Jean Bart-class cruiser

Jean Bart early in her career
Class overview
NameJean Bart class
Builders
Operators French Navy
Preceded byTroude class
Succeeded byAlger
Built1887–1893
In commission1891–1914
Completed2
Lost1
Retired1
General characteristics
TypeProtected cruiser
Displacement
Length109.6 m (359 ft 7 in) long overall
Beam13.3 m (43 ft 8 in)
Draft6.05 m (19 ft 10 in)
Installed power
Propulsion
Speed19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph)
Range7,014 nmi (12,990 km; 8,072 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph)
Complement331–405
Armament
Armor

The Jean Bart class comprised two protected cruisers of the French Navy built in the late 1880s and early 1890s; the two ships were Jean Bart and Isly. They were ordered as part of a fleet program that accorded with the theories of the Jeune École, which proposed a fleet based on cruisers and torpedo boats to defend France. The Jean Bart-class cruisers were intended to serve a long-range commerce raiders to attack enemy merchant shipping. The ships were armed with a main battery of four 164 mm (6.5 in) guns supported by six 138 mm (5.4 in) guns and they had a top speed of 19 to 19.5 knots (35.2 to 36.1 km/h; 21.9 to 22.4 mph).

After entering service, Isly was assigned to the Northern Squadron, while Jean Bart operated with the Mediterranean Squadron until 1895, when she, too, joined the Northern Squadron. That year, Isly was sent to French Indochina, and they were followed by Jean Bart followed in 1898. Jean Bart was present in the Far East during the Boxer Uprising in Qing China the following year, by which time Isly had been transferred to the North Atlantic station. Jean Bart was wrecked off the coast of the Western Sahara in 1907 and could not be refloated. Isly was converted into a depot ship in 1909 before being sold to ship breakers in 1914.