Action of 3 July 1810 | |||||||
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Part of the Napoleonic Wars | |||||||
Ceylon (far right) at the Battle of Grand Port | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
France | East India Company | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Guy-Victor Duperré | Henry Meriton | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
2 frigates 1 brig | 3 merchantmen | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
22 killed 38 wounded |
20 killed 76 wounded 2 merchantmen captured |
The action of 3 July 1810 was a minor naval engagement of the Napoleonic Wars, in which a French frigate squadron under Guy-Victor Duperré attacked and defeated a convoy of Honourable East India Company East Indiamen near the Comoros Islands. During the engagement the British convoy resisted strongly and suffered heavy casualties but two ships were eventually forced to surrender. These were the British flagship Windham, which held off the French squadron to allow the surviving ship Astell to escape, and Ceylon. The engagement was the third successful French attack on an Indian Ocean convoy in just over a year, the French frigates being part of a squadron operating from the Île de France under Commodore Jacques Hamelin.
Although a British frigate squadron under Josias Rowley was under orders to eliminate the French raiders, Rowley was distracted by the planned invasion of Île Bonaparte, which began the following week. Combined with limited British resources in the region, this allowed the French frigates significant freedom to attack British interests across the Ocean. The attack on Île Bonaparte was however part of a wider British strategy to seize and capture French raiding bases, and the success of the operation severely limited future French operations as Hamelin's squadron was required for the defence of Île de France. As a result, this was the last successful attack on a British merchant convoy in the Indian Ocean during the Napoleonic Wars.