'Jean de Vienne' (
1341,
Dole -
1396,
Nicopolis) was a
French knight,
general and
admiral during the
Hundred Years' War.
As a young nobleman, he started his military career at the young age of 9, and was made a knight at 21. Aged 24, he was made
Captain-General for the
Franche-Comté. He was the governor of
Calais when the city was taken by the
English king
Edward III, and was taken prisoner.
In
1373,
Charles V made him ''Amiral de France''. He reorganised the Navy, started an important programme of construction, created a coast guard, navigation police, organised watches along the coasts, and attributed licences for building and selling of ships.
Jean de Vienne was one of the first to understand that naval operation only could do harm to England, and he conducted several expeditions to Rye and Wight.
Between
1381 and
1385, he fought against the
Dutch, notably during the
battle of Rosbec. In 1385, he landed in
Scotland with 180 ships to invade England, but was forced to retreat.
After
Charles VI succeeded his father Charles V to the Throne of France, the Navy tended to decay, since Charles VI did not share his father's concern for naval affairs. Probably disappointed, Jean de Vienne joined the crusade of King
Sigismund of Hungary against the
Turks. He was killed during the
battle of Nicopolis, in
Bulgaria.
Several ships of the
French Navy were named after Jean de Vienne; among them:
★ a ''La Galissonniere'' class cruiser: completed 1937, scuttled at Toulon in November 1942
★ the
F70 type frigate
FS Jean de Vienne (D643), completed 1984 and currently in service