French ship Intrépide (1747)
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A 74-gun French ship of the line similar to Intrépide | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| Name | Intrépide |
| Builder | Blaise Ollivier and Luc Coulomb, Brest Dockyard |
| Laid down | January 1745 |
| Launched | 24 March 1747 |
| Commissioned | August 1747 |
| Fate | Burnt by accident on 22 July 1781 |
| General characteristics | |
| Class & type | Monarque-class 74-gun ship of the line |
| Displacement | 2718 tonneaux |
| Tons burthen | 1500 port tonneaux |
| Length | 166 French feet[1] |
| Beam | 43½ French feet |
| Draught | 21 French feet |
| Depth of hold | 20½ French feet |
| Propulsion | Sails |
| Sail plan | Full-rigged ship |
| Complement | 734 in wartime, 650 peacetime;+ 6/10 officers |
| Armament | 74 guns of various weights of shot |
Intrépide was a 74-gun ship of the line of the French Navy.[2] She was of three ships of the Monarque class, all launched in 1747, the others being Monarque and Sceptre.[2]
Designed by Blaise Ollivier and built by him until his death in October 1746, then completed by Luc Coulomb, her keel was laid down at Brest on 14 November 1745 towards the end of the War of the Austrian Succession and she was launched on 24 March 1747. The fifth ship of this type to be built by the French Navy, she was designed to the norms set for ships of the line by French shipbuilders in the 1740s to try to match the cost, armament and maneuverability of their British counterparts, since the Royal Navy had had a greater number of ships than the French since the end of the wars of Louis XIV.[3] Without being standardized, dozens of French 74-gun ships were based on these norms right up until the start of the 19th century, slowly evolving to match new shipbuilding technologies and the wishes of naval tacticians and strategists.
Her 74 guns comprised 28 × 36-pounders on the lower deck, 30 × 18-pounders on the upper deck, 10 × 8-pounders on the quarterdeck and 6 × 8-pounders on the forecastle.