Trafalgar campaign

Trafalgar campaign
Part of the War of the Third Coalition
Battle of Trafalgar
Battle of Trafalgar

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The Battle of Trafalgar, by Clarkson Frederick Stanfield
DateMarch – November 1805
Location
Result British victory
Belligerents
First French Empire France
Spain Spain
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland United Kingdom
Commanders and leaders
First French Empire Pierre Villeneuve  Surrendered
First French Empire Honoré Ganteaume
First French Empire Pierre le Pelley  Surrendered
Spain Federico Gravina  
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Horatio Nelson  
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Cuthbert Collingwood
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Robert Calder
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Richard Strachan
Strength
70 ships of the line[a] 56 ships of the line[a]

The Trafalgar campaign was a long and complicated series of fleet manoeuvres carried out by the combined French and Spanish fleets; and the opposing moves of the Royal Navy during much of 1805. These were the culmination of French plans to force a passage through the English Channel, and so achieve a successful invasion of the United Kingdom. The plans were extremely complicated and proved to be impractical. Much of the detail was due to the personal intervention of Napoleon, who as a soldier rather than a sailor failed to consider the effects of weather, difficulties in communication, and the Royal Navy. Despite limited successes in achieving some elements of the plan the French commanders were unable to follow the main objective through to execution. The campaign, which took place over thousands of miles of ocean, was marked by several naval engagements, most significantly at the Battle of Trafalgar on 21 October, where the combined fleet was decisively defeated, and from which the campaign takes its name. A final mopping up action at the Battle of Cape Ortegal on 4 November completed the destruction of the combined fleet, and secured the supremacy of the Royal Navy at sea.