I guess I'll have to be the party pooper here (Sorry about that...) First of all, a great many compliments to DP for an overall well-executed drawing! But, with regards to the La Couronne (1636) I would be remiss (even though I'm semi-retired from SB) to let pass on a few remarks about both the ship and drawing:
So, this image should properly be labelled something like "La Couronne (1636) according to Vice-Admiral Paris (1908), since this image and, for instance the plastic kit by Heller, the wooden ditto by Corel etc all are based on this venerable naval officer's interpretation, and "decryption" of a few copper plate images, one sewn and stiched gobelain. The Paris' originals can be found in a long-out-of-print work called: "Souvenirs de marine. Collection de plans ou dessins de navires et de bateaux anciens ou modernes existants ou disparus avec les éléments numériques nécessaores à leur construction", printed between 1882-1908. A previous foliante edition was published in 1877. The author was Vice Amiral François-Edmond Pâris (1806-93), meaning that the last three volumes out of six were compiled and published after his death.
The importance here lays in the claim whether the ship portrayed really is the La Couronne. Even today, there has been no absolute positive identification, save Admiral Paris' claims to that effect. Also, the ship is invariably claimed as having carried up to 72 guns, which might have represented her maximum allotment (though unlikely), since warships of the day were frequently carrying a far fewer number of guns than officially registered for (One example is the Henry, ex-Dunbar, which carried from 64 guns up to 82 guns, between her commissioning in 1656 till her accidental fire in 1682!). A more recent "on average" calculation puts the Couronne's numbers of gun to a more modest and also realistic 56. This may have been the number of guns as planned for upon commissioning in 1638. We know a source that claims a certain "La Couronne" participating in Bishop Henri de Sourdis' naval expeditions against the Spanish in Rousillon in 1638-39 carried only 52 guns! The gunport configuration of the Paris' drawings seems to indicate that no more than about 56-58 guns could realistically be carried, which easily could explain the later number of 40, since guns were hard to forge and the French were hard pressed to divert whatever guns they had to the armies of the Prince d'Enghien and Duke Bernhard of Weimar, fighting in Germany together with the Swedes against the Imperials and Spanish!
The boast of 72 guns could as easily be explained by Richelieu's desire to have, at least a couple of ships worthy of the English 1st rates Sovereign of the Seas and Prince Royal (which, when commissioned did not carry more than 55 guns!) and second-rates such as Constant Reformation, Triumph, Victory, James, Swiftsure, Rainbow etc, which all carried gun numbers from 42-64 at the time.
It should be noted that with the famous "Le Grand St Louis" (Grand Vaisseau du Roi) of 1626, and her four near-siblings, France had such ships available, being armed with between 48 - 56 guns of varied sizes.
As for the image itself, besides the misleading caption, the shading around the stern section and stern post appers to me somewhat crude and inaccurate. The aft stern, float plane would be gently flared out from the base of the keel towards the top of the stern post, ending up at the conventional flat "cruiser" stern. The present shading does not appropriately represent this.
_________________ My Avatar:Петр Алексеевич Безобразов (Petr Alekseevich Bezobrazov), Вице-адмирал , царская ВМФ России(1845-1906) - I sign my drawings as Ari Saarinen
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