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  1. Sir William Sidney Smith (Westminster, 1764 – Paris, 1840), entré dans la Royal Navy en 1777, fut fait prisonnier en 1795 et resta deux ans au Temple après avoir été chargé par l’Amiral Hood d’incendier la flotte française dans le port de Toulon. Il dirigea la défense de Saint-Jean-d'Acre contre les Français, forçant Bonaparte à ...

  2. Admiral Sir William Sidney Smith (1764-1840) (Updated, April 2024) Over life-size marble statue, the sitter bare-headed, facing forwards but looking and imperiously pointing slightly down to his right with extended right arm. His left arm stretches back behind to support him on one of several pieces of ruined masonry and his left leg rests ...

  3. > biographical memoirs of sir william sidney smith, grand cross of the royal military swedish order of the sword, and commander The Naval Chronicle Containing a General and Biographical History of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom with a Variety of Original Papers on Nautical Subjects

  4. 18 de jul. de 2023 · The Life and Correspondence of Admiral Sir William Sidney Smith GCB is a biography of the esteemed British naval commander, written by John Barrow. This book chronicles Smith's naval accomplishments and his strategic role in major conflicts such as the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.

  5. 11 de jun. de 2018 · He died in Paris and was buried in Père-Lachaise. Richard A. Smith. *Smith, Sir Sidney* (1764–1840). Admiral. Smith entered the navy in 1777 and saw action in the American War at Cape St Vincent (16 January 1780) and off the Chesapeake (5 September 1781). In 1785–7 he studied French at Caen [1] before spending a year with the Swedish navy.

  6. Sidney-Smith a tenté à de multiples reprises de propager la calomnie, la diffamation et la corruption en France et en Europe dans le but de subvertir les intérêts français. William Sidney Smith, plus connu sous le nom usuel de Sidney Smith, né le 21 juin 1764 à Westminster, Londres et mort le 25 mai 1840 à Paris, est un amiral britannique.

  7. Sir William Sidney Smith. British Admiral. 1764-1840. Another daring Royal Navy officer, Sir William Sidney Smith proved a perennial thorn in the side of both Republican and Imperial France during the long wars. His early career saw him at the battle of Cape St Vincent and Toulon, where he scuttled the bulk of the French ships before the ...