French Gold Coins 50 Euro 2012, Great French Ships L'Hermione

French Gold Coins 50 Euro Great Ships Hermione

Commemorative coins of France 50 Euro Great French Ships
French Gold Coins 50 Euro 2012, Great French Ships - L'Hermione

COLLECTION OF "GREAT FRENCH SHIPS"

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The Hermione
Constructed in Rochefort in the 18th century, the Hermione is the French frigate which sailed General La Fayette to the United States to join the insurgents in 1780. A replica is currently under construction and should be launched in 2012 to re-enact this historical journey. The Hermione is represented on the obverse, with wind in all her sails, upon a stormy sea. This representation is crowned by a rope-design frieze. King Louis XVI's coat of arms is reproduced below the boat's hull. The reverse is a composition which is common to all the sailing ships and is featured on all five coins. The ship's helm and jibs are clearly visible. The Hermione's bow is depicted on the front sail.

Denomination : 1/4 oz
Artist : Monnaie de Paris
Weight : 8,45 g
Diameter : 22 mm
Mintage : 1500
Metal : Gold 920/1000
Proof : Proof
Vintage : 2012
Face value : 50 Euro
Price (incl. taxes): 420.00 Euro

French frigate Hermione (1779)
The Hermione was a 12-pounder Concorde class frigate of the French Navy. She became famous when she ferried General Lafayette to the United States in 1780 to allow him to rejoin the American side in the American Revolutionary War. She grounded and was wrecked in 1793.
In 1997, construction of a replica ship started in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France; the new ship is named French frigate Hermione.
Hermione was built in eleven months at Rochefort, by the shipwright Henri Chevillard as a light (French: légère) frigate, fast and maneuverable. Between May and December 1779 she underwent successful sea trials in the Gulf of Gascony under the command of Lieutenant de Latouche.
General La Fayette embarked at Rochefort on 11 March 1780 and arrived in Boston on 28 April carrying the then-secret news that he had secured French reinforcements (5,500 men and 5 frigates) for Washington. She got underway again on 2 June and suffered serious damage in the fierce but indecisive Action of 7 June 1780 against the 32-gun HMS Iris, under James Hawker.
Hermione received the American Congress on board in May 1781. She fought several times in company with the Astrée, commanded by Lapérouse, especially at the Naval battle of Louisbourg on 21 July 1781.
After the end of the American Revolutionary War, Hermione returned to France in February 1782. She then formed part of a squadron sent to India to help Suffren against the British. However peace was declared and the ship returned to Rochefort in April 1784.
Again in service against the British, on 20 September 1793, she ran aground off Croisic, and was then wrecked by heavy seas. The court-martial consecutive to the wreck found her pilot, Guillaume Guillemin du Conquet, responsible for her loss; her commanding officer, Captain Martin, was honourably acquitted.

In 1997 a reconstruction project started in Rochefort. The new ship is named Hermione
In April 2015, a full-size replica of the Hermione frigate plans to make a return voyage to the United States from Rochefort, France, according to a November 10, 2013 report in The New York Times. Stopping at ports from Yorktown, Mount Vernon and Philadelphia to New York and Boston, Hermione’s itinerary is meant to reaffirm the historic relationship between the United States and France.