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Notes
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This shows the beginning of the action on 3 May 1810, between the British ship ‘Spartan’ and the Neapolitan frigate ‘Cérère’ with her consort, in the Bay of Naples. On 1 May the British ships ‘Spartan’ and ‘Success’ chased a Neapolitan squadron inside the mole at Naples. It consisted of the ‘Cerere’ the ‘Fama’ the ‘Sparvievo’ and the ‘Achille’. Captain Jahleel Brenton, captain of the ‘Spartan’, assuming that the enemy would not come out to fight two British frigates, sent the ‘Success’ off to rendezvous on the 2 May. In fact the Neapolitan squadron did decide to fight having embarked 400 Swiss troops into the ‘Cerere’ and ‘Fama’. So when the ‘Spartan’ approached Naples early on 3 May Brenton saw the enemy squadron sailing out to meet him, supported by seven gunboats.
In the centre of the painting the ‘Spartan’ is shown firing her port broadside into the Neapolitan ships. They are shown on the left, passing ‘Spartan’ and firing at her. They are led by the ‘Cerere’ on the left of the painting followed by the ‘Fama’ and ‘Sparviero’. Beyond and to the right of the ‘Spartan’ the cutter ‘Achille’ is shown firing into her as she brings up the seven gunboats in the right background. Naples can be seen in the distance and provides a backdrop for the action. The painting is signed and dated ‘Thos. Whitcombe 1810’.
Title
HMS 'Spartan' and French Frigates: Beginning of the Action, 3 May 1810
Date
1810
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 63.5 x W 99 cm
Accession number
BHC0594
Acquisition method
National Maritime Museum (Greenwich Hospital Collection)
Work type
Painting