French ship Saint Philippe (1693)

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History
Flag of France (1814-1830).svg Kingdom of France
NameSaint Philippe
OrderedLate 1692
Builder François Coulomb, Toulon Dockyard
Laid downDecember 1692
LaunchedOctober 1693
CompletedDecember 1693
FateTaken to pieces in 1714
General characteristics
Tonnage1,750
Length158 French feet [lower-alpha 1]
Beam44½ French feet (14.45m)
Draught23 French feet (7.47m)
Depth of hold20½ French feet
Decks3 gun decks
Complement870 (750 in peacetime), + 10/13 officers
Armament90 guns

Saint Philippe was a First Rank ship of the line of the French Royal Navy, the second vessel in the two-ship Tonnant Class (her sister being the Tonnant).

This ship was ordered in late 1692 to be built at Toulon Dockyard, and on 20 January 1693 she was allotted the name Saint Philippe, taking the name of a ship lost in the action at La Hogue in June 1692. The designer and builder of both ships was François Coulomb, and they represented an enlargement of his design of 1691 for the Sceptre, with an extra pair of guns (and gunports) added on each level. They were three-decker ships without forecastles. The Saint Philippe was launched in October 1693 and completed in December of the same year.

At the French Ancre Publishing Compagny published till December 2018 a Monography with a full set of plans for this ship - scaled in 1/48 for Model building.

She was initially armed with 90 guns, comprising twenty-eight 36-pounders on the lower deck, thirty 18-pounders on the middle deck, twenty-six 12-pounders on the upper deck, and six 6-pounders on the quarterdeck.

The Saint Philippe was rebuilt at Toulon from February 1699 to 1700; she took part in the Battle of Vélez-Málaga on 24 August 1703 as the Flagship. She ships state room was hit by a bomb-vessel and several officers died. In July 1707 - during the siege of Toulon - she and her sister were undergoing a refit in the basin of Le Mourillon, and avoided the scuttling order which affected most other French ships at Toulon; they were sailed to counter the British attack, and subsequently were used as floating batteries. The Saint Philippe was condemned at Toulon on 18 August 1714, and was subsequently taken to pieces.

Notes

  1. The French foot (pre-metric) was 6.575% longer than the equivalent English foot.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">François Coulomb the Elder</span>

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