Scale model of Achille, sister ship of French ship Pultusk (1807), on display at the Musée national de la Marine in Paris.
| |
History | |
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France | |
Name | Pultusk |
Namesake | Battle of Pułtusk |
Builder | Antwerp[1] |
Laid down | April 1804 [1] |
Launched | 20 September 1807 [1] |
Decommissioned | 1817 [1] |
Fate | Ceded to Holland 1814, broken up 1817 |
General characteristics [2] | |
Class and type | Téméraire-class ship of the line |
Displacement |
|
Length | 55.87 metres (183.3 ft) (172 pied) |
Beam | 14.90 metres (48 ft 11 in) |
Draught | 7.26 metres (23.8 ft) (22 pied) |
Propulsion | Up to 2,485 m2 (26,750 sq ft) of sails |
Armament |
|
Armour | Timber |
Pultusk was a Téméraire-class 74-gun ship of the line of the French Navy.
Ordered on 24 April 1804 as Audacieux, the ship was one of the ships built in the various shipyards captured by the First French Empire in Holland and Italy in a crash programme to replenish the ranks of the French Navy. She took her definitive name as Pulstuck on 21 February 1807, though the order might not have been implemented until 14 May.[1]
Only after the Danish crew of the ship remarked about the spelling of the name, this was corrected to Pultusk, with an icy comment from the Emperor that "the French people didn't know their victories."[3]
She was commissioned on 21 September 1807 and was part of the Escault squadron under Admiral Missiessy. She was ceded to Holland under the Treaty of Paris,[1] and entered Dutch service as Waterloo being broken up in 1817.[4]
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