French ship Oriflamme (1744)

French ship Oriflamme (1744)
Career (France) French Royal Navy Ensign
Name: Oriflamme
Builder: Toulon
Launched: 30 October 1744
Captured: 1 April 1761, by the Royal Navy
Career (Spain)
Name: Oriflama
Fate: Lost at sea between 25–28 July 1770
General characteristics
Class and type: 56-gun ship of the line
Propulsion: Sails
Sail plan: Full rigged ship
Armament: 56 guns of various weights of shot

Oriflamme was a 56-gun ship of the line of the French Navy. She was built at Toulon and launched on 1743 by engineer and builder Pierre Blaise Coulomb. The ship was named for the long, multi-tailed red banner that was historically the battle standard of the medieval French monarchy.[1] She narrowly survived one encounter with the Royal Navy during the Seven Years' War, but was captured during a later engagement, in 1761. She was not taken into British service but was used as a merchant ship, ending her days in Spanish service. She sailed on her last voyage in 1770, but her crew apparently succumbed to a plague and the ship was lost at sea.

Contents

French career

The oriflamme of the Capetian dynasty.

Oriflamme served during the Seven Years' War, and had an encounter with a superior British squadron in late February 1758, when she was chased off the Spanish coast by the 60-gun HMS Montagu, under Captain Joshua Rowley and the 74-gun HMS Monarch under Captain John Montagu.[2] They chased Oriflamme onshore, but owing to Spain's neutrality at the time, did not attempt to destroy her, and Oriflamme was later salvaged.[2]

Oriflamme again encountered the British, this time when she was chased by the 50-gun strike her colours.[3] Oriflamme, which had been armed en flûte and was carrying between 40 and 50 guns during the action, had 50 killed and wounded from her complement of around 370.[5] Isis had four killed, including Wheeler, and nine wounded.[6] The captured Oriflamme was brought into Gibraltar.[7]

Spanish career

Oriflamme was not brought into the Royal Navy, but was instead sold into mercantile service. She appears to have then entered Spanish service, and was sold at auction to the company of Juan Baptista de Uztaris, Bros & Co.

She set sail on her final voyager on 18 February 1770, departing Cadiz under the command of Captain Joseph Antonio de Alzaga, with Joseph de Zavalsa as Master and Manuel de Buenechea as pilot. On 25 July she was sighted by the Gallardo, whose captain, Juan Esteban de Ezpeleta, knew de Alzaga. The Gallardo signalled to her with a cannon shot, but it went unanswered. The first officer of the Gallardo, Joseph de Alvarez, was sent to investigate and found that the Oriflama had been swept by a mysterious plague. Half the crew had already died, and the rest were dying, with only thirty men barely able to haul a sail.

De Alvarez returned to his ship and a boatload of supplies was prepared, but bad weather drove the ships apart and it was impossible to catch up with the Oriflama. It was reported that as the crew of the Gallardo prayed for the safety of the men of the Oriflama, a ghostly light illuminated the latter's sails and she was seen to sail away into the night. On 28 July wreckage of the Oriflama and some bodies were washed up on the coast of Chile near the mouth of the Huenchullami River.

The following spring Manuel de Amat y Juniet, the Viceroy of Peru, sent Juan Antonio de Bonachea, apparently a relative of the pilot of the Oriflama (Buenechea and Bonachea were interchangeable spellings), with trained divers to search for the wreck, but the search was abandoned in January 1772.

Citations

  1. ^ "In Search of the Oriflamme". Société de l'Oriflamme. 2003. http://xenophongroup.com/montjoie/orifl-fa.htm. Retrieved 18 October 2010. 
  2. ^ a b Dobson, p.47.
  3. ^ a b c Cust. Annals of the Wars of the Eighteenth Century. p. 55. 
  4. ^ Charnock. Biographia Navalis. p. 96. 
  5. ^ Dull, p.213.
  6. ^ Winfield. British Warships of the Age of Sail 1714–1792. p. 145. 
  7. ^ London Chronicle. p. 432. 

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Battle of Toulon (1744) — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Battle of Toulon caption=The Battle of Toulon by José Manuel de Moraleda. Watercolour on paper, 1783. partof=the War of the Austrian Succession date=February 22 1744 place=Mediterranean Sea, near Toulon, France… …   Wikipedia

  • Curepto —   Town and Commune   Location of Curepto commune in the Maule Region …   Wikipedia

  • List of ships of the line of France — This is a list of French broadside battleships of the period 1640 1861: Sections stating the ruler in power are provided as chronological references. Not quite complete yet. =Louis XIV= *Monarque 94 *? (ex Algerine, captured 1665, ex Dutch… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”