WIKIPEDIA
FRISIA
HMS
LUTINE
Hms
Lutine, sunk during an autumn storm on the Dutch coast, near the
island of Vlieland. The fregat carried gold and silver to pay the
British allies in Germany. part of the royal treasure were on board
as well. Officially, nothing much has been found, the shipwreck was
accessible in the years immediately after the disaster. then the
wreckage disappeared under sands of the “Waddenzee”.
Maybe
some of the content of the Lutine could have been looted. Anonymous
tales point at pe.rsons or families on the island, who suddenly
became rich in the years after the vessel stranded
Lutine
was a frigate
which served in both the French
Navy
and the Royal
Navy.
She was launched by the French in 1779. The ship passed to British
control in 1793 and was taken into service as HMS
Lutine.
She sank among the West
Frisian Islands
during a storm in 1799.
She
was built as a French Magicienne-class
frigate
with 32 guns, and was launched at Toulon
in 1779. During the French
Revolution,
Lutine
came under French
Royalist
control. On 18 December 1793, she was one of sixteen ships handed
over to a British fleet at the end of the Siege
of Toulon,
to prevent her being captured by the French
Republicans.
In 1795, she was rebuilt by the British as a fifth-rate
frigate with 38 guns. She served thereafter in the North
Sea,
where she was part of the blockade
of Amsterdam.
Lutine
sank during a storm at Vlieland
in the West
Frisian Islands
on 9 October 1799, whilst carrying a large shipment of gold. Shifting
sandbanks
disrupted salvage attempts, and the majority of the cargo has never
been recovered. Lloyd's
of London
has preserved her salvaged bell – the Lutine
Bell
– which is now used for ceremonial purposes at their
headquarters
in London. The employees rang the famous bell, when they heard, that
the BISMARCK was sunk.
Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten