French ship Jean-Jacques Rousseau
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French ship Jean-Jacques Rousseau

1795 Téméraire-class third-rate ship of the line


Country of Registry
France
Inception
1795
Operator
French Navy
Vessel Type
third-rate, Téméraire-class third-rate ship of the line
Aliases
French ship Marengo, Marengo, HMS Marengo, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau

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The French ship Jean-Jacques Rousseau was a Téméraire-class 74-gun ship of the line, constructed at Toulon with her keel laid in September 1794 and launched on 21 July 1795. As a member of the prominent Téméraire class, she featured the typical design of French 74-gun ships, which balanced firepower with maneuverability. In October 1796, under Captain Racord, she was part of Villeneuve's squadron that sailed from Toulon to Brest, marking her early service in the French Navy. In 1802, she was renamed Marengo, signaling a shift away from revolutionary ideals under Jean-Jacques Rousseau towards the Bonaparte era. The vessel played a notable role in the Indian Ocean, departing Brest in March 1803 as the flagship of Admiral Linois's squadron, aiming to take possession of Pondicherry, which France had been awarded in the Treaty of Amiens. Her squadron included frigates and troopships, carrying 1,350 soldiers under General Decaen. Marengo’s service was marked by active engagement in the ongoing conflicts between France and Britain. She participated in raiding British settlements, capturing merchant vessels such as Charlotte and Upton Castle in August 1804, and engaged in combat during the Battle of Vizagapatam in September 1804, where she was involved in a four-hour exchange with British forces and required extensive repairs afterward. Her operational history includes capturing British ships off the coast of Ceylon and participating in various skirmishes throughout the Indian Ocean. In 1806, during her return voyage to France, Marengo engaged in the Battle of 13 March 1806, where she was captured by the British Royal Navy after an engagement with Vice-Admiral Sir John Warren’s division. The British then commissioned her as HMS Marengo. She served as a prison hulk from 1809 until her breaking up in 1816, marking the end of her maritime career. Her service history underscores her role in French naval operations during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, exemplifying the tactical and strategic importance of 74-gun ships of the line during this era.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

5 ship citations (0 free) in 4 resources

Marengo (80 guns), Taken in the Atlantic from the French by LONDON and AMAZON on 13 Feb. 1806. Broken up in 1816. Subscribe to view
Marengo (ex Jean Jacques Rousseau, French, 1795) Subscribe to view
Marengo, 1806-1816, 3rd Rate 74 ex-French prize Subscribe to view
Marengo, British third rate ship of the line (1806) Subscribe to view