Talk:French ironclad Gloire

Latest comment: 1 year ago by 2A00:23C7:3119:AD01:49C5:967A:1826:AC3B in topic Image gallery

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Both the article and links to it say the ship's name is "La Gloire". Is the feminine article actually party of the official name? If not, "La Gloire" is wrong, because in French, ships are male. It would be "le Gloire". -- 213.172.121.249 00:59, 1 September 2005 (UTC)Reply

The ship name is indeed "La Gloire" as indicated in the Illustrated London News caption. In French, the word ship is indeed masculine ("un bateau"), but individual ship names can be feminine or masculine (cf FS La Motte-Picquet, La Fayette (F710). Somebody changed the name of the article to "FS Gloire" a while ago, but it should be "FS La Gloire". In any case "Le Gloire" is not possible. PHG 01:14, 1 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
Sorry to be direct, but your examples are bollocks : you managed to pick both examples among names of people.
Better examples are La Gracieuse or La Glorieuse ("the Gracious one" and "the Glorious one", respectively). Typically, when commons names used for a ship name, the "le/la" is not part part of the name : "S606 Perle" (not "La Perle"). English speakers tend to put "le/la" everywhere for a good and a bad reason :
  1. Good reason : it is tricky because of the substantivied adjectives (La Glorieuse, Le Redoutable). In these cases, the "le/la" sems to be part of the name
  2. Bad reason : its "sounds" French (to non-speakers). These kind of people also capitalise randomly, put accents anywhere, confuse é with è, and even cedillas. I hate them. :)
Besides, you are right : "Le Gloire", never ever. Rama 10:08, 14 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
I just went to the Musee de la Marine last week, and the ship is designated as "La Gloire" although GLOIRE is put in italics and LA is not. Ex: "MISE A L'EAU DE LA FREGATE LA GLOIRE". What do you think? PHG 10:24, 14 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
The placement of the italics suggests that the name is "Gloire". On the on the hand, I have never seen her refered to as, for instance, "la frégate Gloire", but always as "la frégate la Gloire" (on the other hand, you do say things like "le chaland de débarquement Rapière") ; I suspect that la Gloire is some sort of exception. Frankly, names of ships can be tricky. Rama 12:14, 14 September 2006 (UTC)Reply
PS: did you enjoy the museum ? Have they opened all the rooms ? Last time I went, a part of the museum was under repairs and I could not see the models of ships of the line of Louis XV and Louis XVI, I was so frustrated... Rama 12:18, 14 September 2006 (UTC)Reply

I've just added that the La Gloire's armour was backed with 17inches (43cm) of timber. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.22.206.163 (talk) 14:51, 29 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

Sorry

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This article states: "However La Gloire was soon herself rendered obsolete by the launching in 1860 of the British HMS Warrior, the world's first iron-hulled warship." Of course, the first USS Michigan was actually the world's first iron-hulled warship, launched in 1843 and commissioned in 1844, well over a decade before either La Gloire or Warrior. The description of La Gloire is correct in that she was the first "ocean-going" ironclad, but sorry, Warrior was not the first iron-hulled warship, perhaps if you added the qualificatino "ocean-going" then you'd be accurate. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.51.66.32 (talk) 15:45, 10 June 2013 (UTC)Reply

Service history - Wartime

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Since she was in the French fleet during the Franco Prussian war, it would be good to see a sentence or two to cover her role in that war. ϢereSpielChequers 11:51, 29 December 2018 (UTC)Reply

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An image of la Couronne (as modified to a gunnery school ship) is included in the gallery. I feel that it doesn't belong here, but what do others think? Couronne was not a half-sister or "near-sister" to Gloire, being of a different form and construction as designed and completed. Furthermore, she has her own article. Considering that the Gloire and sisters were never converted for school ship use (nor were the later and much more similar Provence-class ships) I feel that the image adds nothing to this article. 2A00:23C7:3119:AD01:49C5:967A:1826:AC3B (talk) 16:52, 16 September 2023 (UTC)Reply