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Following the events that transpired at [[Sun's floating gambling hall]], John stole another gunboat to save Edward, [[Shimazu Saito]], and [[Xialun Qing]] from Admiral [[Zheng]]'s fleet, which had destroyed the gambling ship. With the help of the [[Zhawang Corporation|Zhang Wei Union]]'s flagship ''[[Fenghuang]]'', which forced Zheng's fleet to retreat, the group ultimately escaped to safety.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]'' – [[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple Episode 39|Episode 39]]</ref>
Following the events that transpired at [[Sun's floating gambling hall]], John stole another gunboat to save Edward, [[Shimazu Saito]], and [[Xialun Qing]] from Admiral [[Zheng]]'s fleet, which had destroyed the gambling ship. With the help of the [[Zhawang Corporation|Zhang Wei Union]]'s flagship ''[[Fenghuang]]'', which forced Zheng's fleet to retreat, the group ultimately escaped to safety.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]'' – [[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple Episode 39|Episode 39]]</ref>
During the same period, the [[Japan]]ese [[mercenary]] [[Nagamasa]] and his pirate crew also commanded a gunboat, which they used in their [[raid]]s throughout the [[Philippines]].<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]'' – [[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple Episode 80|Episode 80]]</ref> After allying with the Zhang Wei Union, Nagamasa and his men used their ship to assist the Union's members on several occasions, such as saving Edward and John from the [[Sultanate of Sulu]],<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]'' – [[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple Episode 92|Episode 92]]</ref> pursuing an [[East India Company]] [[Man O' War]] to the [[Strait of Malacca]] to recover a [[Piece of Eden]],<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]'' – [[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple Episode 108|Episode 108]]</ref> and fighting through a naval [[Blockade of Indochina|blockade]] near the coast of {{Wiki|Indochina}}.<ref>''[[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple]]'' – [[Assassin's Creed: Forgotten Temple Episode 116|Episode 116]]</ref>


==Notable gunboats==
==Notable gunboats==

Revision as of 19:44, 25 August 2025

British gunboat attacking a merchant ship

A gunboat is a small watercraft armed with one or more guns for the purpose of bombarding coastal targets or harassing larger warships. In the 18th century, European naval forces like the Royal Navy, the Spanish Navy, French Navy, and the Portuguese Navy all included gunboats in their fleets to support their capital ships.[1][2][3]

Description

From the War of Spanish Succession to the Seven Years' War and the American Revolutionary War, the gunboat was used as a quick response attack vessel by not only the navies but civilian operators as well. This was due to its extremely simple design that required very little crew. This lightly armed vessel provided ample speed and a quick rate of fire, with the trade-off being that it bore next-to-no armor whatsoever. Each ship was composed of a single mast and a sleek, low hull, and was capable of fielding just two frontal guns, capable of shooting both the standard round shot and the wide-spray grapeshot.[1][2][3]

Due to their sparse protection and tiny profile, gunboats were highly vulnerable to ramming by larger vessels like frigates, brigs, or Men O' War, almost always being instantly rent asunder by their bows. Single shots from swivel guns would be enough to destroy any gunboat of this era. Their sole function was to act as the naval equivalent of skirmishers, carrying little to no cargo other than ammunition. While fragile and weak in firepower, a common tactic by navies in an age where watercraft were made from wood was to convert these gunboats into fireships which were then sent careening into large enemy ships in the hope of setting them aflame.[1][2][3]

History

In June 1716, the French pirate Alonzo Batilla was given command of a gunboat, the Serpent, by Captain Olivier Levasseur, after the latter saved him and Jumao from John Barnes' captivity.[4] Alonzo and Jumao used the Serpent for a time, until eventually replacing it with a schooner called the Wanderer, which they seized from the Royal Navy.[5]

John Young's gunboat

In February 1725, the Dutch East India Company navigator John Young defected from the company to rescue the British Assassin Edward Kenway from an ambush by Shimazu clan ninja at Macau's harbor, and stole a gunboat, using its cannon to dispatch Edward's assailants.[6] John subsequently kept the ship, using it several times to sail Edward from Zhang's village, where they had both taken refuge, to Macau and back.[7][8][9][10] At one point, Edward and John also used the gunboat to thwart a pirate attack on Lee Huiyin's merchant fleet.[11]

Following the events that transpired at Sun's floating gambling hall, John stole another gunboat to save Edward, Shimazu Saito, and Xialun Qing from Admiral Zheng's fleet, which had destroyed the gambling ship. With the help of the Zhang Wei Union's flagship Fenghuang, which forced Zheng's fleet to retreat, the group ultimately escaped to safety.[12]

During the same period, the Japanese mercenary Nagamasa and his pirate crew also commanded a gunboat, which they used in their raids throughout the Philippines.[13] After allying with the Zhang Wei Union, Nagamasa and his men used their ship to assist the Union's members on several occasions, such as saving Edward and John from the Sultanate of Sulu,[14] pursuing an East India Company Man O' War to the Strait of Malacca to recover a Piece of Eden,[15] and fighting through a naval blockade near the coast of Indochina.[16]

Notable gunboats

Appearances

References