What's the most important naval battle in your nations history?

What's the most important naval battle in your nations history?

For the U.S. it's the Battle of the Midway Islands
>tfw 4 carriers sunk

Other urls found in this thread:

youtube.com/watch?v=M65mswPJN80
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Jutland
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Leyte_Gulf
youtube.com/watch?v=mgwo5dwNaMg
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Colachel)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Sound
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Santa_Cruz_de_Tenerife_(1797)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_of_9_August_1780
youtube.com/watch?v=suY06PVK_bI
twitter.com/SFWRedditGifs

The obvious one for my flag is pretty boring, so I'm going to say something from the Dutch wars or the battle of the Sluys

Actium is up there too

You lost against the Dutch.

First war no, second and third yes, fourth war no

Sadly it was a loss.
Here's the soundtrack.
youtube.com/watch?v=M65mswPJN80

Probably an unnamed battle during the reconquest attempts by Spain

Angamos, in 1879
Sink one ship (Unión) and captured one of the ot powerful ships of the Peruvian Navy
>tfw when we still have Huascar anchored at Talcahuano

how is that a naval battle bitch

It was a sea of blood

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I would say pic related, it gave us free access to the Uruguay river during all the war, plus we used those 12 captured vessels to enlarge our navy and defeat again the brazilians in Ituzaingó and Carmen de Patagones.

Vuelta del obligado too, not exactly a naval battle but it was pretty badass

that battle where we sank a kiwi boat

>The obvious one for my flag

you mean trafalgar?

gravelines/Spanish Armada is pretty obvious too, as would be jutland or the battle of the atlantic

>you mean trafalgar?
Yeah was easily the winner just thought it would be too obvious

Obviously lepanto but im going to post this one anyway

Looks like nips were completely incompetent.

>Huascar
I want to visit Chile to see this.

I can't think of a single battle, but the Battle of the Atlantic in WW2 was by far the most important campaign the Royal Canadian Navy ever participated in. There were no single decisive battles involving Canada, though, mostly U-Boats vs convoy escorts.

Battle of the Chesapeake

How was that decisive in any way?
You even got all our warships to help you...
Here's a better one

>lepanto

almost forgot that spain saved the world for a second

Not a battle, but small portion of the RN assembled for fleet review in 1902

The battle was irrelevant to some point.
The ottomans would never set foot in Italy.

It still meant that the Ottomans were btfo of the Mediterranean.

Nothing beats pic related tho

aboukir bay 2bqh

It's still sad that the christian kingdoms didn't focus on getting land from the turks.I guess Venetians only cared about the shekels

>The Swedes had a long tradition of seamanship and maintained a strong navy, and were able to land troops from the Swedish mainland at will along the south Baltic shore. They were also able to blockade Poland's ports, the most important of which was Danzig, maintaining a stranglehold on Polish trade. On 28 November 1627, a small, newly formed Polish fleet emerged from Danzig to engage the Swedish blockading squadron.

>The Polish ships were more numerous: numbering ten in all, but were mostly small, and only four galleons had full combat value. The Polish vessels were commanded by Admiral Arend Dickmann in the galleon Sankt Georg (Święty Jerzy). The Swedish squadron numbered six vessels, under Nils Stiernsköld in his flagship the Tigern. The Polish vessels had a larger complement of marines on board than the Swedish ships, and this in large part determined the tactics employed in the action.

>tfw your country cannot into naval battles

No idea whether this is the most important, but as far as I know it's the largest a German navy ever fought.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Jutland

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>Zerg rush Empire #102
lel

Portuguese are fucking hardcore

>How was that decisive in any way?
Well you know, that battle practically ended the war.
>It's still sad that the christian kingdoms didn't focus on getting land from the turks.I guess Venetians only cared about the shekels
It's hard to focus in the turks when you have an autistic french king as neighbour and other autistic german priest causing revolts in the middle of Europe.

This comes to mind, though Germany never really had a chance in the Pacific.

>The Castilian fleet was anchored in a harbor near Mina when the Portuguese fleet initiated an attack early in the morning. The Castilians were caught by surprise and ended up being quickly and totally defeated
Now sure that's a great battle.

yeah

Jutland wasn't a bad showing.

What about Falklands?

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The v*netians were the reason why Europe had a T*rk problem in the first place

that's not even remarkable.

Yeah,defeating spanish is normal

>The Ottomans would never set foot in Italy

Except they literally did.

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It was quite important though, after the battle Spain was forced to sign the Treaty of Alcacovas which made the crown accept Columbus offer to find a new route to India

>35 ships vs 18
>casualties unknown
>french ships
>french commander
yeah, great spanish fleet you have there

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Leyte_Gulf
this is more important desu

Underrated /his/ bro. Word.

Post picture idiot

Only shitholes celebrate naval victories to be honest. Proper countries celebrate heros that died trying.

Funny you say that when more than half of the invincle armada was portuguese.
Worthless pigs you are

nah

There you have the reason why it was a failure

faggot.

It was called the invincible armada for a reason.

what if your hero died trying but also won

oui !

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That's the best thing that could ever happen to a seaman, and he should be honoured by his nation
t. sailor

youtube.com/watch?v=mgwo5dwNaMg

he is

Then he becomes the GOAT

Battle of Colachel (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Colachel)

>Dutch got BTFO'd

Also here's that Spanish flag today

Where is that? Imperial War Museum?

delet

Based

This battle is the largest naval battle ever fought in the Baltic Sea.

It also brought an end to the last serious war against Russia, so in essence this is the battle that told them they weren't taking Sweden. 40% of Russia's fleet was capsized and permanently halted Catherine the Great's expansion at sea.

>The Nelson's column has bronze plates made from captured French guns

The french admiral was a retard, and the worse is that he escaped only to commit sudoku in France

We completely raped the Russians even though they had more guns and more men.
They stood no chance against the mighty Swedish fleet. .

Eyyyy kek. Saved me the trouble.
Thanks.
>kek the ruskies got their asses crushed

the french ships that survived were captured by Spaniards who allied Britain

I don't think there was a bigger humiliation in french history

Definitely the Battle of the Sound, where the sneaky Dutch saved Denmark from utter destruction.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_Sound

can't argue with that

>On 22 April 1806, he was found dead at the Hôtel de la Patrie in Rennes with six stab wounds in the left lung and one in the heart:[4] a verdict of suicide[5] was recorded.

Yeah... suicide

I reckon a spaniard got him

that's a big flag

This is what happens when Nelson fought spaniards.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Santa_Cruz_de_Tenerife_(1797)

>get btfo in every single level
>still the spaniards have the honor of give you ships so you can return to your home

>Nelson himself had been wounded in the arm, which was subsequently partially amputated: a stigma that he carried to his grave as a constant reminder of his failure.

>Nelson dies in the battle
>the spanish commander dies from the wounds
>the French commander commits suicide later

Collingwood died of Cancer

five seconds in wiki

""""suicide""""

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_of_9_August_1780

>The Spaniards captured 52 of 55 British vessels, making it one of the most complete naval captures ever made.

This was relevant in the sense that helped burgers in their rebellion against the rosbifs and eventually their revolution would inspire the ones in Latin America. And again, spanish honor at its finest.

>The great kindness of the Spaniards makes our situation scarcely felt, as everything is done by them to alleviate our misfortune; and we have never yet felt that we were prisoners
>Officer of East Indiaman Hillsborough, Cádiz, August 25, 1780

>This is what happens when Nelson fought spaniards.
lmao, more like this

It's not the first time someone stabs his own heart to commit suicide. The frog just sucked at stabbing.

> In terms of total tonnage of ships involved, this was the largest surface battle.

Did not know this.


I'd say the Battle of the Atlantic
youtube.com/watch?v=suY06PVK_bI

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>7 (seven) times

Napoleone obviously had him murdered

And? This is a naval battle thread.

Are you retarded?

>Implying that it wasn't the ghosts of Nelson and Gravina.

Battle of Gaugamela probably.

We never got back on our feet after it and had to move to Poland.

>Are you retarded?
No you are. That's the entire war. Which was fought on land as well.
The one I depicted was the naval battle it self.
In which Russia got raped.

MY

BYLI

We had a lot of victories against the Dutch and the Berbers but no one wants to remember them because it was when we were a republic during the Commonwealth

So it was russian suicide.