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"198 December" - must have been a heck of a leap year ;)
"The ship began trials on 28 December before she was sent to Crete on 16 February 1897 as part of the French contingent of the International Squadron deployed there during the Greco-Turkish War to protect Western interests and citizens and remained with the squadron until 25 February 1898" - this is a bit too long. I'd probably split it after "interests and citizens".
As an aside, it looks like Chanzy was an unlucky name - the steamer SS Chanzy was grounded in 1896 and later wrecked in 1910 off Minorca.
Feron's article only says that Chanzy returned to the Levant on 30 October and remained near Mytilene until January 1902. These dates don't precisely match up with Caresse's account in Warship 2013 so I not sure if she was actually assigned to the squadron, which moved around quite a bit, or if she acted as guardship at Mytilene while the French occupied it. Without further clarification, I'm not willing to add that to the article. Thanks for digging up the court-martial info, my sources disagreed on the date of the grounding and, as it seemed pretty unlikely that the crew would remain aboard the ship for 9 days without it being recoverable, I went with the one that gave a later date for the grounding. Feron also doesn't mention any reboilering, so I'm not sure if it happened or not. I don't think that I would have wanted to be aboard either ship given their histories. Thanks for the review.--Sturmvogel 66 (talk) 02:35, 23 September 2014 (UTC)Reply