French battleship Bouvet

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Image:French battleship Bouvet.jpg
Warship Template:Border
Shipyard: Lorient, France
Laid down: January 16, 1893
Launched: April 27, 1896
Commissioned: June 1898
Fate: Sunk by mine, March 18, 1915
General Characteristics
Displacement: 12,007 tons
Length: 117.81 m
Beam: 21.39 m
Draft: 8.38 m
Propulsion:
Speed: 18 knots (33 km/h)
Complement: 666 to 710
Armament: • 2 × 12 in (305 mm) 45-calibre guns
• 2 × 10.8 in (274 mm)/45-cal guns
• 8 × 5.5 in (140 mm) 45-cal guns
• 8 × 3.9 in (99 mm) guns
• 12 × 3 pounder (1.4 kg) guns
• 2 × 18 in (457 mm) torpedo tubes

The French battleship Bouvet was a pre-Dreadnought battleship of the French Navy, (probably) named after French admiral François Joseph Bouvet, launched in 1896 and sunk during World War I. She was the fifth of the Charles Martel class of battleships. The Bouvet had face-hardened armour above the waterline, making her one of the most powerfully protected warships of her era.

The Bouvet was part of the squadron contributed by the French to the Dardanelles Campaign. On March 18, 1915, the British commander, Rear Admiral John de Robeck, launched a concerted effort to overwhelm the Turkish forts defending the Dardanelles straits and the Bouvet was one of the four French battleships making up the second line.

Image:Bouvet capsizing March 18 1915.jpg

Bouvet sustained eight hits from Turkish artillery fire and the forward turret was disabled. When de Robeck ordered the French line to retire, Bouvet turned to starboard into Erin Keui Bay where a line of mines lay undetected. The battleship struck a mine below the starboard 10.8-in turret and suffered a massive explosion, probably of a magazine. Lacking effective internal compartmentation, the Bouvet capsized and sank within two minutes, taking over 600 crew with her.

Despite the loss of the Bouvet, the first such loss of the day, the British remained unaware of the minefield, thinking the explosion had been caused by a shell or torpedo. Subsequently two British battleships, the Ocean and Irresistible, were sunk and the battlecruiser HMS Inflexible, as well as the battleships Suffren and Gaulois, were damaged by the same minefield.

See French ship Bouvet for other ships of this name.

See also

External links