipyard
- Ordered: 1782
- Laid down: October 1784
- Launched: 18 April 1787
- Completed: 1788
- Fate: Condemned 1802, and broken up 1803-04.[15]
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered: 1785
- Begun: October 1785
- Launched: 22 June 1787
- Completed: July 1787
- Fate: Wrecked and then burnt, February 1793.[16]
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: May 1786
- Launched: 11 October 1787
- Completed: 1788
- Fate: Broken up, 1803.[17]
- Builder: Rochefort shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: July 1786
- Launched: 25 October 1787
- Completed: 1788
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy, 1 June 1794. Accidentally destroyed by fire, 24 August 1794.[18]
- Apollon, renamed Gasparin in February 1794, reverted to Apollon in May 1794; renamed Marceau in December 1797.
- Builder: Rochefort shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: April 1787
- Launched: 21 May 1788
- Completed: 1788
- Fate: Broken up, 1798.[19]
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: end 1786
- Launched: 21 May 1788
- Completed: 1789
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy, 1 June 1794, and served as HMS Impétueux. Broken up, 1813.[20]
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: End 1786
- Launched: 30 October 1788
- Completed: July 1790
- Fate: Destroyed during the Siege of Toulon, December 1793.[21]
- Builder: Rochefort shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: September 1787
- Launched: 8 June 1789
- Completed: June 1790
- Fate: Captured by Britain during the Battle of the Nile on 2 August 1798. Served as HMS Aboukir until broken up in Plymouth in 1802.[22]
Duquesne group (46 ships)
- Builder: Toulon shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: August 1787
- Launched: 2 September 1788
- Completed: 1789
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy on 24 July 1803, and served as HMS Duquesne. Broken up in 1805.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: June 1787
- Launched: 16 December 1788
- Completed: July 1790
- Decommissioned: 26 October 1833
- Fate: Broken up at Brest, 1841.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: June 1787
- Launched: 15 November 1789
- Completed: August 1790
- Fate: Broken up in Baltimore, 1816.
- Jupiter, renamed Montagnard in March 1794, Démocrate on 18 May 1795, then back to Jupiter again on 30 May 1795, and to Batave in December 1797.
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered: 19 August 1787
- Begun: June 1788
- Launched: 4 November 1789
- Completed: October 1790
- Fate: Broken up in Brest, 1807.
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: 23 May 1788
- Launched: 16 December 1789
- Completed: August 1790
- Fate: Ran aground, 12 December 1792. Abandoned, and finally sank, 8 June 1793.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 7 November 1790
- Fate: Wrecked at the Battle of the Basque Roads on 26 February 1809, hull burnt by the British in April.
- Builder: Toulon shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 30 July 1790
- Fate: Captured by the British at Toulon in August 1793, commissioned with a crew of French Royalist rebels under British command, burnt by accident at Livorno on 28 November 1793.[23]
- Thésée, renamed Révolution on 7 January 1793, then Finisterre on 5 February 1803.
- Builder: Rochefort shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 14 April 1790
- Fate: Broken up, 1816.
- Pyrrhus, renamed Mont-Blanc in 1793, and Trente-et-un Mai in 1794. Renamed Républicain in 1795, then Mont-Blanc again in 1796.
- Builder: Rochefort shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched:
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy during the Battle of Cape Ortegal, 4 November 1805. Served as HMS Mont Blanc. Used as a gunpowder hulk from 1811, and sold in 1819.
- Suffren, renamed Redoutable, May 1794.
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 31 May 1791
- Fate: Participated in the Battle of Trafalgar, taken by the British, foundered two days later, 22 October 1805.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1791
- Fate: Burnt by the Royal Navy at the Siege of Toulon, 18 December 1793.[24]
- Trajan, renamed Gaulois.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 24 January 1792
- Fate: Decommissioned, June 1802. Broken up, 1805.
- Nestor, renamed Cisalpin in 1797, and Aquilon in 1803.
- Builder: Brest
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1794
- Fate: Grounded and burnt at the Battle of the Basque Roads, April 1809
- Builder: Toulon shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched:28 May 1791
- Fate: Captured at Toulon by the Royal Navy, 29 August 1793. Served as HMS Pompee. Converted to prison hulk at Portsmouth, 1816. Broken up, January 1817.
- Builder: Brest
- Ordered:
- Launched: 8 May 1793
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy during the Battle of Groix, 23 June 1795. Served as HMS Tigre. Broken up, June 1817.
- Tyrannicide, renamed Desaix in August 1800.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1793
- Fate: Wrecked at Saint-Domingue, January 1802.
- Barra, renamed Pégase in 1795, and Hoche in 1797.
- Builder:
- Ordered:
- Launched:
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy on 12 October 1798. Served as HMS Donegal. Broken up, 1845.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 29 May 1794
- Fate: Driven ashore by HMS Amazon and Indefatigable and wrecked on 14 January 1797.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 22 January 1794
- Fate: Decommissioned, May 1820.
- Lion, renamed Marat in 1794, Formidable in May 1795.
- Builder: Rochefort shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 29 April 1794
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy at the Battle of Groix, 23 June 1795, served as HMS Belleisle. Broken up in 1814.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered: 3 July 1793
- Launched: 1794
- Fate: Scrapped, 1808.
- Cassard, renamed Dix-août in 1798, Brave in February 1803.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered: 16 February 1793
- Launched: 2 May 1795
- Fate: Captured by HMS Donegal during the Battle of San Domingo, 6 February 1806. Foundered, 12 April 1806.
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau, renamed Marengo on 2 December 1802.
- Builder: Toulon
- Ordered:
- Launched: 21 July 1795
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy in the Action of 13 March 1806, and served as HMS Marengo until broken up 1816.
- Viala, renamed Voltaire in 1795, Constitution in 1795, and Jupiter in 1803.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1795
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy during the Battle of San Domingo, 6 February 1806, and served as HMS Maida. Sold for breaking up, 1814.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 5 December 1797
- Fate: Captured by HMS Mars during the Battle of the Raz de Sein on 21 April 1798, and served as HMS Hercules. Broken up in December 1810.
- Builder: Toulon
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1797
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy during the Battle of the Nile, 2 August 1798. Served as HMS Spartiate. Broken up, 1857.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 22 December 1798
- Fate: Exchanged with Spain, 1806.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1 February 1798
- Fate: Destroyed by accidental fire before being commissioned.
- Brutus, renamed Impétueux in February 1803.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered: 31 May 1798
- Begun: August 1798
- Launched: 24 January 1803
- Completed: March 1803
- Fate: Beached and set ablaze by the British in the Chesapeake, 14 September 1806.
- Union, renamed Diomède in 1803.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1799
- Fate: Ran aground and wrecked during the Battle of San Domingo, 6 February 1806. Burnt by the Royal Navy, 8 February 1806.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1800
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy at Trafalgar on 21 October 1805. Retaken by her crew on 22 October 1805, but sank in a heavy storm the next day.
- Duguay-Trouin (ii)
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 24 March 1800
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy in the Battle of Cape Ortegal, 4 November 1805, and served as HMS Implacable. Renamed HMS Foudroyant, 1943. Scuttled, 2 December 1949.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1801
- Fate: Captured by Spain at Cadiz, June 1808.
- Scipion (ii)
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1798
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy at the Battle of Cape Ortegal, 4 November 1805. Served as HMS Scipion until broken up in January 1819.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 18 August 1803
- Fate: Decommissioned, 1816.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: November 1804
- Fate: Sunk at the battle of Trafalgar, 22 October 1805.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 12 January 1804
- Fate: Ran aground and burnt, 26 October 1809.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 12 April 1805
- Fate: Burnt by crew to avoid capture, 7 April 1814.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 17 June 1806
- Fate: Decommissioned, 1816.[25]
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 3 February 1806
- Fate: Broken up, 1831.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 2 September 1807
- Fate: Captured by the Royal Navy on 17 April 1809 during Troude's expedition to the Caribbean. Served as HMS Abercrombie. Sold, 1817.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1809
- Fate: Hulked, 1828.
Danube Group (26 ships)
- Polonais, renamed Lys in April 1814, reverted to Polonais from March until July 1815, then Lys again.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Begun: August 1805
- Launched: 25 May 1808
- Completed: October 1808
- Fate: Broken up at Brest, 1825.
- Tonnerre, renamed, Quatorze Juillet in 1795, but launched under her original name.
- Builder: Brest
- Ordered:
- Begun: 16 April 1794
- Launched: 9 June 1808
- Completed: September 1808
- Fate: Wrecked during the Battle of the Basque Roads on 12 April 1809, and burned by her crew to avoid capture.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:1804
- Launched:1809
- Fate: Converted to a pontoon, 1828.[note 1]
- Builder: Toulon
- Ordered:
- Begun: June 1807
- Launched: 27 December 1808
- Completed: August 1809
- Fate: Converted to a pontoon, 1828.[note 1]
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Launched: 25 May 1809
- Fate: Converted to a pontoon, 1822.[note 1]
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 8 December 1809
- Fate: Wrecked off Brest, 23 March 1814.
- Nestor (ii)
- Builder: Brest
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1810
- Fate: Struck, 1849
- Marengo, renamed Pluton in 1866.
- Builder: Lorient
- Ordered:
- Launched: 12 October 1810
- Fate: Struck, 21 July 1858. Prison hulk from 1860 to 1865. Broken up in 1873.
- Builder: Toulon
- Ordered:
- Launched: 9 June 1811
- Fate: Struck, 24 November 1857. Used as a barracks hulk from 1857 to 1869. Broken up in 1879.
- Builder: Antwerp
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1811
- Fate: Struck, 1826.
- Builder: Genoa
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1812
- Fate: Converted to a pontoon, 1836.[note 1]
- Builder: Antwerp
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1812
- Fate: Converted to a pontoon, 1826.[note 1] Broken up, 1831.
- Builder: Toulon
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1812
- Fate: Broken up, 1840.
- Builder: Toulon
- Ordered:
- Launched: 15 August 1812
- Fate: Struck, 22 June 1858, and used as a barracks hulk. Broken up in Toulon, 1877.
- Scipion (ii)
- Builder: Genoa
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1813
- Fate: Struck, 1846.
- Orion (ii)
- Builder: Brest
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1813
- Fate: Scrapped, 1841.
- Duguay-Trouin (ii)
- Builder: Cherbourg
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1813
- Fate: Struck, and used as a floating magazine from 1824.
- Builder: Toulon
- Ordered:
- Launched: 5 December 1812
- Fate: Struck, 1831. Broken up, 1840.
- Superbe (ii)
- Builder: Antwerp
- Ordered:
- Begun: December 1808
- Launched: 5 July 1814
- Completed: September 1814
- Fate: Lost, 1833.
- Builder: Genoa
- Ordered:
- Begun: February 1812. Captured by the British, 18 April 1814.
- Launched: 18 April 1815 for the British Navy as HMS Genoa
- Completed: 1815
- Fate: Broken up at Plymouth, 1838.
- Hercule (ii), renamed Provence in July 1815, then Alger in July 1830.
- Builder: Toulon
- Ordered:
- Begun: September 1812
- Launched: 26 May 1815
- Completed: August 1815
- Fate: Struck, 31 December 1855, and used as a hospital ship. Broken up, 1881.
- Duc de Berry, renamed Glorieux before launch, Minerve in 1834, Aber Wrac'h in 1865.
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Begun: January 1812
- Launched: 18 June 1818
- Completed: July 1818
- Fate: Razeed to 58-gun frigate during 1831-34. Struck, and converted to a pontoon, 1853.[note 1] Broken up, 1874.
- Jean Bart (ii)
- Builder: Lorient-Caudan
- Ordered:
- Begun: July 1811
- Launched: 25 August 1820
- Completed: December 1820
- Fate: Broken up, 1833
- Builder: Rochefort
- Ordered:
- Begun: April 1813
- Launched: 22 September 1823
- Completed: December 1824
- Fate: Converted to a pontoon, 1852.[note 1] Broken up, 1870.
- Couronne (ii), renamed Duperré in December 1849.
- Builder: Brest
- Ordered:
- Begun: October 1813
- Launched: 26 August 1824
- Completed: 1825
- Fate: Broken up, 1870.
- Généreux (ii)
- Builder: Cherbourg
- Ordered:
- Begun: July 1813
- Launched: 23 September 1831
- Completed: 1832
- Fate: Broken up, 1865.
Three further ships to this design were begun at Castellammare di Stabia for the "puppet" Neapolitan Navy of Joachim Murat:
- Begun: end 1808
- Launched: 21 August 1810
- Completed: January 1812
- Fate: Out of service 1847, and broken up.
- Begun: September 1810
- Launched: 1 August 1812
- Completed: May 1813
- Fate: Damaged by fire, 10 May 1820. Sold for breaking up, 1821.
- The third ship, laid down in September 1812, was never named, let alone launched, as its construction was abandoned following the defection of the Kingdom of Naples from the Napoleonic cause in November 1813.
Large Variant (Cassard group – 2 ships launched)
Two ships were laid down in 1793-94 at Brest to a variant of Sané's design with the aim of carrying 24-pounder guns on the upper deck instead of the 18-pounders carried by the Téméraire. These ships were 2 feet longer than the standard 74s, and half a foot wider. The first was begun as the Lion, but was renamed Glorieux in 1795 and Cassard in 1798. The second was begun as the Magnanime, but was renamed Quatorze Juillet in 1798 and Vétéran in 1802. Unlike the main sequence, construction proceeded slowly. By 1816 the 24-pounders aboard these two ships had been replaced by 18-pounders, and no further ships to this variant design were produced, so indicating that it was not judged successful.
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Begun: November 1794
- Launched: 18 July 1803
- Completed: December 1803
- Fate: Condemned, 1833.
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Begun: August 1793
- Launched: 24 September 1803
- Completed: December 1803
- Fate: Condemned, 1818.
Short Variant (Suffren group – 2 ships launched)
Two ships were begun in 1801 to a variation of the standard Téméraire design by Sané to meet the demands of Pierre-Alexandre Forfait. The length of these ships were reduced by 65 cm from the standard design. A third ship to this variant design begun at Brest was cancelled in 1804. After Forfait left the Ministry of the Marine in October 1801, no further vessels were ordered to this variant design.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Begun: August 1801
- Launched: 17 September 1803
- Completed: October 1803
- Fate: Condemned, 1815.
- Builder: Lorient shipyard
- Begun: August 1801
- Launched: 8 July 1804
- Completed: September 1804
- Fate: Captured by the British at Trafalgar in 1805, but retaken. Captured by Spain at Cadiz, June 1808.
- Builder: Brest shipyard
- Begun: May 1801
- Launched: Never launched
- Completed: -
- Fate: Cancelled, February 1804.
Small Variant (Pluton group – 24 ships launched)
Starting with the prototypes Pluton and Borée in 1803, a smaller version of the Téméraire class, officially named petit modèle, was designed by Jacques-Noël Sané to be produced in shipyards having a lesser depth of water than the principal French shipyards, primarily those in neighbouring states under French control and in foreign ports which had been absorbed into the French Empire such as Antwerp. The revised design measured 177 feet 7 inches on the waterline, 180 feet 1 inch on the deck, and 46 feet 11 inches moulded breadth. The depth of hull was 9 inches less than that in the "regular" Téméraire design.
- Builder: Toulon shipyard
- Ordered: June 1803
- Laid down: August 1803
- Launched: 17 January 1805
- Completed: March 1805.
- Fate: Captured by the Spanish at Cadiz in June 1808.
- Builder: Toulon shipyard
- Ordered: June 1803
- Laid down: August 1803
- Launched: 27 June 1805
- Completed: August 1805
- Fate: Condemned at Toulon in 1827.
- Two more 74s to the "petit modèle" design were ordered in June 1803, one at Marseille and the other at Bordeaux, but these were not built.
- Génois
- Builder: Genoa shipyard
- Ordered:
- Laid down: July 1803
- Launched: 17 August 1805
- Completed: November 1805
- Fate: Condemned at Rochefort in August 1821, and broken up there by October 1821.
- Builder: Flushing shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched:
- Fate: Captured on the stocks after the fall of Flushing during the Walcheren Campaign in 1809. Frames taken to England, where she was assembled and launched as HMS Chatham in 1812.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Laid down: November 1803
- Launched: 9 April 1807
- Completed: March 1808
- Fate: Condemned at Brest in February 1819, and broken up there in December 1819.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Laid down: April 1804
- Launched: 8 April 1807
- Completed: March 1808
- Fate: Ceded to the new Dutch Navy, 1 August 1814, renamed Nassau.
- Anversois, renamed Éole in August 1814, then Anversois in March 1815 and back to Éole in July 1815.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Laid down: June 1804
- Launched: 7 June 1807
- Completed: March 1808
- Fate: Condemned at Brest in February 1819 and broken up there in December 1819.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Laid down: July 1804
- Launched: 20 June 1807
- Completed: March 1808
- Fate: Condemned at Lorient in June 1818, and broken up there in January 1820.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1807
- Fate:
- Ville de Berlin, renamed Thésée before launch, renamed Atlas after 1814.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1807
- Fate: Condemned 1819, hulked.
- Pultusk, originally Audacieux, renamed before launch.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1807
- Fate:
- Dantzig, named Illustre before launching, and renamed Achille in 1814 during the First Restoration. In 1815, during the Hundred Days, reverted to Dantzig, but returned to Achille on the Second Restoration.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1807
- Fate: Struck, 1815.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: April 1807
- Launched: 2 October 1808
- Completed: April 1809
- Fate: Struck, 1814.
- Breslaw (originally named Superbe, but renamed before launching)
- Builder: Genoa shipyard
- Ordered: January 1806
- Launched: 3 May 1808
- Completed: August 1808
- Fate: Struck, 1836.
- Dalmate, renamed Hector in 1814 during the First Restoration. In 1815, during the Hundred Days, reverted to Dalmate, but returned to Hector on the Second Restoration.
- Builder: Antwerp shipyard
- Ordered:
- Begun: August 1806
- Launched: 21 August 1808
- Completed: April 1809
- Fate: Struck, 1819.
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 6 September 1810
- Fate: Captured by HMS Victorious in the Action of 22 February 1812. Served as HMS Rivoli until broken up in 1819.
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: not launched
- Fate:
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1811
- Fate: Struck, 1814.
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1811
- Fate: Struck, 1814.
- Builder: Amsterdam shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1815
- Fate: Abandoned in 1813, completed by the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1812
- Fate: Struck, 1814.
- Builder: Amsterdam shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: July 1817
- Fate: Abandoned in 1813, completed by the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1812
- Fate: Struck, 1814.
- Builder: Amsterdam shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1817
- Fate: Abandoned in 1813, completed by the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.
- Builder: Rotterdam shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1817
- Fate: Abandoned in 1813, completed by the United Kingdom of the Netherlands.
- Montenotte
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: 1815
- Fate: Completed by Lombardy–Venetia.
- Arcole
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: not launched
- Fate: Cancelled.
- Lombardo
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: not launched
- Fate: Cancelled.
- Semmering
- Builder: Venice shipyard
- Ordered:
- Launched: not launched
- Fate: Cancelled.
- Citoyen
- Builder: Trieste shipyard
- Ordered: December 1811
- Launched: not launched
- Fate: Cancelled, 1812.
See also
- French ship Téméraire for a list of ships so named in the French Navy
Notes, citations, and references
Notes
- Note: The French Ponton can mean a floating walkway, dock, barge, or ship used for storage, accommodation, or even as a prison hulk.
Citations
- see Winfield & Roberts, op.cit.
- Winfield, Rif (2008). British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1793-1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth Publishing. p. 69. ISBN 978-1844157174.
- Winfield, Rif (2015). French Warships in the Age of Sail, 1786-1861: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth Publishing. p. 87. ISBN 978-184832-2042.
- Roche, vol.1, p.432
- Roche, vol.1, p.56
- Roche, vol.1, p.426
- Roche, vol.1, p.222-223
- Roche, vol.1, p.122
- Roche, vol.1, p.198
- Roche, vol.1, p.212
- Roche, vol.1, p.343
- Roche, vol.1, p.122
- Roche, vol.1, p.290
- Roche, vol.1, p.79
- Roche, vol.1, p.336
- Roche, vol.1, p.278
- Roche, vol.1, p.176
- Roche, vol.1, p.251-252
- Roche, vol.1, p.44
- Roche, vol.1, p.38
- Roche, vol.1, p.161
- Roche, vol.1, p.45
- Roche, vol.1, p.408
- Roche, vol.1, p.435
- Roche, vol.1, p.29
References
- Roche, Jean-Michel (2005). Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours (Vol 1: 1671 - 1870). ISBN 978-2-9525917-0-6. OCLC 165892922.
- Winfield, Rif & Roberts, Stephen S. French Warships in the Age of Sail 1626–1786: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Naval Institute Press, 2017. ISBN 978-1-4738-9351-1.
- Winfield, Rif & Roberts, Stephen S. French Warships in the Age of Sail 1786–1861: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates. Seaforth Publishing, 2015. ISBN 978-1-84832-204-2.