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Encyclopedia > French battleship Richelieu

Battleship Richelieu
Career French Navy Ensign
Ordered:
Laid down: October 1935
Launched: January 1939
Commissioned: Spring 1940
Decommissioned: 1967
Fate: scrapped
Struck: 1968
General Characteristics
Displacement: 48 000 t
Length: 247,90 m
Beam:
Draught: 9,70 m
Propulsion: four Parsons geared turbines, 150 000 HP
Speed: 30 knots
Range: 8,500 nautical miles
Complement: 70 officers, 1550 men
Armament: 2 x 4 380mm main guns (bow)

3 x 3 152mm secondary (aft)
6 x 2 100 mm Anti-Air guns
14 x 4 40 mm Bofors Anti-Air guns
48 x 20 mm Cerlikon Anti-Air cannons

Shielding 343 mm hull, 50 to 170 mm decks and 445 mm turrets
Planes Three flying boats, two catapults.
Motto:

The Richelieu was a French battleship of World War II named for the seventeenth century statesman Cardinal Richelieu.


Derived from the Strasbourg class, Richelieu and Jean Bart (plus unfinished Clemenceau) were designed to counter the threat of the Italian Navy. Their speed, shielding, armament and overall technology were state of the art. The turret arrangement for the main battery of eight 380 mm guns was somewhat unusual, with two 4-gun turrets located forward, enabling all the main armiement to fire at the bow.


The keel was laid in October 1935 in Brest. Richelieu was launched in January 1939 and the first sea trials were done in the spring of 1940.


After the French defeat in June of 1940 she hastily left Brest to escape the advancing German forces and went to Dakar in the summer of 1940. There she was attacked by Swordfish torpedo planes from the British carrier Hermes on July 8, 1940 and as a result of a torpedo hit her starboard propulsion shaft was disabled. At the time, the British were anxious not to let the French navy, under orders from Vichy France, to turn to the Axis Powers. She fought against the British and Free France naval forces in Dakar, where she was immobilised for repairs from the air attack. Gunnery duel occurred between Richelieu and British battleships HMS Barham and HMS Resolution, who had to retire. Richelieu was further damaged in the battle when a defective 380mm shell put her n°2 main gun out of order.


When French Africa went to the Allies, Richelieu sailed to New York for refitting. Notable modifications were done to the anti-air armament. A special factory had to be assembled to provide ammunition of the appropriate calliber for Richelieu 's main artillery. Afterward, Richelieu fought in the Pacific War on the Allies side. She eventually was present in the Bay of Tokyo during the Japanese Instrument of Surrender.


After the War, Richelieu served in the Indochina War, and in the Suez Crisis. She was de-commissioned in 1967 and scrapped in 1968.


The Richelieu type, with their 380mm main artillery, was the most powerful battleship class ever built in France.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
French Navy - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography (1164 words)
Frigate division of the French Navy in Toulon harbour
The French navy is affectionately known as La Royale ("the Royal"), for its traditional attachment to the monarchy; it is to be noted that some of the greatest heroes of the First Republic were in the French Navy (Luc-Julien-Joseph Casabianca, Robert Surcouf, Latouche-Tréville).
French naval authorities were divided on their response: Amiral Jean de Laborde, the commander of the Forces de Haute Mer (the High Seas Fleet) advocated sailing to attack the Allied invasion fleet while others, such as the Vichy Secretary of the Navy, Contre-Amiral Auphan favoured joining the Allies.
French battleship Richelieu (1939) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (984 words)
Richelieu was the name-ship of a class of French battleships of World War II.
The quadruple 380 mm turrets of the Richelieu and the Jean Bart
The Richelieu was further damaged in the battle when a 380 mm shell blew back and disabled two guns in the number 2 main turret: this was traced to use of the wrong type of propellant.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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