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French Navy

The French Navy (French: Marine nationale, lit.'National Navy'), informally La Royale, is the maritime arm of the French Armed Forces and one of the five military service branches of France. It is among the largest and most powerful naval forces in the world,[4] ranking seventh in combined fleet tonnage and fifth in number of naval vessels.[5] The French Navy is one of eight naval forces currently operating fixed-wing aircraft carriers,[Note 1] with its flagship Charles de Gaulle being the only nuclear-powered aircraft carrier outside the United States Navy, and one of two non-American vessels to use catapults to launch aircraft.[6][7]

French Navy
Marine nationale
Logo of the French Navy since 1990
Founded1624; 399 years ago (1624)
Country France
TypeNavy
RoleNaval warfare
Size37,000 personnel (2021)[1] and 7,000 civilians (2021)
180 ships[2]
178 aircraft[3]
Garrison/HQMain: Brest, Île Longue, Toulon
Secondary: Cherbourg, Lorient
French overseas territories: Fort de France, Degrad des Cannes, Port des Galets, Dzaoudzi, Nouméa, Papeete
Overseas: Dakar, Djibouti, Abu Dhabi
Nickname(s)La Royale
Motto(s)Honneur, patrie, valeur, discipline
("Honour, homeland, valour, discipline")
ColoursBlue, white, red
ShipsCurrent fleet
Engagements
Websitewww.defense.gouv.fr/marine
Commanders
Chief of the Armed ForcesPresident Emmanuel Macron
Chef d'État-Major de la Marine, CEMMAmiral Pierre Vandier
Major Général de la MarineVice-amiral d'escadre Stanislas Gourlez de la Motte
Insignia
InsigniaRanks in the French Navy
Naval ensign
Aircraft flown
AttackRafale M
Electronic
warfare
Hawkeye
FighterRafale M
HelicopterNH90, Eurocopter Lynx, Panther, Dauphin
Utility helicopterAlouette III
PatrolAtlantique 2, Falcon 50, Falcon 200
TrainerMudry CAP 10, MS-88 Rallye, Falcon 10, Xingu

Founded in the 17th century, the French Navy is one of the oldest navies still in continual service, with precursors dating back to the Middle Ages. It has taken part in key events in French history, including the Napoleonic Wars and both world wars, and played a critical role in establishing and securing the French colonial empire for over 400 years. The French Navy pioneered several innovations in naval technology, including the first steam-powered ship of the line, first seagoing ironclad warship, first mechanically propelled submarine, first steel-hulled warship, and first armoured cruiser.

The French Navy consists of six main components: the Naval Action Force, the Submarine Forces (FOST and ESNA), French Naval Aviation, the Navy Riflemen (including Naval Commandos), the Marseille Naval Fire Battalion, and the Maritime Gendarmerie. As of 2021, the French Navy employed 44,000 personnel (37,000 military and 7,000 civilian), more than 180 ships, 200 aircraft, and six commandos units;[8] as of 2014, its reserve element numbered roughly 48,000.[9]

As a blue-water navy, the French Navy is capable of operating globally and conducting expeditionary missions, maintaining a significant overseas presence.[5] It operates a wide range of fighting vessels, including various aeronaval forces, attack and ballistic missile submarines, frigates, patrol boats and support ships, with aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle serving as the centerpiece of most expeditionary forces.

Origins

The history of French naval power dates back to the Middle Ages, and had three loci of evolution:

Names and symbols

The first true French Royal Navy (French: la Marine Royale) was established in 1624 by Cardinal Richelieu, chief minister to King Louis XIII. During the French Revolution, la Marine Royale was formally renamed la Marine Nationale. Under the First French Empire and the Second French Empire, the navy was designated as the Imperial French Navy (la Marine impériale française). Institutionally, however, the navy has never lost its short familiar nickname, la Royale.

The original symbol of the French Navy was a golden anchor, which, beginning in 1830, was interlaced by a sailing rope; this symbol was featured on all naval vessels, arms, and uniforms.[10] Although anchor symbols are still used on uniforms, a new naval logo was introduced in 1990 under Naval Chief of Staff Bernard Louzeau, featuring a modern design that incorporates the tricolour—by flanking the bow section of a white warship with two ascending red and blue spray foams—and the inscription "Marine nationale".

History

 
The historic "Golden Anchor" symbol

17th century

Cardinal Richelieu personally supervised the Navy until his death in 1643.[11] He was succeeded by his protégé, Jean Baptiste Colbert, who introduced the first code of regulations of the French Navy and established the original naval dockyards in Brest and Toulon.[11] Colbert and his son, the Marquis de Seignelay, between them administered the Navy for twenty-nine years.[11]

During this century, the Navy cut its teeth in the Anglo-French War (1627–1629), the Franco-Spanish War (1635–59), the Second Anglo-Dutch War, the Franco-Dutch War, and the Nine Years' War. Major battles in these years include the Battle of Augusta, Battle of Beachy Head, the Battles of Barfleur and La Hougue, the Battle of Lagos, and the Battle of Texel.

18th century

 
Armament of a frigate in Brest, 1773

The 1700s opened with the War of the Spanish Succession, over a decade long, followed by the War of the Austrian Succession in the 1740s. Principal engagements of these wars include the Battle of Vigo Bay and two separate Battles of Cape Finisterre in 1747. The most grueling conflict for the Navy, however, was the Seven Years' War, in which it was virtually destroyed.[11] Significant actions include the Battle of Cap-Français, the Battle of Quiberon Bay, and another Battle of Cape Finisterre.

The Navy regrouped and rebuilt, and within 15 years it was eager to join the fray when France intervened in the American Revolutionary War.[11] Though outnumbered everywhere, the French fleets held the British at bay for years until victory.[11] After this conflict and the concomitant Anglo-French War (1778–1783), the Navy emerged at a new height in its history.[11] Major battles in these years include the Battle of the Chesapeake, the Battle of Cape Henry, the Battle of Grenada, the invasion of Dominica, and three separate Battles of Ushant.

Within less than a decade, however, the Navy was decimated by the French Revolution when large numbers of veteran officers were dismissed or executed for their noble lineage.[11] Nonetheless, the Navy fought vigorously through the French Revolutionary Wars as well as the Quasi-War. Significant actions include a fourth Battle of Ushant (known in English as the Glorious First of June), the Battle of Groix, the Atlantic campaign of May 1794, the French expedition to Ireland, the Battle of Tory Island, and the Battle of the Nile.

19th century

 
Napoleon inspecting the fleet of Cherbourg in May 1811 (by Rougeron and Vignerot)

Other engagements of the Revolutionary Wars ensued in the early 1800s, including the Battle of the Malta Convoy and the Algeciras Campaign. The Quasi-War wound down with single-ship actions including USS Constellation vs La Vengeance and USS Enterprise vs Flambeau.

When Napoleon was crowned Emperor in 1804, he attempted to restore the Navy to a position that would enable his plan for an invasion of England.[11] His dreams were dashed by the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, where the British all but annihilated a combined Franco-Spanish fleet, a disaster that guaranteed British naval superiority throughout the Napoleonic Wars. Still, the Navy did not shrink from action: among the engagements of this time were the Battle of the Basque Roads, the Battle of Grand Port, the Mauritius campaign of 1809–11, and the Battle of Lissa.

After Napoleon's fall in 1815, the long era of Anglo-French rivalry on the seas began to close, and the Navy became more of an instrument for expanding the French colonial empire.[11] Under King Charles X, the two nations' fleets fought side by side in the Battle of Navarino, and throughout the rest of the century they generally behaved in a manner that paved the way for the Entente Cordiale.[11]

Charles X sent a large fleet to execute the invasion of Algiers in 1830. The next year, his successor, Louis Philippe I, made a show of force against Portugal at the Battle of the Tagus, and in 1838 conducted another display of gunboat diplomacy, this time in Mexico at the Battle of Veracruz. Beginning in 1845, a five-year Anglo-French blockade of the Río de la Plata was imposed on Argentina over trade rights.

The Emperor Napoleon III was determined to follow an even stronger foreign policy than his predecessors, and the Navy was involved in a multitude of actions around the world. He joined in the Crimean War in 1854; major actions for the Navy include the siege of Petropavlovsk and the Battle of Kinburn. The Navy was heavily involved in the Cochinchina Campaign in 1858, the Second Opium War in China, and the French intervention in Mexico. It took part in the French campaign against Korea, and fought Japan in the bombardment of Shimonoseki. In the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, the Navy imposed an effective blockade of Germany, but events on land proceeded at such a rapid pace that it was superfluous. Isolated engagements between French and German ships took place in other theaters, but the war was over in a matter of weeks.[12][13]

The Navy continued to protect colonial safety and expansion under the French Third Republic. The Sino-French War saw considerable naval action including the Battle of Fuzhou, the Battle of Shipu, and the Pescadores Campaign. In Vietnam, the Navy helped wage the Tonkin Campaign which included the Battle of Thuận An, and it later participated in the Franco-Siamese War of 1893.

The 19th century French Navy brought forth numerous new technologies. It led the development of naval artillery with its invention of the highly effective Paixhans gun. In 1850, Napoléon became the first steam-powered ship of the line in history, and Gloire became the first seagoing ironclad warship nine years later. In 1863, the Navy launched Plongeur, the first submarine in the world to be propelled by mechanical power. In 1876, Redoutable became the first steel-hulled warship ever. In 1887, Dupuy de Lôme became the world's first armoured cruiser.

During the latter part of the century, French officers developed the so-called Jeune École (Young School) theory that emphasized the use of small, cheap torpedo boats to destroy expensive battleships, coupled with long-range commerce raiders to attack an opponent's merchant fleet.

20th century

The first seaplane, the French Fabre Hydravion, was flown in 1910, and the first seaplane carrier, Foudre, was christened in the following year.[14] Despite that innovation, the general development of the French Navy slowed down in the beginning of the 20th century as the naval arms race between Germany and Great Britain grew in intensity. It entered World War I with relatively few modern vessels, and during the war few warships were built because the main French effort was on land. While the British held control of the North Sea, the French held the Mediterranean, where they mostly kept watch on the Austro-Hungarian Navy.[11] The largest operations of the Navy were conducted during the Dardanelles Campaign.[11] In December 1916, during the Noemvriana events, French warships also bombarded Athens, trying to force the pro-German government of Greece to change its policies.[15] The French Navy also played an important role in countering Germany's U-boat campaign by regularly patrolling the seas and escorting convoys.[11]

 
A Cassard-class frigate

Between the World Wars, the Navy modernized and expanded significantly, even in the face of limitations set by the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty.[11] New additions included the heavy and fast Fantasque class "super-destroyers", the Richelieu-class battleships, and the submarine Surcouf which was the largest and most powerful of its day.

From the start of World War II, the Navy was involved in a number of operations, participating in the Battle of the Atlantic, the Norwegian Campaign, the Dunkirk evacuation and, briefly, the Battle of the Mediterranean. However, after the fall of France in June 1940, the Navy was obligated to remain neutral under the terms of the armistice that created the truncated state of Vichy France. Worldwide, some 100 naval vessels and their crews heeded General Charles de Gaulle's call to join forces with the British, but the bulk of the fleet, including all its capital ships, transferred loyalty to Vichy. Concerned that the German Navy might somehow gain control of the ships, the British mounted an attack on Mers-el-Kébir, the Algerian city where many of them were harbored. The incident poisoned Anglo-French relations, leading to Vichy reprisals and a full-scale naval battle at Casablanca in 1942 when the Allies invaded French North Africa. But the confrontations were set aside once the Germans occupied Vichy France. The capital ships were a primary goal of the occupation, but before they could be seized they were scuttled by their own crews. A few small ships and submarines managed to escape in time, and these joined de Gaulle's Free French Naval Forces, an arm of Free France that fought as an adjunct of the Royal Navy until the end of the war. In the Pacific theatre as well, Free French vessels operated until the Japanese capitulation; Richelieu was present at the Japanese Instrument of Surrender.

The Navy later provided fire support and troop transport in the Indochina War, the Algerian War, the Gulf War, and the Kosovo War.

21st century

Since 2000, the Navy has given logistical support to the War in Afghanistan (2001–2021) as well as the global War on Terror. In 2011, it assisted Opération Harmattan in Libya.

Organisation

 
French navy facilities in metropolitan France (status 2015)

The chief of the naval staff is Vice-admiral d’escadre Arnaud de Tarlé,[16] and as of 2014 the Navy has an active strength of 36,776 military personnel and 2,909 civilian staff.[17] The Navy is organised into four main operational branches:

In addition, the National Gendarmerie of France maintain a maritime force of patrol boats that falls under the operational command of the French Navy:

During most of the Cold War, the Navy was organised in two squadrons based in Brest and Toulon, commanded by ALESCLANT (Amiral commandant l'escadre de l'Atlantique) and ALESCMED (Amiral commandant l'escadre de la Méditerranée) respectively. Since the post-Cold War restructuring process named Optimar '95, the two components have been divided into the Naval Action Force (commanded by ALFAN) and the Antisubmarine Group (commanded by ALGASM).[18]

Main naval bases

As of 2014, the largest French naval base is the military port of Toulon. Other major bases in metropolitan France are the Brest Arsenal and Île Longue on the Atlantic, and Cherbourg Naval Base on the English Channel. Overseas French bases include Fort de France and Degrad des Cannes in the Americas; Port des Galets and Dzaoudzi in the Indian Ocean; and Nouméa and Papeete in the Pacific. In addition, the navy shares or leases bases in foreign locales such as Abu Dhabi, Dakar and Djibouti.

Equipment

 
La Capricieuse

Ships and submarines

Although French naval doctrine calls for two aircraft carriers, the French only have one, Charles de Gaulle. Originally a planned order for French aircraft carrier PA2 was based on the design of the British Queen Elizabeth-class aircraft carrier recently constructed and launched for the British Royal Navy. However, the French programme had been delayed several times for budgetary reasons and the result was priority being given to the more exportable FREMM project. In April 2013 it was confirmed that the second aircraft carrier project would be abandoned due to defence cuts announced in the 2013 French White Paper on Defence and National Security.

The French Navy operates three amphibious assault ships, ten air defence and/or anti-submarine frigates, five general purpose frigates and has a commitment to six fleet submarines (SSNs). This constitutes the French Navy's main ocean-going war-fighting force. In addition the French Navy operates six light surveillance frigates and, as of 2020, six avisos (originally light corvettes now reclassified as patrol vessels). They undertake the navy's offshore patrol duties, the protection of French naval bases and territorial waters, and can also provide low-end escort capabilities to any oceangoing task force. The four ballistic missile submarines (SSBN) of the navy's Strategic Oceanic Force provide the backbone of the French nuclear deterrent.

Aircraft

The French Naval Aviation is officially known as the Aéronautique navale and was created on the 19 June 1998 with the merging of Naval patrol aircraft and aircraft carrier squadrons. It has a strength of around 6,800 civilian and military personnel operating from four airbases in Metropolitan France. The Aéronavale has been modernized with 40 Rafale fighters which operate from the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle.

Personnel

Personnel strength of the French Navy 2015
Category Strength
Commissioned officers 4,500
Petty officers 23,600
Seamen 6,600
Volunteers 767
Civilian employees 2,800
Source:[19]

Application requirement

Seamen

Seamen must be at least 17 but no more than 30 years old, with no minimum level of schooling.

Petty Officers

Petty officers must be at least 17 but no more than 30 years old, with at least a high school diploma giving access to university studies.

Petty Officer Candidate begin training with five months at the Petty Officer School of Maistrance at Brest.

Contract officers

Contract officers serve on an initial eight-year contract, renewable up to 20 years.

  • Operational officers must be 21 to 26 years old, with at least a Bachelor of Science degree, or having passed a classe préparatoire aux grandes écoles in engineering or business.
  • Staff officers have to be 21 to 29 years old, with an honors degree or master's degree in a field corresponding to the military occupational specialty.

Career officers

  • Less than 22 years old, having passed a classe préparatoire in science. After four years at the École Navale (naval academy) a cadet will graduate as a commissioned Enseigne de Vaisseau with an engineering degree.
  • Less than 25 years old, having an honors degree in science. After three years at the naval academy a cadet will graduate as Enseigne de Vaisseau with an engineering degree.
  • Less than 27 years old, having a master's degree. After two years at the naval academy a cadet will graduate as an Enseigne de Vaisseau.

Customs and traditions

Ranks

The rank insignia of the French Navy are worn on shoulder straps of shirts and white jackets, and on sleeves for navy jackets and mantels. Until 2005, only commissioned officers had an anchor on their insignia, but enlisted personnel are now receiving them as well. Commanding officers have titles of capitaine, but are called commandant (in the army, both capitaine and commandant are ranks, which tends to stir some confusion among the public). The two highest ranks, vice-amiral d'escadre and amiral (admiral), are functions, rather than ranks. They are assumed by officers ranking vice-amiral (vice admiral). The only amiral de la flotte (Admiral of the Fleet) was François Darlan after he was refused the dignity of amiral de France (Admiral of France). Equivalent to the dignity of Marshal of France, the rank of amiral de France remains theoretical in the Fifth Republic; it was last granted in 1869, during the Second Empire, but retained during the Third Republic until the death of its bearer in 1873. The title of amiral de la flotte was created so that Darlan would not have an inferior rank than his counterpart in the British Royal Navy, who had the rank of Admiral of the Fleet.

Commissioned officer ranks

The rank insignia of commissioned officers.

Other ranks

The rank insignia of non-commissioned officers and enlisted personnel.

Addressing officers

Unlike in the French Army and air and space force, one does not prepend mon to the name of the rank when addressing an officer (that is, not mon capitaine, but simply capitaine).[21]

Uniforms

Military music

 
The Toulon band in Brest.

The main military musical unit of the French Navy is the Military Band of the Toulon Fleet (French: La musique des équipages de la flotte de Toulon), founded on 13 July 1827.[22] The Bagad Lann Bihoue, based on the bagad bands in Bretagne, is currently the sole pipe band in the service of the French Navy, which uses bagpipes and bombards, and thus is affiliated to the band.

In Canada, French naval music has affected the traditions of Canadian navy bands. French navy bands in the country date back to the era of New France.[23] Musical units were primarily attached to the Compagnies Franches de la Marine and the Troupes de la marine, the former of which maintained two drums (tambour) and a fife.

Future

 
EDA-R landing craft

France's financial problems have affected all branches of her military. The 2013 French White Paper on Defence and National Security cancelled the long-planned new aircraft carrier and a possible fourth Mistral-class amphibious assault ship.[24] The backbone of the fleet will be the Aquitaine-class FREMM anti-submarine frigates, replacing the Georges Leygues class, but plans to buy a possible seventeen FREMMs were cut back to eleven and then to eight. The cancellation of the third and fourth Horizon destroyers meant that the last two FREMM hulls, entering service in 2021/22, are fitted out as FREDA air-defence ships to replace the Cassard class.[25] DCNS has shown a FREMM-ER concept to meet this requirement, emphasising ballistic missile defence with the Thales Sea Fire 500 AESA radar.[26] Industrial considerations mean that the funds for FREMMs 9-11 will now be spent on five more exportable frégates de taille intermédiaire (FTI, "intermediate size frigates") from 2024 to supplement, and ultimately replace, the La Fayette class, three of which are being upgraded with new sonars to operate into the early 2030s.[27] With respect to support ships, the Durance class will be replaced under the FLOTLOG project by four derivatives of Italy's Vulcano-class logistic support ship, to be delivered in 2023–2029.[28]

Construction has started on the first of six Barracuda-class nuclear attack submarines; commissioning of Suffren took place in 2020. These nuclear attack submarines are to be followed in the 2030s by the incremental introduction of a new class of nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) whose construction is to begin in around 2023.

The first MM40 Exocet Block 3 missile was test-fired in 2010 to be produced. Naval versions of the SCALP EG land-attack cruise missile are under development, along with a planned Aster Block 1NT with greater capabilities against ballistic missiles.

In October 2018, the French Ministry of Defence launched an 18-month study for €40 million for the eventual future replacement of the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle beyond 2030. A decision to build the new carrier was taken by President Emmanuel Macron in 2020[29] and once it enters service it is anticipated to remain in service until beyond 2080.[30][31] Construction of the new carrier is to begin in around 2025 with service entry anticipated in the latter 2030s.

French naval officers

Privateers

Heroes of the First Republic

Explorers

Other important French naval officers

Notable people who served in the French Navy

See also

Marine Nationale

Notes

  1. ^ Along with the U.S., U.K., China, Russia, Italy, India and Spain

References

  1. ^ "Defence Key Figures: 2016 Edition". Ministère des Armėes. (download PDF file or see HTML version 6 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine)
  2. ^ "Forces de surface". Ministère des Armėes. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  3. ^ "World Air Forces 2019". Flightglobal: 16. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  4. ^ "Top 10 Navies in the World". military-today.com. Retrieved 2021-06-05.
  5. ^ a b "Rest-of-World Naval Forces Resources". globalsecurity.org. Retrieved 2021-06-05.
  6. ^ Suciu, Peter (2021-04-07). "France's Brand New Aircraft Carrier is On Its Way". The National Interest. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  7. ^ Yeo, Mike (2022-06-17). "China Launches Third Carrier". DefenseNews. Retrieved 2022-08-22.
  8. ^ "Forces". Ministère des Armėes. Retrieved 2021-06-05.
  9. ^ (PDF) (in French). Ministère des Armėes. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-12-13.
  10. ^ L'Ordonnance royale de 1772 prévoit le port de l'ancre d'or sur les tenues des régiments des ports constituant le corps royal de la Marine, implantés à Toulon, Brest, Rochefort, Saint-Malo, Bordeaux, Le Havre, Bayonne et Cherbourg.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Auphan, Gabriel Paul; Mordai, Jacques (2016) [1959]. "Chapter 1: The Naval Tradition of France". The French Navy in World War II. Translated by Sabalot, A.C.J. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-68247-060-2.
  12. ^ Wawro, Geoffrey: The Franco-Prussian War: The German conquest of France in 1870–1871
  13. ^ Wilhelm Rustow and John Layland Needham: The Way for the Rhine Frontier, 1870: Its Political and Military History
  14. ^ Description and photograph of Foudre
  15. ^ "French Navy, World War 1". Naval-history.net. Retrieved 2011-12-28.
  16. ^ "État-major" (in French). Defense.gouv.fr. 2011-09-15. Retrieved 2011-12-28.
  17. ^ "Forces (Navy)". Ministry of Defence (France). 18 July 2011. Retrieved 14 November 2011.
  18. ^ T.D. Young, Command in NATO after the Cold War, Carlisle Barracks, 1997
  19. ^ Chiffres clés de la Défense – 2016 Retrieved 2017-03-06.
  20. ^ a b "Instruction n°1 DEF/EMM/RH/CPM relative aux uniformes et tenues dans la Marine du 15 juin 2004" (in French). 15 June 2004. pp. 3793–3867. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  21. ^ Rapport sur la féminisation des noms de métier, fonction, grade ou titre – La diversité des usages
  22. ^ "Musique des Équipages de la Flotte" (in French). Ministère des Armées. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  23. ^ Chartrand, René (1989). (PDF). Cap-aux-Diamants (in Canadian French). 5 (2): 17–19. ISSN 0829-7983. Archived from the original on 31 July 2020.
  24. ^ "French White Paper: Defence and National Security" (PDF). Government of France. 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  25. ^ (PDF) (in French). August 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-24.
  26. ^ "DCNS to unveil new FREMM Frigate variant, updated BRAVE supply ship design at Euronaval 2012". Navy Recognition. 4 October 2012.
  27. ^ "Update to French Military Planning Law Means New Capabilities for Lafayette Class Frigates". Navy Recognition. 21 May 2015.
  28. ^ Cabirol, Michel (15 June 2018). "Pétrolier ravitailleur : la France monte à bord du programme italien Vulcano". Le Tribune (in French).
  29. ^ Mackenzie, Christina (8 December 2020). "Macron kicks off French race to build a new nuclear-powered aircraft carrier". DefenseNews. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  30. ^ "France starts study phase for new aircraft carrier". Naval Today. 24 October 2018. from the original on 24 October 2018. Retrieved 30 October 2018.
  31. ^ Briganti, de, Giovanni (24 October 2018). "France Launches Studies for New Aircraft Carrier". Defense Aerospace. Paris. from the original on 30 October 2018. Retrieved 30 October 2018.

Further reading

  • Jenkins, E H (1973). A History of the French Navy from its Beginnings to the Present Day. London: Macdonald and Jane's. ISBN 0356-04196-4.
  • Randier, Jean (2006). La Royale: L'histoire illustrée de la Marine nationale française. ISBN 978-2-35261-022-9.
  • Winfield, Rif and Roberts, Stephen S., French Warships in the Age of Sail, 1626-1786: Design, Constructions, Careers and Fates (Seaforth Publishing, 2017) ISBN 978-1-4738-9351-1; French Warships in the Age of Sail, 1786-1861: Design, Constructions, Careers and Fates (Seaforth Publishing, 2015) ISBN 978-1-84832-204-2.

External links

  • (in French) Marine nationale—Official site
  • (in English) French Navy 2011—Guide Book
  • (in English) French Navy 2011—Information File
  • (in English) Net-Marine—A well documented database on French navy.
  • (in French) Mer & Marine—Main website on French maritime affairs (only in French)
  • (in English) French Fleet Air Arm, about French naval aviation.
  • (in English) French Navy in World War 1, including warship losses

french, navy, 2009, single, camera, obscura, maudlin, career, french, marine, nationale, national, navy, informally, royale, maritime, french, armed, forces, five, military, service, branches, france, among, largest, most, powerful, naval, forces, world, ranki. For the 2009 single by Camera Obscura see My Maudlin Career The French Navy French Marine nationale lit National Navy informally La Royale is the maritime arm of the French Armed Forces and one of the five military service branches of France It is among the largest and most powerful naval forces in the world 4 ranking seventh in combined fleet tonnage and fifth in number of naval vessels 5 The French Navy is one of eight naval forces currently operating fixed wing aircraft carriers Note 1 with its flagship Charles de Gaulle being the only nuclear powered aircraft carrier outside the United States Navy and one of two non American vessels to use catapults to launch aircraft 6 7 French NavyMarine nationaleLogo of the French Navy since 1990Founded1624 399 years ago 1624 Country FranceTypeNavyRoleNaval warfareSize37 000 personnel 2021 1 and 7 000 civilians 2021 180 ships 2 178 aircraft 3 FAN FSM AVIA FORFUSCO Marins Pompiers Gendarmerie Maritime Service de soutien de la FlotteGarrison HQMain Brest Ile Longue ToulonSecondary Cherbourg LorientFrench overseas territories Fort de France Degrad des Cannes Port des Galets Dzaoudzi Noumea PapeeteOverseas Dakar Djibouti Abu DhabiNickname s La RoyaleMotto s Honneur patrie valeur discipline Honour homeland valour discipline ColoursBlue white redShipsCurrent fleetEngagementsSee list Anglo French War 1627 1629 Franco Spanish War 1635 59 Second Anglo Dutch War Franco Dutch War Nine Years War War of the Spanish Succession War of the Austrian Succession Seven Years War American Revolutionary War Anglo French War 1778 1783 French Revolutionary Wars Napoleonic Wars French conquest of Algeria Battle of the Tagus Pastry WarCrimean War Second French intervention in Mexico Sino French War French conquest of Morocco World War I World War II Indochina War Korean War Algerian War Operation Musketeer Bizerte crisis Lebanese Civil War Gulf War Yugoslav Wars Kosovo War 1999 East Timorese crisis War on Terror War in Afghanistan Operation HarmattanWebsitewww wbr defense wbr gouv wbr fr wbr marineCommandersChief of the Armed ForcesPresident Emmanuel MacronChef d Etat Major de la Marine CEMMAmiral Pierre VandierMajor General de la MarineVice amiral d escadre Stanislas Gourlez de la MotteInsigniaInsigniaRanks in the French NavyNaval ensignAircraft flownAttackRafale MElectronicwarfareHawkeyeFighterRafale MHelicopterNH90 Eurocopter Lynx Panther DauphinUtility helicopterAlouette IIIPatrolAtlantique 2 Falcon 50 Falcon 200TrainerMudry CAP 10 MS 88 Rallye Falcon 10 Xingu Founded in the 17th century the French Navy is one of the oldest navies still in continual service with precursors dating back to the Middle Ages It has taken part in key events in French history including the Napoleonic Wars and both world wars and played a critical role in establishing and securing the French colonial empire for over 400 years The French Navy pioneered several innovations in naval technology including the first steam powered ship of the line first seagoing ironclad warship first mechanically propelled submarine first steel hulled warship and first armoured cruiser The French Navy consists of six main components the Naval Action Force the Submarine Forces FOST and ESNA French Naval Aviation the Navy Riflemen including Naval Commandos the Marseille Naval Fire Battalion and the Maritime Gendarmerie As of 2021 the French Navy employed 44 000 personnel 37 000 military and 7 000 civilian more than 180 ships 200 aircraft and six commandos units 8 as of 2014 its reserve element numbered roughly 48 000 9 As a blue water navy the French Navy is capable of operating globally and conducting expeditionary missions maintaining a significant overseas presence 5 It operates a wide range of fighting vessels including various aeronaval forces attack and ballistic missile submarines frigates patrol boats and support ships with aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle serving as the centerpiece of most expeditionary forces Contents 1 Origins 2 Names and symbols 3 History 3 1 17th century 3 2 18th century 3 3 19th century 3 4 20th century 3 5 21st century 4 Organisation 4 1 Main naval bases 5 Equipment 5 1 Ships and submarines 5 2 Aircraft 6 Personnel 6 1 Application requirement 6 1 1 Seamen 6 1 2 Petty Officers 6 1 3 Contract officers 6 1 4 Career officers 7 Customs and traditions 7 1 Ranks 7 2 Commissioned officer ranks 7 3 Other ranks 7 4 Addressing officers 7 5 Uniforms 7 6 Military music 8 Future 9 French naval officers 9 1 Privateers 9 2 Heroes of the First Republic 9 3 Explorers 9 4 Other important French naval officers 9 5 Notable people who served in the French Navy 10 See also 10 1 Marine Nationale 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksOrigins EditThe history of French naval power dates back to the Middle Ages and had three loci of evolution The Mediterranean Sea where the Ordre de Saint Jean de Jerusalem had its own navy the Levant Fleet whose principal ports were Frejus Marseille and Toulon The Ordre which was both a religious and military order recruited knights from the families of French nobility Members who had fulfilled their service at sea were granted the rank of Knights Hospitaller elites who served as the officer corps The Ordre was one of the ancestors of modern French naval schools including the French Naval Academy The Manche along Normandy which since William the Conqueror always tendered capable marines and sailors from its numerous active seaports The Atlantic Ocean where the navy of the Duchy of Brittany eventually constituted the nucleus of the royal Flotte du Ponant which projected French naval power across the Atlantic and the Americas Names and symbols EditThe first true French Royal Navy French la Marine Royale was established in 1624 by Cardinal Richelieu chief minister to King Louis XIII During the French Revolution la Marine Royale was formally renamed la Marine Nationale Under the First French Empire and the Second French Empire the navy was designated as the Imperial French Navy la Marine imperiale francaise Institutionally however the navy has never lost its short familiar nickname la Royale The original symbol of the French Navy was a golden anchor which beginning in 1830 was interlaced by a sailing rope this symbol was featured on all naval vessels arms and uniforms 10 Although anchor symbols are still used on uniforms a new naval logo was introduced in 1990 under Naval Chief of Staff Bernard Louzeau featuring a modern design that incorporates the tricolour by flanking the bow section of a white warship with two ascending red and blue spray foams and the inscription Marine nationale History EditMain article History of the French Navy The historic Golden Anchor symbol 17th century Edit Cardinal Richelieu personally supervised the Navy until his death in 1643 11 He was succeeded by his protege Jean Baptiste Colbert who introduced the first code of regulations of the French Navy and established the original naval dockyards in Brest and Toulon 11 Colbert and his son the Marquis de Seignelay between them administered the Navy for twenty nine years 11 During this century the Navy cut its teeth in the Anglo French War 1627 1629 the Franco Spanish War 1635 59 the Second Anglo Dutch War the Franco Dutch War and the Nine Years War Major battles in these years include the Battle of Augusta Battle of Beachy Head the Battles of Barfleur and La Hougue the Battle of Lagos and the Battle of Texel 18th century Edit Armament of a frigate in Brest 1773 The 1700s opened with the War of the Spanish Succession over a decade long followed by the War of the Austrian Succession in the 1740s Principal engagements of these wars include the Battle of Vigo Bay and two separate Battles of Cape Finisterre in 1747 The most grueling conflict for the Navy however was the Seven Years War in which it was virtually destroyed 11 Significant actions include the Battle of Cap Francais the Battle of Quiberon Bay and another Battle of Cape Finisterre The Navy regrouped and rebuilt and within 15 years it was eager to join the fray when France intervened in the American Revolutionary War 11 Though outnumbered everywhere the French fleets held the British at bay for years until victory 11 After this conflict and the concomitant Anglo French War 1778 1783 the Navy emerged at a new height in its history 11 Major battles in these years include the Battle of the Chesapeake the Battle of Cape Henry the Battle of Grenada the invasion of Dominica and three separate Battles of Ushant Within less than a decade however the Navy was decimated by the French Revolution when large numbers of veteran officers were dismissed or executed for their noble lineage 11 Nonetheless the Navy fought vigorously through the French Revolutionary Wars as well as the Quasi War Significant actions include a fourth Battle of Ushant known in English as the Glorious First of June the Battle of Groix the Atlantic campaign of May 1794 the French expedition to Ireland the Battle of Tory Island and the Battle of the Nile 19th century Edit Napoleon inspecting the fleet of Cherbourg in May 1811 by Rougeron and Vignerot Other engagements of the Revolutionary Wars ensued in the early 1800s including the Battle of the Malta Convoy and the Algeciras Campaign The Quasi War wound down with single ship actions including USS Constellation vs La Vengeance and USS Enterprise vs Flambeau When Napoleon was crowned Emperor in 1804 he attempted to restore the Navy to a position that would enable his plan for an invasion of England 11 His dreams were dashed by the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 where the British all but annihilated a combined Franco Spanish fleet a disaster that guaranteed British naval superiority throughout the Napoleonic Wars Still the Navy did not shrink from action among the engagements of this time were the Battle of the Basque Roads the Battle of Grand Port the Mauritius campaign of 1809 11 and the Battle of Lissa After Napoleon s fall in 1815 the long era of Anglo French rivalry on the seas began to close and the Navy became more of an instrument for expanding the French colonial empire 11 Under King Charles X the two nations fleets fought side by side in the Battle of Navarino and throughout the rest of the century they generally behaved in a manner that paved the way for the Entente Cordiale 11 Charles X sent a large fleet to execute the invasion of Algiers in 1830 The next year his successor Louis Philippe I made a show of force against Portugal at the Battle of the Tagus and in 1838 conducted another display of gunboat diplomacy this time in Mexico at the Battle of Veracruz Beginning in 1845 a five year Anglo French blockade of the Rio de la Plata was imposed on Argentina over trade rights The Emperor Napoleon III was determined to follow an even stronger foreign policy than his predecessors and the Navy was involved in a multitude of actions around the world He joined in the Crimean War in 1854 major actions for the Navy include the siege of Petropavlovsk and the Battle of Kinburn The Navy was heavily involved in the Cochinchina Campaign in 1858 the Second Opium War in China and the French intervention in Mexico It took part in the French campaign against Korea and fought Japan in the bombardment of Shimonoseki In the Franco Prussian War in 1870 the Navy imposed an effective blockade of Germany but events on land proceeded at such a rapid pace that it was superfluous Isolated engagements between French and German ships took place in other theaters but the war was over in a matter of weeks 12 13 The Navy continued to protect colonial safety and expansion under the French Third Republic The Sino French War saw considerable naval action including the Battle of Fuzhou the Battle of Shipu and the Pescadores Campaign In Vietnam the Navy helped wage the Tonkin Campaign which included the Battle of Thuận An and it later participated in the Franco Siamese War of 1893 The 19th century French Navy brought forth numerous new technologies It led the development of naval artillery with its invention of the highly effective Paixhans gun In 1850 Napoleon became the first steam powered ship of the line in history and Gloire became the first seagoing ironclad warship nine years later In 1863 the Navy launched Plongeur the first submarine in the world to be propelled by mechanical power In 1876 Redoutable became the first steel hulled warship ever In 1887 Dupuy de Lome became the world s first armoured cruiser During the latter part of the century French officers developed the so called Jeune Ecole Young School theory that emphasized the use of small cheap torpedo boats to destroy expensive battleships coupled with long range commerce raiders to attack an opponent s merchant fleet 20th century Edit Battleship Richelieu 1943 The first seaplane the French Fabre Hydravion was flown in 1910 and the first seaplane carrier Foudre was christened in the following year 14 Despite that innovation the general development of the French Navy slowed down in the beginning of the 20th century as the naval arms race between Germany and Great Britain grew in intensity It entered World War I with relatively few modern vessels and during the war few warships were built because the main French effort was on land While the British held control of the North Sea the French held the Mediterranean where they mostly kept watch on the Austro Hungarian Navy 11 The largest operations of the Navy were conducted during the Dardanelles Campaign 11 In December 1916 during the Noemvriana events French warships also bombarded Athens trying to force the pro German government of Greece to change its policies 15 The French Navy also played an important role in countering Germany s U boat campaign by regularly patrolling the seas and escorting convoys 11 A Cassard class frigate Between the World Wars the Navy modernized and expanded significantly even in the face of limitations set by the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty 11 New additions included the heavy and fast Fantasque class super destroyers the Richelieu class battleships and the submarine Surcouf which was the largest and most powerful of its day From the start of World War II the Navy was involved in a number of operations participating in the Battle of the Atlantic the Norwegian Campaign the Dunkirk evacuation and briefly the Battle of the Mediterranean However after the fall of France in June 1940 the Navy was obligated to remain neutral under the terms of the armistice that created the truncated state of Vichy France Worldwide some 100 naval vessels and their crews heeded General Charles de Gaulle s call to join forces with the British but the bulk of the fleet including all its capital ships transferred loyalty to Vichy Concerned that the German Navy might somehow gain control of the ships the British mounted an attack on Mers el Kebir the Algerian city where many of them were harbored The incident poisoned Anglo French relations leading to Vichy reprisals and a full scale naval battle at Casablanca in 1942 when the Allies invaded French North Africa But the confrontations were set aside once the Germans occupied Vichy France The capital ships were a primary goal of the occupation but before they could be seized they were scuttled by their own crews A few small ships and submarines managed to escape in time and these joined de Gaulle s Free French Naval Forces an arm of Free France that fought as an adjunct of the Royal Navy until the end of the war In the Pacific theatre as well Free French vessels operated until the Japanese capitulation Richelieu was present at the Japanese Instrument of Surrender The Navy later provided fire support and troop transport in the Indochina War the Algerian War the Gulf War and the Kosovo War 21st century Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2020 Since 2000 the Navy has given logistical support to the War in Afghanistan 2001 2021 as well as the global War on Terror In 2011 it assisted Operation Harmattan in Libya The French Navy as planned for the late 2030s a Batiment ravitailleur de forces fleet tanker conducts simultaneous underway replenishment with the Future French aircraft carrier and with a Fregate de defense et d intervention Defence and Intervention Frigate Organisation Edit French navy facilities in metropolitan France status 2015 The chief of the naval staff is Vice admiral d escadre Arnaud de Tarle 16 and as of 2014 the Navy has an active strength of 36 776 military personnel and 2 909 civilian staff 17 The Navy is organised into four main operational branches The Force d Action Navale Naval Action Force Surface fleet The Forces Sous marines Submarine forces Nuclear powered ballistic missile submarines and fleet submarines The Aviation Navale Naval air force Ground and sea based aircraft The Fusiliers Marins Naval riflemen Protection force and infantry including the Navy special forces Commandos Marine In addition the National Gendarmerie of France maintain a maritime force of patrol boats that falls under the operational command of the French Navy The Gendarmerie maritime The coast guard of France During most of the Cold War the Navy was organised in two squadrons based in Brest and Toulon commanded by ALESCLANT Amiral commandant l escadre de l Atlantique and ALESCMED Amiral commandant l escadre de la Mediterranee respectively Since the post Cold War restructuring process named Optimar 95 the two components have been divided into the Naval Action Force commanded by ALFAN and the Antisubmarine Group commanded by ALGASM 18 Main naval bases Edit As of 2014 the largest French naval base is the military port of Toulon Other major bases in metropolitan France are the Brest Arsenal and Ile Longue on the Atlantic and Cherbourg Naval Base on the English Channel Overseas French bases include Fort de France and Degrad des Cannes in the Americas Port des Galets and Dzaoudzi in the Indian Ocean and Noumea and Papeete in the Pacific In addition the navy shares or leases bases in foreign locales such as Abu Dhabi Dakar and Djibouti Equipment Edit The Horizon class frigate Chevalier Paul La Capricieuse The Rubis class submarine Casabianca in 2005 A French Navy AS365 F Dauphin helicopter Ships and submarines Edit Main article List of active French Navy ships Although French naval doctrine calls for two aircraft carriers the French only have one Charles de Gaulle Originally a planned order for French aircraft carrier PA2 was based on the design of the British Queen Elizabeth class aircraft carrier recently constructed and launched for the British Royal Navy However the French programme had been delayed several times for budgetary reasons and the result was priority being given to the more exportable FREMM project In April 2013 it was confirmed that the second aircraft carrier project would be abandoned due to defence cuts announced in the 2013 French White Paper on Defence and National Security The French Navy operates three amphibious assault ships ten air defence and or anti submarine frigates five general purpose frigates and has a commitment to six fleet submarines SSNs This constitutes the French Navy s main ocean going war fighting force In addition the French Navy operates six light surveillance frigates and as of 2020 six avisos originally light corvettes now reclassified as patrol vessels They undertake the navy s offshore patrol duties the protection of French naval bases and territorial waters and can also provide low end escort capabilities to any oceangoing task force The four ballistic missile submarines SSBN of the navy s Strategic Oceanic Force provide the backbone of the French nuclear deterrent Aircraft Edit Main article French Naval Aviation The French Naval Aviation is officially known as the Aeronautique navale and was created on the 19 June 1998 with the merging of Naval patrol aircraft and aircraft carrier squadrons It has a strength of around 6 800 civilian and military personnel operating from four airbases in Metropolitan France The Aeronavale has been modernized with 40 Rafale fighters which operate from the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle Personnel EditPersonnel strength of the French Navy 2015Category StrengthCommissioned officers 4 500Petty officers 23 600Seamen 6 600Volunteers 767Civilian employees 2 800Source 19 Application requirement Edit Seamen Edit Seamen must be at least 17 but no more than 30 years old with no minimum level of schooling Petty Officers Edit Petty officers must be at least 17 but no more than 30 years old with at least a high school diploma giving access to university studies Petty Officer Candidate begin training with five months at the Petty Officer School of Maistrance at Brest Contract officers Edit Contract officers serve on an initial eight year contract renewable up to 20 years Operational officers must be 21 to 26 years old with at least a Bachelor of Science degree or having passed a classe preparatoire aux grandes ecoles in engineering or business Staff officers have to be 21 to 29 years old with an honors degree or master s degree in a field corresponding to the military occupational specialty Career officers Edit Less than 22 years old having passed a classe preparatoire in science After four years at the Ecole Navale naval academy a cadet will graduate as a commissioned Enseigne de Vaisseau with an engineering degree Less than 25 years old having an honors degree in science After three years at the naval academy a cadet will graduate as Enseigne de Vaisseau with an engineering degree Less than 27 years old having a master s degree After two years at the naval academy a cadet will graduate as an Enseigne de Vaisseau Customs and traditions EditRanks Edit Main article Ranks in the French Navy The rank insignia of the French Navy are worn on shoulder straps of shirts and white jackets and on sleeves for navy jackets and mantels Until 2005 only commissioned officers had an anchor on their insignia but enlisted personnel are now receiving them as well Commanding officers have titles of capitaine but are called commandant in the army both capitaine and commandant are ranks which tends to stir some confusion among the public The two highest ranks vice amiral d escadre and amiral admiral are functions rather than ranks They are assumed by officers ranking vice amiral vice admiral The only amiral de la flotte Admiral of the Fleet was Francois Darlan after he was refused the dignity of amiral de France Admiral of France Equivalent to the dignity of Marshal of France the rank of amiral de France remains theoretical in the Fifth Republic it was last granted in 1869 during the Second Empire but retained during the Third Republic until the death of its bearer in 1873 The title of amiral de la flotte was created so that Darlan would not have an inferior rank than his counterpart in the British Royal Navy who had the rank of Admiral of the Fleet Commissioned officer ranks Edit The rank insignia of commissioned officers NATO code OF 10 OF 9 OF 8 OF 7 OF 6 OF 5 OF 4 OF 3 OF 2 OF 1 OF D Student officer French Navy 20 vte Amiral de France Amiral Vice amiral d escadre Vice amiral Contre amiral Capitaine de vaisseau Capitaine de fregate Capitaine de corvette Lieutenant de vaisseau Enseigne de vaisseau de 1re classe Enseigne de vaisseau de 2e classe Aspirant Eleve officierOther ranks Edit The rank insignia of non commissioned officers and enlisted personnel NATO code OR 9 OR 8 OR 7 OR 6 OR 5 OR 4 OR 3 OR 2 OR 1 French Navy 20 vte Major Maitre principal Premier maitre Maitre Second maitre Quartier maitre de 1ere classe Quartier maitre de 2eme classe Matelot brevete MatelotAddressing officers Edit Unlike in the French Army and air and space force one does not prepend mon to the name of the rank when addressing an officer that is not mon capitaine but simply capitaine 21 Uniforms Edit See also Military uniform France Winter Uniform 22 Summer Uniform 26 Overseas 25 Light Duty Firefighter Suit Gendarmerie Maritime personnelMilitary music Edit The Toulon band in Brest The main military musical unit of the French Navy is the Military Band of the Toulon Fleet French La musique des equipages de la flotte de Toulon founded on 13 July 1827 22 The Bagad Lann Bihoue based on the bagad bands in Bretagne is currently the sole pipe band in the service of the French Navy which uses bagpipes and bombards and thus is affiliated to the band In Canada French naval music has affected the traditions of Canadian navy bands French navy bands in the country date back to the era of New France 23 Musical units were primarily attached to the Compagnies Franches de la Marine and the Troupes de la marine the former of which maintained two drums tambour and a fife Future EditMain article Future of the French Navy A FREMM multipurpose frigate EDA R landing craft Barracuda class submarine France s financial problems have affected all branches of her military The 2013 French White Paper on Defence and National Security cancelled the long planned new aircraft carrier and a possible fourth Mistral class amphibious assault ship 24 The backbone of the fleet will be the Aquitaine class FREMM anti submarine frigates replacing the Georges Leygues class but plans to buy a possible seventeen FREMMs were cut back to eleven and then to eight The cancellation of the third and fourth Horizon destroyers meant that the last two FREMM hulls entering service in 2021 22 are fitted out as FREDA air defence ships to replace the Cassard class 25 DCNS has shown a FREMM ER concept to meet this requirement emphasising ballistic missile defence with the Thales Sea Fire 500 AESA radar 26 Industrial considerations mean that the funds for FREMMs 9 11 will now be spent on five more exportable fregates de taille intermediaire FTI intermediate size frigates from 2024 to supplement and ultimately replace the La Fayette class three of which are being upgraded with new sonars to operate into the early 2030s 27 With respect to support ships the Durance class will be replaced under the FLOTLOG project by four derivatives of Italy s Vulcano class logistic support ship to be delivered in 2023 2029 28 Construction has started on the first of six Barracuda class nuclear attack submarines commissioning of Suffren took place in 2020 These nuclear attack submarines are to be followed in the 2030s by the incremental introduction of a new class of nuclear powered ballistic missile submarines SSBNs whose construction is to begin in around 2023 The first MM40 Exocet Block 3 missile was test fired in 2010 to be produced Naval versions of the SCALP EG land attack cruise missile are under development along with a planned Aster Block 1NT with greater capabilities against ballistic missiles In October 2018 the French Ministry of Defence launched an 18 month study for 40 million for the eventual future replacement of the aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle beyond 2030 A decision to build the new carrier was taken by President Emmanuel Macron in 2020 29 and once it enters service it is anticipated to remain in service until beyond 2080 30 31 Construction of the new carrier is to begin in around 2025 with service entry anticipated in the latter 2030s French naval officers EditPrivateers Edit Lieutenant general des Armees navales du Casse Lieutenant general des Armees navales Duguay Trouin Chef d escadre Jean Bart Chef d escadre Pierre Bouvet Cassard Surcouf ThurotHeroes of the First Republic Edit Vice admiral de Latouche Treville Vice admiral de Villaret Joyeuse Vice admiral Bruix Rear Admiral du Chayla Capitaine de vaisseau du Petit Thouars Capitaine de vaisseau CasabiancaExplorers Edit Lieutenant general des Armees navales Bougainville Chef d escadre d Entrecasteaux Chef d escadre Dumont d Urville Chef de Division Laperouse Captain Samuel de Champlain Captain d Iberville Captain Nicolas Baudin Captain Louis de Freycinet Commander Doudart de Lagree Lieutenant de St Alouarn Lieutenant Francis Garnier Lieutenant Savorgnan de BrazzaOther important French naval officers Edit Admiral Florent de Varennes first admiral of France Admiral Jean de Vienne admiral of the French fleet during the Hundred Years War Admiral Herve de Portzmoguer Breton naval commander renowned for his raids on the English and his death in the Battle of St Mathieu Admiral d Estaing admiral of the French fleet which helped the United States secure independence Admiral de Grasse commander of the French fleet at Chesapeake Bay during the American Revolutionary War Admiral Courbet commander of the Far East Squadron Vice Admiral Tourville commander of the French fleet at the Battle of Beachy Head Vice Admiral Villeneuve commander of the French and Spanish fleets at the Battle of Trafalgar Vice Admiral Duquesne commander of the French fleet at the Battle of Agosta Lieutenant commander Paul Teste pioneer of the modern aeronaval operations Vice Admiral Jean Paul de Saumeur often called Chevalier Paul served in several Mediterranean campaigns Notable people who served in the French Navy Edit Marcel Cerdan world boxing champion during the 1940s Jean Cocteau poet novelist dramatist designer playwright artist and filmmaker Jean Cras composer Jacques Yves Cousteau Philippe de Gaulle the son of the general Charles de Gaulle Alain Delon actor served as a fusilier marin in the First Indochina War Bob Denard a mercenary notorious for coup attempts and wars in Africa Jean Gabin another major French actor he joined the free French naval force during the Second World War Paul Gauguin painter sculptor print maker ceramist and writer Bernard Giraudeau actor film director scriptwriter producer and writer Andre Marty a leading figure in the French Communist Party from 1923 to 1955 Albert II Prince of Monaco reserve Lieutenant Commander Pierre Loti mostly known for his literary works Albert Roussel composer Michel Serres philosopher and author Eric Tabarly yachtsman Victor Segalen ethnographer archaeologist writer poet explorer art theorist linguist and literary critic Eugene Sue a famous 19th century novelist Paul Emile Victor an ethnologist and polar explorerSee also Edit France portalFuture of the French Navy List of active French Navy ships List of French Navy ship namesMarine Nationale Edit Airborne Units of the French Navy Escorteur Far East Squadron French 100 mm naval gun List of aircraft carriers of France List of Escorteurs of the French Navy List of French naval battles List of Naval Ministers of France Standing French Navy Deployments Category French Navy admirals Category French Navy officers Category Naval ships of FranceNotes Edit Along with the U S U K China Russia Italy India and SpainReferences Edit Defence Key Figures 2016 Edition Ministere des Armees download PDF file or see HTML version Archived 6 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Forces de surface Ministere des Armees Retrieved 29 August 2021 World Air Forces 2019 Flightglobal 16 Retrieved 7 August 2019 Top 10 Navies in the World military today com Retrieved 2021 06 05 a b Rest of World Naval Forces Resources globalsecurity org Retrieved 2021 06 05 Suciu Peter 2021 04 07 France s Brand New Aircraft Carrier is On Its Way The National Interest Retrieved 2021 06 04 Yeo Mike 2022 06 17 China Launches Third Carrier DefenseNews Retrieved 2022 08 22 Forces Ministere des Armees Retrieved 2021 06 05 Key defence figures 2014 PDF in French Ministere des Armees Archived from the original PDF on 2014 12 13 L Ordonnance royale de 1772 prevoit le port de l ancre d or sur les tenues des regiments des ports constituant le corps royal de la Marine implantes a Toulon Brest Rochefort Saint Malo Bordeaux Le Havre Bayonne et Cherbourg a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Auphan Gabriel Paul Mordai Jacques 2016 1959 Chapter 1 The Naval Tradition of France The French Navy in World War II Translated by Sabalot A C J Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 68247 060 2 Wawro Geoffrey The Franco Prussian War The German conquest of France in 1870 1871 Wilhelm Rustow and John Layland Needham The Way for the Rhine Frontier 1870 Its Political and Military History Description and photograph of Foudre French Navy World War 1 Naval history net Retrieved 2011 12 28 Etat major in French Defense gouv fr 2011 09 15 Retrieved 2011 12 28 Forces Navy Ministry of Defence France 18 July 2011 Retrieved 14 November 2011 T D Young Command in NATO after the Cold War Carlisle Barracks 1997 Chiffres cles de la Defense 2016 Retrieved 2017 03 06 a b Instruction n 1 DEF EMM RH CPM relative aux uniformes et tenues dans la Marine du 15 juin 2004 in French 15 June 2004 pp 3793 3867 Retrieved 4 June 2021 Rapport sur la feminisation des noms de metier fonction grade ou titre La diversite des usages Musique des Equipages de la Flotte in French Ministere des Armees Retrieved 29 August 2021 Chartrand Rene 1989 Tambour battant la tradition millitaire PDF Cap aux Diamants in Canadian French 5 2 17 19 ISSN 0829 7983 Archived from the original on 31 July 2020 French White Paper Defence and National Security PDF Government of France 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2021 Projet De Loi De programmation Militarie 2014 2019 PDF in French August 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 09 24 DCNS to unveil new FREMM Frigate variant updated BRAVE supply ship design at Euronaval 2012 Navy Recognition 4 October 2012 Update to French Military Planning Law Means New Capabilities for Lafayette Class Frigates Navy Recognition 21 May 2015 Cabirol Michel 15 June 2018 Petrolier ravitailleur la France monte a bord du programme italien Vulcano Le Tribune in French Mackenzie Christina 8 December 2020 Macron kicks off French race to build a new nuclear powered aircraft carrier DefenseNews Retrieved 29 August 2021 France starts study phase for new aircraft carrier Naval Today 24 October 2018 Archived from the original on 24 October 2018 Retrieved 30 October 2018 Briganti de Giovanni 24 October 2018 France Launches Studies for New Aircraft Carrier Defense Aerospace Paris Archived from the original on 30 October 2018 Retrieved 30 October 2018 Further reading EditJenkins E H 1973 A History of the French Navy from its Beginnings to the Present Day London Macdonald and Jane s ISBN 0356 04196 4 Randier Jean 2006 La Royale L histoire illustree de la Marine nationale francaise ISBN 978 2 35261 022 9 Winfield Rif and Roberts Stephen S French Warships in the Age of Sail 1626 1786 Design Constructions Careers and Fates Seaforth Publishing 2017 ISBN 978 1 4738 9351 1 French Warships in the Age of Sail 1786 1861 Design Constructions Careers and Fates Seaforth Publishing 2015 ISBN 978 1 84832 204 2 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to French Navy in French Marine nationale Official site in English French Navy 2011 Guide Book in English French Navy 2011 Information File in English Net Marine A well documented database on French navy in French Mer amp Marine Main website on French maritime affairs only in French in English French Fleet Air Arm about French naval aviation in English French Navy in World War 1 including warship losses Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title French Navy amp oldid 1125124612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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