The Battle of Trafalgar: A Historic Naval Triumph

Slide Note
Embed
Share

In 1805, the Battle of Trafalgar secured British naval supremacy and thwarted Napoleon's invasion plans. Admiral Horatio Nelson led the British fleet to victory, although losing his life in the process. The battle, marked by strategic maneuvers and fierce engagements, saw the British capturing enemy ships and establishing dominance at sea. This pivotal event reshaped European naval dynamics and elevated Nelson to national hero status.


Uploaded on Jul 16, 2024 | 1 Views


Download Presentation

Please find below an Image/Link to download the presentation.

The content on the website is provided AS IS for your information and personal use only. It may not be sold, licensed, or shared on other websites without obtaining consent from the author. Download presentation by click this link. If you encounter any issues during the download, it is possible that the publisher has removed the file from their server.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 21 October 1805

  2. The Build up to the Battle In 1803, Napoleon was planning an invasion of Britain To succeed he needed to control the English Channel, but Britain has a much stronger navy and much better sailors and leaders (e.g. Horatio Nelson) In 1804, Spain joined France against Britain Napoleon hoped to use the combined Spanish & French fleets to gain control of the Channel

  3. To Fool Nelson. The British tried to blockade the French & Spanish fleets in their harbours The French Admiral, Villeneuve managed to evade Nelson and sailed for the West Indies in March 1805. The plan was to meet up with the other French and Spanish fleets. In August the combined fleets (29 ships) sailed westwards back to Europe They arrived off Cadiz (Spain) on 20thAugust The French had eluded Nelson and now had a strong fleet a threat to British superiority in the Channel

  4. The Battle Opening Moves Villeneuve left Cadiz on 19thOctober Nelson moved to block the French from entering the Mediterranean. The French fleet sailed in line astern On the morning of 21stOctober the two fleets sighted each other Nelson ordered his fleet to attack in two columns He ordered his famous signal to be flown England Expects That Every Man Will Do His Duty At12 noon the opening shots were fired

  5. The Battle Close Action The Victory & The Royal Sovereign led the columns and were the first to engage the French- Spanish fleet The Victory sailed past the Bucentaure and crashed into the Redoutable Other British ships began to engage the French in vicious broadsides At 1.15, Nelson was shot in the shoulder and was carried below deck It was obvious the wound was fatal. Slowly, the British got the upper hand as more and more enemy ships struck their colours By about 4.00pm the battle was won Nelson died at 4.30 pm Thank God I have done my duty

  6. The Battle The Aftermath The victory for the British was soured by the death of Nelson He was THE hero of the time a national celebrity 18 French or Spanish ships were captured by the British British losses = 449 Killed, 1241 wounded French/Spanish losses = 4408 Killed and 2545 wounded Trafalgar secured British naval supremacy and ended the threat of invasion Forced Napoleon to change his strategy Nelson legend French did re-build their fleet but never engaged the British on such a scale again

Related