French ship La Couronne (1636)

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Career Kingdom of France French Navy Ensign
Builder: Charles Morieur
chantiers de La Roche Bernard
Laid down:
Launched:
Commissioned: 1636
Decommissioned: 1645
In service: 1631
Out of service: 1645
Status: scrapped
General Characteristics
Displacement:
Length: 52 metre hull, 10 metre-long bowsprit
Beam: 14.30 metres
Speed:
Complement: 643 men
Armament: 68 guns

La Couronne (French for "crown") was an emblematic ship of the French Navy built by Richelieu.

La Couronne was the first man of war built by the French themselves in accordance to Richelieu's plans to renew the French Navy, after a series of ships built by the Dutch. The contruction was overseen by the famous carpenter Charles Morieur, from Dieppe. She one of the most advanced units of her time. She bore 68 heavy guns, 8 firing to the bow and 8 to the aft, an unusual feature until Dupuy de Lôme redesigned naval artillery.

The Couronne took part in the siege of Hondarribia in 1638, and another expedition to Spain in 1639 under Henri de Sourdis.