Pride of Queen Anne’s navy took Henry VIII’s Regent down with it in explosion off the coast of Brest

This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

French researchers will the search for the Cordeliere, a huge warship that was sunk during an intense 16th-century battle with the biggest vessel in the English fleet, which also went down.



The Cordeliere, pride of Anne of Brittany’s navy, exploded off the coast of Brest in 1512 after Henry VIII’s armada surprised her France-Brittany fleet during the War of the League of Cambrai.

“What we have under the water here are two of the most significant museums of the 16th century’s maritime history,” said Michel L’Hour, head of France’s marine archeology department. “It’s an underwater Pompeii.”

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The search, set to run from 20 June to 14 July, will cover about 10 square miles stretching from the port at Brest to the promontory at Saint-Mathieu that gave its name to the battle.

Discovering the arrival of the much larger English armada on 10 August 1512, the bulk of Queen Anne’s fleet raced to safety in port. But the Cordeliere, a 40-metre-long vessel armed with 200 cannon, turned to take on the Regent, fending it off for several hours before an explosion of unknown origin engulfed the French vessel, sinking both ships.

Nearly 1,500 people died and the sacrifice by the Cordeliere’s captain and crew acquired mythic status in Brittany’s cultural history.

“As is often the case with ships, the Cordeliere was thrust into history just as it disappeared,” L’Hour said.

A series of searches were carried out from 1996 to 2001 without success. The latest effort is based on a new analysis of archival documents as well as a revised interpretation of possible tidal movements.

The Andre Malraux research vessel will use sonar and magnetometric sensors to map the seafloor, with potential anomalies investigated by divers or robotic devices. “We might find something on the first day, or nothing for five years. But I am firmly convinced, one day we will find it,” L’Hour said.