Edward O'Bryen
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Edward_O'Bryen an entity of type: Thing
Rear-Admiral Edward O'Bryen (sometimes O'Brien) (c.1753 – 18 December 1808) was a British Royal Navy officer prominent in the late eighteenth century, who is best known for his participation at the Nore Mutiny and the Battle of Camperdown, both in 1797 during the French Revolutionary Wars. At the Nore, O'Bryen had recently been given command of the ship of the line HMS Nassau when the mutiny broke out. Although he was not the cause and the crew expressed their affection for him, O'Bryen had to be prevented from throwing himself overboard when his men refused to obey his orders. Just five months later, now in command of Vice-Admiral Richard Onslow's flagship HMS Monarch, O'Bryen led the southern division of the British attack at the Battle of Camperdown, in which a Dutch fleet was destroyed
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Edward O'Bryen
rdf:langString
Edward O'Bryen
rdf:langString
Edward O'Bryen
rdf:langString
Unknown
xsd:integer
25946507
xsd:integer
1071618323
xsd:integer
1770
rdf:langString
United Kingdom
rdf:langString
American Revolutionary War
rdf:langString
French Revolutionary Wars
rdf:langString
*Nore Mutiny
*Battle of Camperdown
xsd:integer
1753
xsd:integer
22
xsd:date
1808-12-18
rdf:langString
Rear-Admiral Edward O'Bryen (sometimes O'Brien) (c.1753 – 18 December 1808) was a British Royal Navy officer prominent in the late eighteenth century, who is best known for his participation at the Nore Mutiny and the Battle of Camperdown, both in 1797 during the French Revolutionary Wars. At the Nore, O'Bryen had recently been given command of the ship of the line HMS Nassau when the mutiny broke out. Although he was not the cause and the crew expressed their affection for him, O'Bryen had to be prevented from throwing himself overboard when his men refused to obey his orders. Just five months later, now in command of Vice-Admiral Richard Onslow's flagship HMS Monarch, O'Bryen led the southern division of the British attack at the Battle of Camperdown, in which a Dutch fleet was destroyed and British supremacy in the North Sea confirmed. Although he was praised for his exertions in the battle, O'Bryen's health was deteriorating and he retired from the Navy in 1803, dying at the rank of rear-admiral five years later.
xsd:string
United Kingdom
xsd:gYear
1803
xsd:gYear
1770
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
7146
xsd:string
HMS Kent
xsd:string
HMS Windsor Castle
xsd:string
HMS Southampton
xsd:string
HMS Adamant
xsd:string
HMS Ferret
xsd:string
HMS Jamaica
xsd:string
HMS Monarch
xsd:string
HMS Nassau
xsd:string
HMS Resistance