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Honoré Joseph Antoine Ganteaume

Count Honoré Joseph Antoine Ganteaume (13 April 1755 in La Ciotat[1] – 28 July 1818 in Aubagne[2]) was a French Navy officer and Vice-admiral.

Ganteaume started sailing on Indiamen, before serving during the American War of Independence in the fleets of Admiral d'Estaing and Suffren. At the French Revolution, he was promoted to command the 74-gun Trente-et-un Mai, taking part in the Glorious First of June and the Croisière du Grand Hiver.

Ganteaume took part in the Expedition to Egypt, narrowly escaping death during the Battle of the Nile. There, he formed a personal relationship with General Bonaparte, who supported his promotion. He was made a Rear-Admiral and given command of a squadron to supply the Army of Egypt, but in Ganteaume's expeditions of 1801, he engaged in months of complicated manoeuvres to elude the Royal Navy and eventually failed his mission.

He supplied the French forces of the Saint-Domingue expedition. During the Trafalgar Campaign, Ganteaume was to lead his squadron to the Caribbean to reinforce Villeneuve and Missiessy, but he was blockaded by British squadrons. Ganteaume held various offices during the late First French Empire, and gave his loyalty to Louis XVIII at the Bourbon Restoration.

Career

Ganteaume was born in La Ciotat, into a family of merchant sailors. He started sailing at the age of 14[3] on a merchantman commanded by his father,[1] and by the time he reached the age of 22, Ganteaume had accomplished five campaigns in the Middle East and two in the Caribbean.[1][3] He served on the Mississippi Company Indiaman Fier Rodrigue.[3]

Service in the American War of Independence

In 1778, with the intervention of France in the American Revolutionary War, Ganteaume enlisted in the French Royal Navy as an auxiliary officer,[1] while Fier Rodrigue was purchased into naval service as a 54-gun ship of the line.[3] Fier Rodrigue escorted a convoy to America, and attached to a division under Lamotte-Picquet[4] in the fleet of Admiral d'Estaing.[3]

In the fleet of Admiral d'Estaing, Ganteaume took part in the Capture of Grenada and in the Siege of Savannah.[1] In 1781, he was promoted to auxiliary Frigate Lieutenant,[3] and appointed to command the fluyt Marlborough in a convoy bound for the Indies and escorted by Suffren.[3]

From 1781 to 1785, Ganteaume served on the frigate Surveillante[3][note 1] He was promoted to Fireship Captain[note 2] in 1784, and sub-Lieutenant[note 3] in 1786.[3]

Upon his return at the peace, Ganteaume was granted permission to return to the service of the Mississippi Company.[3] He successively commanded the Indiamen Maréchal de Ségur, bound for Chian, and Prince de Condé and Constitution, bound for the Indies.[3] In 1793, he was captured on an Indiaman[4] and imprisoned by the British;[1] released, he returned to the Navy, with the rank of Lieutenant.[1][3] He served on the 74-gun Jupiter for a campaign in the Atlantic Ocean.[3]

Service on Trente-et-un Mai

 
The 74-gun Trente-et-un Mai, which Ganteaume commanded between 1794 and 1795

Ganteaume was promoted to Captain in 1794,[1] and was appointed to command the 74-gun Trente-et-un Mai.[1] During the Atlantic campaign of May 1794, he attempted to attach to the French fleet under Villaret-Joyeuse, but only joined late in the Glorious First of June; he took part in the last throes of the battle, where he was thrice wounded.[1]

In the winter, Geanteaume led Trente-et-un Mai in the Croisière du Grand Hiver, and notably rescued the crew of the stricken Scipion.[5]

In 1795, Trente-et-un Mai sailed to the Mediterranean, and cruised off Catalonia;[3] she sustained a two-hour battle against a Spanish ship of the line.[3] On 18 April 1795,[6] Trente-et-un Mai was renamed Républicain. She attached to the fleet under Vice-Admiral Martin, and took part in the Battle of Hyères Islands.[5]

In late 1795, Ganteaume was appointed to command a division in an expedition to Smyrna, comprising one ship of the line, four frigates and four corvettes. He sailed to Smyrna, where he lifted the blockade on Villeneuve's squadron,[3] and captured the frigate HMS Nemesis.[4]

In 1796, returned to the Ocean,[3] Ganteaume successful ran the British blockade of Brest and sailed a convoy carrying munitions into the harbour.[5]

Service in Egypt

Appointed Chief of staff to Rear-Admiral and Navy Minister Bruix,[5] Ganteaume took part in the French campaign in Egypt and Syria on the flagship Orient.[3] He took part in the Battle of the Nile, where he was wounded,[3] and narrowly escaped death when he left the burning Orient[5] on a boat.[4] Orient exploded soon after.

Promoted to Rear-Admiral upon request of General Bonaparte,[5] Ganteaume led the flotilla of small ships of the Nile River, taking part in the Siege of Jaffa, the Siege of Acre and the Battle of Abukir.[3]

On 22 August 1799, Ganteaume departed Alexandria with the frigates Muiron and Carrère, the aviso Revanche and a tartane,[3] ferrying General Bonaparte back to France.[5] Bonaparte ordered the ships to sail close to the shore of Africa to elude British squadrons, and landed in Corsica, to finally arrive at Fréjus on 2 October.[3]

After arriving in France, Bonaparte, as First Consul, appointed Ganteaume to the Council of State, in which he presided the section of the Navy.[3]

Ganteaume's expeditions of 1801

In 1801,[3] Ganteaume was appointed to command a seven-ship division in Brest, tasked with ferrying supplies and 5000 soldiers to the French Army of Egypt.[5] After successfully crossing British-held Gibraltar, Ganteaume cruised in the Mediterranean for six months to elude the British fleet.[5]

Ganteaume returned to Toulon to resupply and repair his ships.[5] In the following months, he attempted three sorties, once arriving off Alexandria without landing:[5] when he finally arrived near Egypt, actually Derna, Libya, in June 1801, the troops did not land, due to the hostility of the locals and the British naval threat.[7][8]

Ganteaume eventually renounced and defiantly returned to Toulon, after capturing Elba and four British ships,[3] including the 38-gun frigate HMS Success, and in the action of 24 June 1801, the 74-gun HMS Swiftsure, but failing his mission to supply the French armies in the Middle East.

Ganteaume's tergiversations motivated the satirical poem:[3]

Vaisseaux lestés, tête sans lest,
Ainsi part l'amiral Ganteaume;
Il s'en va de Brest à Bertheaume,
Et revient de Bertheaume à Brest.

Loaded ships, head without weight,
Thus departs Admiral Ganteaume;
He sails off from Brest to Bertheaume,
And sails back from Bertheaume to Brest.

Service in Saint-Domingue and the Trafalgar Campaign

After the Treaty of Lunéville ended the War of the Second Coalition in early 1801, Ganteaume was tasked with supporting the French forces involved in the Saint-Domingue expedition.[5] In 1802, Ganteaume was appointed Maritime Prefect for Toulon.[3]

At the outbreak of the War of the Third Coalition the year after, and with the Coronation of Napoleon I and the advent of the First French Empire on 2 December 1804, Ganteaume was promoted to Vice-Admiral,[5] made a Count of the Empire,[5] and appointed to command the fleet in Brest.[5]

In 1805, after the death of Vice-Admiral Latouche-Tréville and the outbreak of the Trafalgar Campaign, Napoléon briefly considered entrusting Ganteaume with an expedition to land an 18 000-man army in Ireland,[5] in a move similar to what had been attempted in 1796 with the ill-fated Expédition d'Irlande; eventually, Ganteaume was ordered to the Caribbean to land reinforcements there and return to Europe with the fleets under Rear-Admiral Missiessy and Vice-Admiral Villeneuve.[5]

Adverse weather prevented Ganteaume from leaving Brest, and he finally departed one month after Missiessy.[5] In transit, Ganteaume bumped into the British Channel Fleet under Admiral Cornwallis and retreated to Brest, where he ended up hermetically blocked.[5] Informed of the Battle of Cape Finisterre, Ganteaume was ordered to break into the Ocean by force to make his junction with Villeneuve;[5] however, Villeneuve's port call to Cadiz thwarted this plan.[2]

Later career

In 1808, Ganteaume took command of the French squadrons of Toulon and Rochefort, joined together at Toulon, with the aim to ferry supplies to Corfu, then blockaded by the Royal Navy.[2] He departed Toulon in early February, successfully escorted his convoy into Corfu harbour, and returned to Toulon in April.[3] In February on the following year, he authorised the frigates Pénélope and Pauline to chase HMS Proserpine, yielding the action of 27 February 1809 in which Proserpine was captured and brought to Toulon.[3]

In June 1808, Ganteaume was appointed General Inspector of the Coasts of the Ocean.[2] From 1809 to 1810, Ganteaume was appointed to command the fleet in Toulon, but attacks of gout kept him increasingly away from the sea.[2] In 1810, he joined the Council of the Admiralty.[2] On 1 August 1811, Napoléon appointed Ganteaume to command the battalion of the Marins de la Garde in the Imperial Guard as a colonel.[9] In 1813, he defended Toulon.[4]

In 1814, at the first Bourbon Restoration, Ganteaume supported the Acte de déchéance de l'Empereur, and in consequence did not return to command during the Hundred Days;[3] immediately after the Battle of Waterloo, he ordered the Royalist white flag hoisted in Toulon;[2] this act got him almost killed.[2]

Restored to power again, Louis XVIII made Ganteaume a Peer of France in recognition for his support.[2] In December 1815,[3] he was promoted to Commander in the Order of Saint Louis,[2] and appointed General Inspector of the Classes.[2] In his capacity of Peer of France, Ganteaume took part in the trial of Marshal Ney, and voted for his execution.[4][9]

Ganteaume died at his property of Pauline, near Aubagne, on 28 September 1818. The Boulevard Amiral Ganteaume in Aubagne is named after him. In 1801, the explorer Nicholas Baudin named Gantheaume Point, near Broome in Western Australia, after him.

Notes and references

Notes

  1. ^ Michaud (p.98) also mentions the "frigate Apollon", but no ship name Apollon was in service in the French Navy between 1758 and 1788 (furthermore, Apollon is an unlikely name for a frigate and more suitable for a ship of the line).
  2. ^ Capitaine de brûlot
  3. ^ Sous-lieutenant de vaisseau

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Levot, p.206
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Levot, p.208
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Michaud, p.98
  4. ^ a b c d e f Granier, p.437
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Levot, p.207
  6. ^ Roche, p.313-314
  7. ^ Mackesy, p.162
  8. ^ Strathern, p. 418
  9. ^ a b Comte Honoré Joseph Antoine GANTEAUME

Bibliography

  • Granier, Hubert (1998). Histoire des Marins français 1789–1815. illustrations by Alain Coz. Marines éditions. ISBN 2-909675-41-6.
  • Levot, Prosper (1866). Les gloires maritimes de la France: notices biographiques sur les plus célèbres marins (in French). Bertrand.
  • Mackesy, Piers (1995). British victory in Egypt, 1801: the end of Napoleon's conquest. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-04064-7.
  • Michaud, Joseph François; Michaud, Louis Gabriel (1838). "Ganteaume". Biographie universelle, ancienne et moderne (in French). Vol. 65. Paris: Michaud. p. 98. OCLC 7840944.
  • Roche, Jean-Michel (2005). Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre française de Colbert à nos jours. Vol. 1. Group Retozel-Maury Millau. ISBN 978-2-9525917-0-6. OCLC 165892922.
  • Strathern, Paul (2008). Napoleon in Egypt. New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 978-0-553-80678-6.

External links

  • (in French). Archived from the original on 2007-03-22.

honoré, joseph, antoine, ganteaume, count, april, 1755, ciotat, july, 1818, aubagne, french, navy, officer, vice, admiral, countborn, 1755, april, 1755la, ciotatdied28, july, 1818, 1818, aged, aubagneallegiance, franceservice, branchfrench, navyrankvice, admir. Count Honore Joseph Antoine Ganteaume 13 April 1755 in La Ciotat 1 28 July 1818 in Aubagne 2 was a French Navy officer and Vice admiral CountHonore Joseph Antoine GanteaumeBorn 1755 04 13 13 April 1755La CiotatDied28 July 1818 1818 07 28 aged 63 AubagneAllegiance FranceService wbr branchFrench NavyRankVice AdmiralBattles warsAmerican Revolutionary WarCapture of Grenada Siege of SavannahFrench Revolutionary WarsGlorious First of June WIA Croisiere du Grand Hiver Battle of Hyeres Islands Battle of the Nile WIA Ganteaume s expeditions of 1801Napoleonic WarsGanteaume started sailing on Indiamen before serving during the American War of Independence in the fleets of Admiral d Estaing and Suffren At the French Revolution he was promoted to command the 74 gun Trente et un Mai taking part in the Glorious First of June and the Croisiere du Grand Hiver Ganteaume took part in the Expedition to Egypt narrowly escaping death during the Battle of the Nile There he formed a personal relationship with General Bonaparte who supported his promotion He was made a Rear Admiral and given command of a squadron to supply the Army of Egypt but in Ganteaume s expeditions of 1801 he engaged in months of complicated manoeuvres to elude the Royal Navy and eventually failed his mission He supplied the French forces of the Saint Domingue expedition During the Trafalgar Campaign Ganteaume was to lead his squadron to the Caribbean to reinforce Villeneuve and Missiessy but he was blockaded by British squadrons Ganteaume held various offices during the late First French Empire and gave his loyalty to Louis XVIII at the Bourbon Restoration Contents 1 Career 1 1 Service in the American War of Independence 1 2 Service on Trente et un Mai 1 3 Service in Egypt 1 4 Ganteaume s expeditions of 1801 1 5 Service in Saint Domingue and the Trafalgar Campaign 1 6 Later career 2 Notes and references 2 1 Notes 2 2 References 2 3 Bibliography 2 4 External linksCareer EditGanteaume was born in La Ciotat into a family of merchant sailors He started sailing at the age of 14 3 on a merchantman commanded by his father 1 and by the time he reached the age of 22 Ganteaume had accomplished five campaigns in the Middle East and two in the Caribbean 1 3 He served on the Mississippi Company Indiaman Fier Rodrigue 3 Service in the American War of Independence Edit In 1778 with the intervention of France in the American Revolutionary War Ganteaume enlisted in the French Royal Navy as an auxiliary officer 1 while Fier Rodrigue was purchased into naval service as a 54 gun ship of the line 3 Fier Rodrigue escorted a convoy to America and attached to a division under Lamotte Picquet 4 in the fleet of Admiral d Estaing 3 In the fleet of Admiral d Estaing Ganteaume took part in the Capture of Grenada and in the Siege of Savannah 1 In 1781 he was promoted to auxiliary Frigate Lieutenant 3 and appointed to command the fluyt Marlborough in a convoy bound for the Indies and escorted by Suffren 3 From 1781 to 1785 Ganteaume served on the frigate Surveillante 3 note 1 He was promoted to Fireship Captain note 2 in 1784 and sub Lieutenant note 3 in 1786 3 Upon his return at the peace Ganteaume was granted permission to return to the service of the Mississippi Company 3 He successively commanded the Indiamen Marechal de Segur bound for Chian and Prince de Conde and Constitution bound for the Indies 3 In 1793 he was captured on an Indiaman 4 and imprisoned by the British 1 released he returned to the Navy with the rank of Lieutenant 1 3 He served on the 74 gun Jupiter for a campaign in the Atlantic Ocean 3 Service on Trente et un Mai Edit The 74 gun Trente et un Mai which Ganteaume commanded between 1794 and 1795Ganteaume was promoted to Captain in 1794 1 and was appointed to command the 74 gun Trente et un Mai 1 During the Atlantic campaign of May 1794 he attempted to attach to the French fleet under Villaret Joyeuse but only joined late in the Glorious First of June he took part in the last throes of the battle where he was thrice wounded 1 In the winter Geanteaume led Trente et un Mai in the Croisiere du Grand Hiver and notably rescued the crew of the stricken Scipion 5 In 1795 Trente et un Mai sailed to the Mediterranean and cruised off Catalonia 3 she sustained a two hour battle against a Spanish ship of the line 3 On 18 April 1795 6 Trente et un Mai was renamed Republicain She attached to the fleet under Vice Admiral Martin and took part in the Battle of Hyeres Islands 5 In late 1795 Ganteaume was appointed to command a division in an expedition to Smyrna comprising one ship of the line four frigates and four corvettes He sailed to Smyrna where he lifted the blockade on Villeneuve s squadron 3 and captured the frigate HMS Nemesis 4 In 1796 returned to the Ocean 3 Ganteaume successful ran the British blockade of Brest and sailed a convoy carrying munitions into the harbour 5 Service in Egypt Edit Appointed Chief of staff to Rear Admiral and Navy Minister Bruix 5 Ganteaume took part in the French campaign in Egypt and Syria on the flagship Orient 3 He took part in the Battle of the Nile where he was wounded 3 and narrowly escaped death when he left the burning Orient 5 on a boat 4 Orient exploded soon after Promoted to Rear Admiral upon request of General Bonaparte 5 Ganteaume led the flotilla of small ships of the Nile River taking part in the Siege of Jaffa the Siege of Acre and the Battle of Abukir 3 On 22 August 1799 Ganteaume departed Alexandria with the frigates Muiron and Carrere the aviso Revanche and a tartane 3 ferrying General Bonaparte back to France 5 Bonaparte ordered the ships to sail close to the shore of Africa to elude British squadrons and landed in Corsica to finally arrive at Frejus on 2 October 3 After arriving in France Bonaparte as First Consul appointed Ganteaume to the Council of State in which he presided the section of the Navy 3 Ganteaume s expeditions of 1801 Edit Main article Ganteaume s expeditions of 1801 In 1801 3 Ganteaume was appointed to command a seven ship division in Brest tasked with ferrying supplies and 5000 soldiers to the French Army of Egypt 5 After successfully crossing British held Gibraltar Ganteaume cruised in the Mediterranean for six months to elude the British fleet 5 Ganteaume returned to Toulon to resupply and repair his ships 5 In the following months he attempted three sorties once arriving off Alexandria without landing 5 when he finally arrived near Egypt actually Derna Libya in June 1801 the troops did not land due to the hostility of the locals and the British naval threat 7 8 Ganteaume eventually renounced and defiantly returned to Toulon after capturing Elba and four British ships 3 including the 38 gun frigate HMS Success and in the action of 24 June 1801 the 74 gun HMS Swiftsure but failing his mission to supply the French armies in the Middle East Ganteaume s tergiversations motivated the satirical poem 3 Vaisseaux lestes tete sans lest Ainsi part l amiral Ganteaume Il s en va de Brest a Bertheaume Et revient de Bertheaume a Brest Loaded ships head without weight Thus departs Admiral Ganteaume He sails off from Brest to Bertheaume And sails back from Bertheaume to Brest Service in Saint Domingue and the Trafalgar Campaign Edit After the Treaty of Luneville ended the War of the Second Coalition in early 1801 Ganteaume was tasked with supporting the French forces involved in the Saint Domingue expedition 5 In 1802 Ganteaume was appointed Maritime Prefect for Toulon 3 At the outbreak of the War of the Third Coalition the year after and with the Coronation of Napoleon I and the advent of the First French Empire on 2 December 1804 Ganteaume was promoted to Vice Admiral 5 made a Count of the Empire 5 and appointed to command the fleet in Brest 5 In 1805 after the death of Vice Admiral Latouche Treville and the outbreak of the Trafalgar Campaign Napoleon briefly considered entrusting Ganteaume with an expedition to land an 18 000 man army in Ireland 5 in a move similar to what had been attempted in 1796 with the ill fated Expedition d Irlande eventually Ganteaume was ordered to the Caribbean to land reinforcements there and return to Europe with the fleets under Rear Admiral Missiessy and Vice Admiral Villeneuve 5 Adverse weather prevented Ganteaume from leaving Brest and he finally departed one month after Missiessy 5 In transit Ganteaume bumped into the British Channel Fleet under Admiral Cornwallis and retreated to Brest where he ended up hermetically blocked 5 Informed of the Battle of Cape Finisterre Ganteaume was ordered to break into the Ocean by force to make his junction with Villeneuve 5 however Villeneuve s port call to Cadiz thwarted this plan 2 Later career Edit In 1808 Ganteaume took command of the French squadrons of Toulon and Rochefort joined together at Toulon with the aim to ferry supplies to Corfu then blockaded by the Royal Navy 2 He departed Toulon in early February successfully escorted his convoy into Corfu harbour and returned to Toulon in April 3 In February on the following year he authorised the frigates Penelope and Pauline to chase HMS Proserpine yielding the action of 27 February 1809 in which Proserpine was captured and brought to Toulon 3 In June 1808 Ganteaume was appointed General Inspector of the Coasts of the Ocean 2 From 1809 to 1810 Ganteaume was appointed to command the fleet in Toulon but attacks of gout kept him increasingly away from the sea 2 In 1810 he joined the Council of the Admiralty 2 On 1 August 1811 Napoleon appointed Ganteaume to command the battalion of the Marins de la Garde in the Imperial Guard as a colonel 9 In 1813 he defended Toulon 4 In 1814 at the first Bourbon Restoration Ganteaume supported the Acte de decheance de l Empereur and in consequence did not return to command during the Hundred Days 3 immediately after the Battle of Waterloo he ordered the Royalist white flag hoisted in Toulon 2 this act got him almost killed 2 Restored to power again Louis XVIII made Ganteaume a Peer of France in recognition for his support 2 In December 1815 3 he was promoted to Commander in the Order of Saint Louis 2 and appointed General Inspector of the Classes 2 In his capacity of Peer of France Ganteaume took part in the trial of Marshal Ney and voted for his execution 4 9 Ganteaume died at his property of Pauline near Aubagne on 28 September 1818 The Boulevard Amiral Ganteaume in Aubagne is named after him In 1801 the explorer Nicholas Baudin named Gantheaume Point near Broome in Western Australia after him Notes and references EditNotes Edit Michaud p 98 also mentions the frigate Apollon but no ship name Apollon was in service in the French Navy between 1758 and 1788 furthermore Apollon is an unlikely name for a frigate and more suitable for a ship of the line Capitaine de brulot Sous lieutenant de vaisseau References Edit a b c d e f g h i j Levot p 206 a b c d e f g h i j k Levot p 208 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Michaud p 98 a b c d e f Granier p 437 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Levot p 207 Roche p 313 314 Mackesy p 162 Strathern p 418 a b Comte Honore Joseph Antoine GANTEAUME Bibliography Edit Granier Hubert 1998 Histoire des Marins francais 1789 1815 illustrations by Alain Coz Marines editions ISBN 2 909675 41 6 Levot Prosper 1866 Les gloires maritimes de la France notices biographiques sur les plus celebres marins in French Bertrand Mackesy Piers 1995 British victory in Egypt 1801 the end of Napoleon s conquest London Routledge ISBN 0 415 04064 7 Michaud Joseph Francois Michaud Louis Gabriel 1838 Ganteaume Biographie universelle ancienne et moderne in French Vol 65 Paris Michaud p 98 OCLC 7840944 Roche Jean Michel 2005 Dictionnaire des batiments de la flotte de guerre francaise de Colbert a nos jours Vol 1 Group Retozel Maury Millau ISBN 978 2 9525917 0 6 OCLC 165892922 Strathern Paul 2008 Napoleon in Egypt New York Bantam Books ISBN 978 0 553 80678 6 External links Edit Comte Honore GANTEAUME in French Archived from the original on 2007 03 22 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Honore Joseph Antoine Ganteaume amp oldid 1153265409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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