The Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805: Beginning of the Action
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National Maritime Museum {{cite web | url=http://www.europeana.eu/resolve/record/91801/9BB7FDAF09194E70228C46C17AD24031CB259216|title=The Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805: Beginning of the Action|author=Nicholas Pocock & http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nicholas_Pocock|accessdate=2013-06-19 |publisher=Europeana}}
<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.europeana.eu/resolve/record/91801/9BB7FDAF09194E70228C46C17AD24031CB259216|title=The Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805: Beginning of the Action|author=Nicholas Pocock & http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nicholas_Pocock|accessdate=2013-06-19 |publisher=Europeana}}</ref>
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Title Who - Nicholas Pocock (38)
- Oil Paintings (2623)
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The Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805: Beginning of the Action
Description: An action during the Napoleonic War, 1803-15. On 15 September 1805 Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson re-hoisted his flag in the'Victory', 100 guns, at Portsmouth and sailed to join Vice-Admiral Cuthbert Collingwood and re-assume command of the Mediterranean fleet off Cadiz on 28 September. On the same day, Vice-Admiral Villeneuve was ordered to sail from Cadiz for the Mediterranean with just his French ships. However, the Spanish were determined to accompany him. On the morning of 21 October the British found the Franco-Spanish Allied fleet, which reversed its course northwards towards Cadiz, forming into a somewhat disordered single column on the port tack in a light wind. The British fleet was in two parallel lines, the left-hand or windward column being led by Nelson in the'Victory', the right-hand or leeward one by Collingwood in the 'Royal Sovereign', 100 guns. Both lines intercepted the enemy at an angle from slightly astern of their beam, Collingwood engaging about one-third from the rear of the enemy line and Nelson just ahead of the centre. The action quickly became general and continued for over three hours, by which time 17 Allied ships had struck and one blown up. Although no British ship was lost, the battle is important because ofits conclusive nature and the fact that Nelson was among the dead. While the war continued for nearly ten more years, it was its last fleet action of major strategic import. This painting is a bird's eye view from the north-east and shows the Franco-Spanish line being broken in two places. The division in the distance was led by Collingwood, and that in the foreground by Nelson in the 'Victory'. In the right foreground are the Allied fleet's van ships, the Spanish 'Neptuno', 80 guns, on the extreme right, half out of the picture then in starboard-bow view; the French 'Scipion', 74 guns, and 'Duguay-Trouin', 74 guns; the Spanish 'San Agustin', 74 guns, the French 'Formidable', 80 guns, and 'Mont Blanc', 74 guns, the Spanish 'El Rayo' 100 guns, and 'San Fransisco de Asis', 74 guns, the French 'Heros', 74 guns, and the Spanish 'Santissima Trinidad', 140 guns. Almost in the centre the 'Victory' rakes Admiral Villeneuve's flagship 'Bucentaure', 80 guns, from astern as she breaks from right to left through the Franco-Spanish line at the headof Nelson's division. Astern of the 'Victory', Nelson's line streams out to the right, in port-bow view. Accompanying it and nearer to the viewer are various British ships, including the frigate 'Euralyus', 36 guns, the schooner 'Pickle', 10 guns, the frigates 'Sirius', 36 guns, 'Naiad', 38 guns, and 'Phoebe', 36 guns, and the cutter 'Entreprenante', 8 guns. The British ship, 'Africa', 64 guns, is shown inport-quarter view, sailing to join the line. Beyond the'Victory' are the rest of the Allied fleet, some of them in action with the 'Royal Sovereign', together with the leading ships of the British line. In the left foreground are three French cruisers in starboard-bow view
Time period: circa 1808
Format: oil on canvas
Subject: Oil Paintings
Rights: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Provider: National Maritime Museum
Providing country: United Kingdom
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When
- Period Term: http://semium.org/time/18xx_1_third
- Period Label: [early 19th century] (en); [начало 19-го века] (ru)
- Period Term: http://semium.org/time/1808
- Period Label: [1808] (def)
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Who
- Agent Term: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Nicholas_Pocock
- Agent Label: [nicholas pocock] (en)
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Search also for:
Title Who - Nicholas Pocock (38)
- Oil Paintings (2623)
- National Maritime Museum (3676)