French ship Bellone
Appearance
French Navy |
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History |
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Eleven ships of the French Navy have borne the name Bellone, in honour of Bellona:
- Bellone (1690–1696), a galley
- Bellone (1696–1719), a 32-gun frigate
- Bellone (1745–1749), a 30-gun frigate
- Bellone (1758–1777), a 32-gun frigate
- Bellone (1779–1806), a 32-gun Iphigénie-class frigate
- Bellone (1797–1797), a xebec
- Bellone (1807–1817), a 44-gun frigate
- Bellone (1808), a ship of unknown type
- Bellone (1814–1840), a 44-gun Hortense-class frigate
- Bellone (1853–1877), a 38-gun frigate
- Bellone (Q102, 1917–1935), the lead ship of the Bellone class of submarines
Privateers
Several French privateers also bore the name.
- Bellone, involved in a naval battle in Loch nan Uamh during the Jacobite rising. She was captured in 1747 and taken into Royal Navy service as HMS Bellona and was sold in 1749.
- Bellone, of 34-guns under Jacques François Perroud [1], which captured the East Indiaman Lord Nelson on 14 August 1803 [2]. A painting by Auguste Mayer commemorates the action.
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Capture of Lord Nelson by Bellone
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Painting by Auguste Mayer
Merchant Vessels
- Bellone (1714?-1725), a ship of the French East India Company. The ship sank off Dauphin Island near Mobile in 1725.[1]
References
- ^ Krivor, Michael C.; de Bry, John; Linville, Nicholas J.; Wells, Debra J. (2011). "Archival Investigations for Potential Colonial-Era Shipwrecks in Ultra-Deepwater within the Gulf of Mexico" (PDF). New Orleans: U.S. Department of the Interior.