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French ship Ville de Bordeaux (1863)

History
France
Name: Ville de Bordeaux
Namesake: Bordeaux
Builder: Lorient
Laid down: 26 June June 1854
Launched: 21 May 1860
Decommissioned: 14 January 1879
General characteristics
Class and type: Ville de Nantes-class ship of the line
Displacement: 5150 tonnes
Length: 71.7 metres (235 ft)
Beam: 16.8 metres (55 ft 1 in)
Draught: 8.0 metres (26.2 ft)
Propulsion:
  • Up to 2,730 m2 (29,400 sq ft) of sails
  • Mangin steam engine, one propeller
Crew: 490
Armament:
  • 14 × 30-pounder riffled guns
  • 48 × 30-pounder smooth-bore guns
  • 16 × 24-pounder howitzers
Armour: Timber

Ville de Bordeaux was a Ville de Nantes-class 90-gun ship of the line of the French Navy.

Ville de Bordeaux conducted trials in 1861 before being put in ordinary. Reactivated under Captain Delangle de Cary in 1862 for the French intervention in Mexico, she served for three years before returning to the ordinary. She was reactivated again, this time under Commander Mer, to bring back the French troops in Mexico back to France.

After the Paris Commune, Ville de Bordeaux was used as a prison hulk in Brest. In January 1880, she was renamed Bretagne and replaced Bretagne as a boys' schoolship, role which retained until 1894, when Fontenoy, also renamed Bretagne, took her place.



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