Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history/military

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

HMS Athenienne (1800)

Ship of the line of the Royal Navy


Ship of the line of the Royal Navy

FieldValue
section1{{Infobox ship/image
image3rd rate ship of the line MMM n01.jpg
image_captionModel of a Maltese ship of the line, similar to San Giovanni, at the Malta Maritime Museum
section2{{Infobox ship/career
countryMalta
flag[[File:Flag of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta.svg60px]]
nameSan Giovanni
namesakeSaint John
builderLa Valette
laid_down1796
captured11 June 1798 by the French Navy
section3{{Infobox ship/career
hide_headertitle
countryFrance
flag[[Image:Civil and Naval Ensign of France.svg45pxFrench Navy Ensign]]
nameAthénien
namesakeAthens
launchedOctober 1798
in_serviceDecember 1799
captured4 September 1800, by Royal Navy
section4{{Infobox ship/career
hide_headertitle
countryGreat Britain
flag
nameAthenienne
acquired4 September 1800
fateWrecked 20 October 1806
section5{{Infobox ship/characteristics
header_caption
tons_burthen1411 (bm)
length163 ft (overall); 132 ft (keel)
beam44 ft
hold_depth19 ft
sail_planFull-rigged ship
complement491
armament*Lower deck:26 × 24-pounder guns
  • Upper deck:26 × 18-pounder guns
  • QD:2 × 9-pounder guns + 8 × 24-pounder carronades
  • Fc:2 × 9-pounder guns + 4 × 24-pounder carronades

HMS Athenienne was a 64-gun third-rate ship of the line of the Royal Navy. She was originally the Maltese Navy ship San Giovanni, which the French captured on the stocks in 1798 and launched and commissioned as the French Navy ship Athénien. British forces captured her at Valletta on 4 September 1800 during the siege of Malta and took her into service as Athenienne. She was wrecked near Sicily with great loss of life in 1806.

French career

The Knights of Malta were constructing San Giovanni for their navy at her building site in Valletta when the French occupied Malta. She was launched four months later, and the French took her into service as Athénien. They appointed her to the medical services of the fleet, and in that capacity carried out research on the diseases affecting the French fleet in the Mediterranean.

The British acquired Athénien in connection with the capture of Malta. Although the capitulation only took place in September, Athenian was among the British vessels at Malta that shared in the prize money for the capture of Courageux on 29 March 1800.

The Royal Navy brought Athénien into British service as HMS Athenienne.

British career

In December 1800, Sir Thomas Livingstone assumed command of Athenienne. He then accompanied Rear Admiral Sir John Borlase Warren to the coast of Egypt in search of a French squadron under Admiral Ganteaume, which was east of Sardinia. The French squadron escaped.

Athenienne then joined the squadron under Lord Keith off Alexandria until she sprang a leak and returned to Malta for repairs. In 1850, the Admiralty awarded the Naval General Service Medal with clasp "Egypt" to claimants from the crews of the vessels that had served in the navy's Egyptian campaign between 8 March 1801 and 2 September, including Athenian.

Thereafter she was sent to cruise the island of Elba until the Peace of Amiens led to her to being recalled.

Athenian left Gibraltar on 25 August 1802, arrived in Portsmouth on 11 September, and was placed in quarantine. On 24 September she sailed into Portsmouth to be paid off. Her officers and crew were paid off at Portsmouth in October 1802.

Athenienne underwent fitting at Portsmouth between January and March 1804. Captain Francis Fayerman commissioned her there.

Voyage to China (1804-1805)

On 9 June 1804, Athenienne, left St. Helens, Isle of Wight, as escort to nine East Indiamen of the British East India Company bound for China. The Indiamen were Perseverance, , , Ceres, , , True Briton, , and Cuffnells.

The fleet arrived at Rio de Janeiro around 14–18 August. It then passed the Cape of Good Hope. From here, rather than passing through the Indian Ocean and the Straits of Malacca, the fleet sailed south of Western Australia and through Bass Strait. The objectives were two-fold: to avoid French ships reported to be in the Indian Ocean,

The ships then sailed to Norfolk Island, which was the next rendezvous point after Saint Paul Island, for members that had separated. Taunton Castle had separated in the South Atlantic and although she arrived at Norfolk Island three days after the fleet had sailed on, did not rejoin the rest of the fleet until she arrived at Haerlem Bay, in China.

The arrival of the Athenienne and the East Indiamen at Norfolk Island sowed panic among the colonists there who feared that a French flotilla had arrived.

The fleet arrived at Whampoa in mid-January 1805. The fleet then returned to England via the Straits of Malacca. Arniston, for example, crossed the Second Bar on 14 February, reached Malacca on 21 March and St Helena on 30 June, and arrived at Long Reach on 15 September.

Subsequent service

In October 1805 Captain John Giffard replaced Fayerman. He sailed Athenienne to Gibraltar with stores and supplies for the fleet after the Battle of Trafalgar. On 21 April 1806 Sir Sidney Smith took command off Palermo of a squadron that included Athenienne. She subsequently took part in the reinforcement of the defense of Gaieta (), the capture of Capri, and frequent forays to the coast of Calabria.

In the capture of Capri on 12 May Atheniens marines landed and captured the heights, which forced the French to surrender.

In August 1806 Athenienne was in the Mediterranean under Captain Edward Fellowes.

Fate

On 16 October 1806, Athenienne sailed from Gibraltar for Malta under the command of Captain Robert Raynsford, with a crew of 470. In the evening of 20 October, she ran aground on a submerged reef, the Esquirques (), in the Strait of Sicily.

The crew cut away ship's masts to prevent her rolling on her side, but nevertheless she flooded to the lower deck ports within half an hour, then rolled over. Captain Raynsford had had an improvised raft constructed. Unfortunately, two of the ship's boats were swamped when launching and two others deserted the wreck; after much trouble the ship's launch was freed and got into the water. Over 100 survivors were crammed into her and she was rescued the following day by a Danish ship, who brought them safely to land. In all, 347 people died, including Captain Raynsford, while 141 men and 2 women were rescued.

Notes

Citations

References

References

  1. {{London Gazette. (21 May 1805)
  2. {{London Gazette. (15 March 1850)
  3. ''Naval Chronicle'', Vol. 8, pp.263.
  4. ''Naval Chronicle'', Vol. 8, p.349.
  5. and to improve the charting of Bass Strait.Lee (2003).
  6. "Evans: ''Finding my ancestors: Voyage of the Athenienne to China in 1804/1805''.".
  7. [http://searcharchives.bl.uk/IAMS_VU2:IAMS045-001114562 British Library: ''Arniston''.]{{Dead link. (January 2026)
  8. {{London Gazette. (26 July 1806)
  9. ''[[Lloyd's List]]'' [https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005721496?urlappend=%3Bseq=421 №4110.]
  10. Another states that there were 475 people aboard, of whom 122 were saved in her boats, and 2 on a raft. So in all 353 died and 124 were saved.''Literary Gazette'', Vol. 9, pp.259-60.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about HMS Athenienne (1800) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report