Английская Википедия:Charles Martel-class ironclad

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The Charles Martel class was a planned class of ironclad barbette ships of the French Navy. The class comprised two ships, Charles Martel and Brennus, and represented an incremental improvement over the preceding Шаблон:Sclass, being larger, but carrying the same main battery of four Шаблон:Cvt guns in single mounts. Details of the ships' construction are unclear and contradictory, with various sources reporting that both ships were laid down, or that only Brennus was begun; neither ship was launched before they were cancelled in 1884 or 1886. Some sources indicate that Brennus was redesigned and completed as France's first pre-dreadnought battleship, Шаблон:Ship, but most other historians dispute the idea.

Background

Файл:French ironclad Marceau NH 75908.jpg
Шаблон:Ship, which provided the basis of the Charles Martel design

After the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–1871, the French Navy embarked on a construction program to strengthen the fleet in 1872 and to replace older vessels that had been built in the 1860s. By the early 1870s, the Italian Шаблон:Lang (Royal Navy) had begun its own expansion program under the direction of Benedetto Brin, which included the construction of several very large ironclad warships of the Шаблон:Sclass and Шаблон:Sclasses, armed with Шаблон:Cvt 100-ton guns. The French initially viewed the ships as not worthy of concern, but by 1877, public pressure over the new Italian vessels prompted the Navy's Шаблон:Lang (Board of Construction) to respond, beginning with the barbette ship Шаблон:Ship and following with six vessels carrying 100-ton guns of French design. The first of these were the two Шаблон:Sclasss, which carried their guns in open barbettes, all on the centerline, with one forward and two aft.Шаблон:Sfn

By the early 1880s, the very large guns had fallen out of favor in the French Navy, so the remaining four ships, to be laid down beginning in 1880, were redesigned with smaller but equally powerful weapons. These became the Шаблон:Sclass, which was to have comprised four ships but ultimately included only three. The first vessel that was laid down, Шаблон:Ship, had to be reworked after it was realized that the ship was too small for the intended displacement. The remaining three ships, which had not yet been laid down, could be enlarged to the necessary dimensions. All four ships arranged their main battery in a lozenge pattern with one forward, one aft, and a wing mount on either side amidships to maximize end-on fire (which was emphasized by those who favored ramming attacks).Шаблон:Sfn

At the same time, developments with quick-firing guns rendered the generation of French capital ships designed in the 1870s and early 1880s dangerously vulnerable to damage above the waterline. These ships used shallow waterline belt armor to protect their sides, but most of their hulls were unprotected by armor altogether. Many navies began to incorporate thin side protection above the belt to deal with the threat. Further complicating matters were the developments of self-propelled torpedoes and small, fast torpedo boats that posed an existential threat to the battleship-dominated fleets of the European navies.Шаблон:Sfn

Development and cancellation

The fleet program of 1880 projected a total of six new ironclad battleships; the first four were to be the three Marceaus and Hoche. The remaining pair of vessels was due to begin construction in 1882. An initial plan by the naval engineer Louis de Bussy proposed a ship modeled on the British ironclad Шаблон:HMS, carrying a main battery of four Шаблон:Cvt guns in a pair of gun turrets arranged en echelon amidships. Before work on the vessels began, the French naval command reconsidered and opted for an improved Marceau, and a new design was prepared by Charles Ernest Huin, who had designed the Marceaus and Hoche. The new design repeated the lozenge arrangement of the main battery in single mounts.Шаблон:Sfn

The exact timeline for the design and construction of the ships are unclear. According to the historians John Jordan and Philip Caresse, Huin's design was approved in January 1885 and work on the two ships, Charles Martel and Brennus, began that year in Toulon and Lorient, respectively. They credit Admiral Théophile Aube, who became the French Minister of Marine in January 1886, as immediately suspending work on the new ships upon becoming the naval minister. Aube was a proponent of the Шаблон:Lang (Young School), which held that cheap torpedo boats could effectively replace the capital ships that had been the primary component of naval power.Шаблон:Sfn

But according to naval historian Theodore Ropp, the decision to cancel the vessels had been made in late 1884, during the tenure of Admiral Alexandre Peyron; while he was not a partisan of the Шаблон:Lang, he was also not convinced that further battleship construction was warranted during a period of technological uncertainty. He remained committed to completing the Marceau class and Hoche, as they were already well advanced in construction, but was unwilling to authorize construction of any new vessels.Шаблон:Sfn This is corroborated by the 1887 edition of the contemporary journal The Naval Annual, which reported that the decision was made to suspend the vessels on 24 October 1884. But Thomas Brassey noted that the ships had been ordered in 1882 and that at least some work on the keel for Brennus had already been completed by October 1884, though Charles Martel had not yet been laid down.Шаблон:Sfn

Файл:French battleship Brennus NH 82700.jpg
The second Шаблон:Ship, sometimes believed to be the same vessel as the Charles Martel-class ship

In 1887, Aube left the ministry and his replacement, Édouard Barbey, disagreed with his predecessor over the future composition of the French fleet. Huin suggested reworking the design for Brennus, which Barbey accepted, resulting in France's first pre-dreadnought battleship, Шаблон:Ship. There is some confusion as to the ship's fate. Jordan and Caresse seem to indicate that the two vessels were one in the same, stating that "work on the partially built Brennus resumed in 1889."Шаблон:Sfn But in another publication, Caresse provides a new keel-laying date for Brennus on 2 January 1889,Шаблон:Sfn and Brassey indicates the two were different vessels.Шаблон:Efn Speaking of Charles Martel, the historian Luc Feron states more plainly, instructing readers to "[not] confuse this one with the 12,000-ton battleship of the 1890 program which was actually built."Шаблон:Sfn Charles Martel was scrapped in Toulon and some of her components were reused in other projects. Her name was reused in the later battleship Шаблон:Ship, also designed by Huin.Шаблон:Sfn

Characteristics

The two Charles Martel-class ships were to have been Шаблон:Cvt long at the waterline, with a beam of Шаблон:Cvt. Charles Martel was to displace Шаблон:Cvt, while Brennus was to have been slightly lighter, at Шаблон:Cvt; both vessels' draft was to have been Шаблон:Cvt. They were steel-hulled vessels. Their propulsion system was to have consisted of three marine steam engines of unrecorded type, each driving a screw propeller. Their engines were rated to produce a top speed of Шаблон:Convert from Шаблон:Convert.Шаблон:Sfn

The ships' primary armament was to have consisted of four 340 mm guns carried in individual mounts in the French lozenge arrangement.Шаблон:Sfn The guns fired Шаблон:Cvt high-explosive shells filled with melinite with a muzzle velocity of Шаблон:Cvt.Шаблон:Sfn These would have been supported by a secondary battery of eight Шаблон:Cvt guns in individual casemate mounts. Close-range defense against torpedo boats would have been provided by seven light auto-cannon of unrecorded type. The ships would have been protected with compound armor; their belt was to have been Шаблон:Cvt, but unlike previous French ironclads, it did not cover the entire length of the hull. An identical thickness covered their main battery barbettes.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Sfn

Footnotes

Notes

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Citations

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References

Шаблон:French ironclads