请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 French order of battle in the Expédition d'Irlande
释义

  1. Order of battle

  2. Notes

  3. References

  4. Bibliography

{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2013}}

The Expédition d'Irlande was a French attempt to invade Ireland in December 1796 during the French Revolutionary Wars. Encouraged by representatives of the Society of United Irishmen, an Irish republican organisation, the French Directory decided that the best strategy for eliminating Britain from the war was to invade Ireland, then under British control.[1] It was hoped that a substantial invasion in the summer of 1796 would encourage a widespread uprising among the Irish population and force the British to abandon Ireland, providing a major strategic and propaganda coup for the French Republic and a staging point for a subsequent invasion of Britain.[2] Assigned to lead the operation was General Lazare Hoche, the Republic's most successful military commander, who was provided with a significant body of troops and the services of the entire French Atlantic fleet.[3][A]

Preparation for the invasion was slow throughout the autumn, and it was not until December that the force was ready to leave Brest. The delay was principally the result of poor organisation and discipline within the French Navy, and preparations were only completed once the commander at Brest, Vice-amiral Villaret de Joyeuse, had been replaced with Vice-amiral Morard de Galles and Hoche given direct command of discipline within the fleet.[4] Departing Brest on 15 December, the French invasion fleet was almost immediately scattered: a combination of bad weather, inexperience at sea and the depredations of British frigates dispersing the force and destroying one ship of the line.[5] As separate ships and small squadrons made their way independently to the rendezvous point off Mizen Head, the flagship frigate Fraternité was chased deep into the Atlantic by a British frigate and took more than a week to return to Ireland. In that time the rest of the fleet, buffeted by the worst winter storms since 1708, broke up off the landing beaches in Bantry Bay, the weather too fierce to allow any amphibious landings.[6]

By the last week of December 1796 the fleet was in full retreat, having failed to land a single soldier in Ireland.[7] Several ships were wrecked or foundered in heavy seas, and a British frigate squadron based at Cork managed to seize a number of lone frigates and transports during the first two weeks of January.[8] The main British fleet, although ordered to intercept the invasion force, made little progress and did not arrive in the Western Approaches until 13 January, by which time all except three French ships had been accounted for.[9] Two, including the flagship Fraternité, were chased by the British fleet, eventually reaching safety at Rochefort. The third, the ship of the line Droits de l'Homme, was intercepted by two British frigates led by Captain Sir Edward Pellew and destroyed in a running action that cost the lives of over 1,000 Frenchmen.[10]

In total, French losses were 12 ships captured or destroyed and over 2,000 men drowned.[8] The Brest fleet was so badly damaged by the operation that they launched no major operations during 1797 and were unable to respond when the British fleet was paralysed by the Spithead Mutiny a few months later.[11] A second French attempt to invade Ireland was launched in the summer of 1798, in response to the Irish Rebellion, but this too ended in disaster: all of the men landed were captured a few weeks later at the Battle of Ballinamuck. A third and final invasion effort was defeated and destroyed by a British squadron at the Battle of Tory Island in October 1798.[12]

Order of battle

Ships of the line
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Indomptable80Commodore Jacques BedoutReturned to Brest on 1 January.
Droits de l'Homme74Commodore Jean-Baptiste Raymond de LacrosseWrecked on 14 January 1797 in action with {{HMS|Indefatigable|1784|6}} and {{HMS|Amazon|1795|6}}. Over 1,000 men drowned.
Constitution74Commodore Louis L'HériterReturned to Brest on 11 January.
Pegase74Contre-amiral Joseph de Richery
Commodore Clement Laronier
Returned to Brest on 11 January.
Nestor74Commodore Charles LinoisReturned to Brest on 13 January.
Révolution74Commodore Pierre Dumanoir le PelleyReturned to Rochefort on 13 January.
Fougueux74Commodore Esprit-Tranquille MaistralReturned to Brest on 1 January.
Trajan74Commodore Julien Le RayReturned to Brest on 11 January.
Mucius74Commodore Pierre QuérangalReturned to Brest on 1 January.
Tourville74Captain Jean-Baptiste HenryReturned to Brest on 13 January.
Pluton74Captain Jean-Marie LebrunReturned to Brest on 11 January.
Éole74Captain Joseph-Pierre-André MalinReturned to Brest on 13 January.
Wattignies74Captain Henri-Alexandre ThévenardReturned to Brest on 11 January.
Cassard74Captain DufayReturned to Brest on 13 January.
Redoutable74Captain Pierre-Augustin MoncousuReturned to Brest on 1 January.
Patriote74Captain La FargueReturned to Brest on 1 January.
Séduisant74Commodore Jean-Baptiste HenryWrecked on 16 December 1796 on the Stevenant Rock near Brest. 680 men drowned.
Source: James, pp. 4–5, Clowes, p. 298
Frigates
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Scévola44captain Le BozecScuttled after storm damage on 30 December 1796.
Impatiente40Wrecked on 30 December 1796 near Crookhaven. Nearly 550 men drowned.
Romaine40Returned to Brest.
Immortalité40Flagship of Contre-amiral François Joseph BouvetReturned to Brest.
Tartu40Captured on 30 December 1796 by HMS Polyphemus.
Bellone32Returned to Brest.
Bravoure40Returned to Lorient.
Charente36Returned to Brest.
Cocarde40Returned to Brest.
Fraternité32Flagship of Vice-amiral Morard de GallesReturned to Rochefort on 13 January.
Résolue32Flagship of Contre-amiral Joseph Marie NiellyBadly damaged in collision with Indomptable. Returned to Brest on 13 January.
Sirène36Returned to Brest.
Surveillante32Wrecked in Bantry Bay on 30 December 1797.
Source: James, pp. 4–5, Clowes, p. 298
Corvettes
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
Affronteur16Returned to Brest.
Vautour16Returned to Brest.
Atalante20Captured on 10 January 1797 by HMS Phoebe.
Voltigeur16Returned to Brest.
Mutine14Captured on 29 May 1797 at Santa Cruz.
Renard16Returned to Brest.
Source: James, pp. 4–5, Clowes, p. 298
Transports
ShipGunsCommanderNotes
NicodèmeReturned to Brest.
JustineDisarmed frigate. Captured on 30 December 1796 by HMS Polyphemus.
Fille UniqueSank in the Bay of Biscay on 6 January 1797.
Ville de LorientDisarmed frigate. Captured on 7 January 1797 by HMS Unicorn, HMS Doris and HMS Druid.
SuffrenDisarmed frigate. Captured on 30 December 1796 by HMS Jason, recaptured by Tartu and captured again and destroyed on 8 January 1797 by HMS Daedalus.
AllègreCaptured on 12 January 1797 by HMS Spitfire.
ExpérimentReturned to Brest.
Source: James, pp. 4–5, Clowes, p. 298

Notes

{{refbegin}}
  1. ^ Sources vary on the exact number of French troops that eventually participated in the campaign. Pakenham gives 12,000,[13] Clowes, James, Woodman and Henderson suggest 18,000 (although James quotes estimates between 16,200 and 25,000),[3][14][15][16] while Regan and Come indicate approximately 20,000,[2] although Come comments that they were of low quality.[17]
{{refend}}

References

1. ^Come, p. 181
2. ^Regan, p. 88
3. ^James, p. 5
4. ^Come, p. 184
5. ^Woodman, p. 85
6. ^Henderson, p. 22
7. ^Pakenham, p. 18
8. ^Clowes, p. 304
9. ^James, p. 10
10. ^James, p. 19
11. ^Clowes, p. 305
12. ^Gardiner, p. 114
13. ^Pakenham, p. 23
14. ^Clowes, p. 297
15. ^Henderson, p. 20
16. ^Woodman, p. 83
17. ^Come, p. 185

Bibliography

  • {{Cite book

| last = Clowes
| first = William Laird
| authorlink = William Laird Clowes
| year = 1997 |origyear=1900
| chapter =
| title = The Royal Navy, A History from the Earliest Times to 1900, Volume IV
| publisher = Chatham Publishing
| location =
| isbn = 1-86176-013-2
}}
  • {{Cite journal|last=Come |first=Donald R. |authorlink= |coauthors= |date=Winter 1952 |title= French Threat to British Shores, 1793–1798 |journal= Military Affairs |volume= 16 |issue= 4 |pages= 174–188 |id= |quote= |doi=10.2307/1982368 |publisher=Society for Military History|jstor=1982368 }}
  • {{Cite book

| editor =Gardiner, Robert
| year = 2001 |origyear=1996
| title = Fleet Battle and Blockade
| publisher = Caxton Editions
| isbn = 1-84067-363-X
}}
  • {{Cite book

| last = Henderson CBE
| first = James
| year = 1994 |origyear=1970
| title = The Frigates
| publisher = Leo Cooper
| isbn = 0-85052-432-6
}}
  • {{Cite book

| last = James
| first = William
| authorlink = William James (naval historian)
| year = 2002 |origyear=1827
| title = The Naval History of Great Britain, Volume 2, 1797–1799
| publisher = Conway Maritime Press
| isbn = 0-85177-906-9
}}
  • {{Cite book

|last= Pakenham
|first= Thomas
|authorlink= Thomas Pakenham (historian)
|year= 2000
|origyear= 1997
|title= The Year of Liberty: The Story of the Great Irish Rebellion of 1798
|publisher= Abacus
|location= London
|isbn= 978-0-349-11252-7 }} Rev. ed.
  • {{Cite book

| last = Regan
| first = Geoffrey
| authorlink = Geoffrey Regan
| year = 2001
| title = Naval Blunders
| publisher = Andre Deutsch
| isbn = 0-233-99978-7
}}
  • {{Cite book

| last = Woodman
| first = Richard
| authorlink = Richard Woodman
| year = 2001
| title = The Sea Warriors
| publisher = Constable Publishers
| isbn = 1-84119-183-3
}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Expedition Dirlande}}

10 : 1796 in Ireland|Wars involving Ireland|Naval battles of the French Revolutionary Wars|Naval battles involving Great Britain|Naval battles involving France|Conflicts in 1796|Conflicts in 1797|1796 in France|1797 in France|French Revolutionary Wars orders of battle

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/11/12 19:13:56