The exact launch date of
the Flagship of the French fleet, Soleil Royal with its 104 cannons, is a matter of
dispute. Many historians say 1690 whilst others are of the opinion that she was engaged in
combat in the Mediterranean sea as early as the 1670s.
In May 1692 Aun Hilarion de Cotentin, Count of Tourville and Marshal of France, who was Captain of the Soleil Royal, at the same time, achieved his hour of glory.
On the 12th May he sailed
from Brest with a formation fo 45 ships and on May 29th approximately 21 nautical miles
north east of the headland of Barleur, he was confronted by the English and Dutch fleets
with a combined strength of 97 vessels. After a bloody battle lasting 12 hours, it was the
British and Dutch who took refuge in fight after suffering heavy losses. Thereafter three
of the French fleet including the Soleil Royal were hauled up onto the beach at Cherbourg
for repairs.

There they provided a defenceless target for the Dutch and British when the latter
attacked on 2nd and 3rd June 1692 and set fire to the ships. The loss of 18 warships,
especially the flagship Soleil Royal was a serious setback.
However, to speak of the Catastrophe of la Hohue as anglophile authors are inclined to do, is something an exaggeration, since the following year the Count of Tourville was at sea again and defeated 59 English ships at Cape St Vincent on 27th June 1693.
Furthermore, he ensured that France remained Englands most feared enemy at sea for more than a century.
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