Battle of Anholt
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Battle_of_Anholt an entity of type: Thing
La bataille d'Anholt, qui se déroula le 27 mars 1811, est une bataille amphibie qui se solda par une lourde défaite pour les Danois. Un monument en souvenir de la bataille est aujourd'hui situé dans le village d'Anholt.
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The Battle of Anholt (25–27 March 1811) was a successful British military operation under the command of James Wilkes Maurice against the Danish-held island of Anholt under the command of Jørgen Conrad de Falsen, taking place during the Gunboat War, a conflict between the United Kingdom and Denmark-Norway that was part of the wider Napoleonic Wars. It was an attempt by the Dano-Norwegians to recapture Anholt, a small Danish island off the coast of Jutland which the British had captured in 1809. Early in the Gunboat War, the Dano-Norwegians had closed their lighthouse at the easternmost point of Anholt. In January 1809, the bomb-vessel Proselyte, which the British had stationed off Anholt to act as a lighthouse, struck Anholt Reef and sank. On 18 May 1809, the 74-gun Third Rate HMS Standard
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Battle of Anholt
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Bataille d'Anholt
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Battle of Anholt
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1802883
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An aerial view of the island of Anholt
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Denmark–Norway
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James Maurice
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Battle of Anholt
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1811-03-27
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the Napoleonic Wars
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British victory
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The Battle of Anholt (25–27 March 1811) was a successful British military operation under the command of James Wilkes Maurice against the Danish-held island of Anholt under the command of Jørgen Conrad de Falsen, taking place during the Gunboat War, a conflict between the United Kingdom and Denmark-Norway that was part of the wider Napoleonic Wars. It was an attempt by the Dano-Norwegians to recapture Anholt, a small Danish island off the coast of Jutland which the British had captured in 1809. Early in the Gunboat War, the Dano-Norwegians had closed their lighthouse at the easternmost point of Anholt. In January 1809, the bomb-vessel Proselyte, which the British had stationed off Anholt to act as a lighthouse, struck Anholt Reef and sank. On 18 May 1809, the 74-gun Third Rate HMS Standard, under Captain Askew Hollis, led in a squadron that also included the frigate Owen Glendower, and the vessels Avenger, Ranger, Rose, and Snipe. Together they captured the island. A landing party of seamen and marines under the command of Captain William Selby of Owen Glendower, with the assistance of Captain Edward Nicolls of the Standard's marines, landed. The Danish garrison of 170 men put up a sharp but ineffectual resistance that killed one British marine and wounded two; the garrison then surrendered. The British took immediate possession of the island. The Danish army had a larger fighting force than the British, but a lack of planning and supply failures led to a devastating defeat and many Danish casualties. As a result of the battle, the Royal Marines won many supporters among senior naval officers, which helped to further their cause for fairness in terms of service and officers' promotion. After the battle, the British occupation of Anholt continued until peace was signed at the Treaty of Kiel in 1814. There is a monument commemorating the battle in the village on the island.
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La bataille d'Anholt, qui se déroula le 27 mars 1811, est une bataille amphibie qui se solda par une lourde défaite pour les Danois. Un monument en souvenir de la bataille est aujourd'hui situé dans le village d'Anholt.
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United Kingdom
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Denmark–Norway
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1811-03-27
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British victory
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1,000
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381
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1 brig-sloop
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1 frigate
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1 schooner
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18 gunboats
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2 transports