Battle of Copenhagen (1801)
The Battle of Copenhagen (danish: "Slaget på Reden", Battle at Reden) was a naval battle fought on 2 April 1801 by a British fleet under the command of Admiral Sir Hyde Parker, against a Danish fleet anchored just off Copenhagen. The main attack was led by Admiral Horatio Nelson, who famously disobeyed Parker's order to withdraw and destroyed many of the Danish ships before the Danes agreed to a truce.
The battle was due to multiple failures of diplomacy in the latter half of 1800 and the beginning of 1801; an Armed Neutrality of the Scandinavian countries and Russia, in combination with Napoleon's domination of the European continent, was perceived by Great Britain as a serious threat to her existence. However, the Danes were themselves more afraid of Russia and France.
In early 1801, the British government assembled a fleet at Yarmouth, with the goal of intimidating the Danish before the Baltic Sea thawed and released the Russian fleet from its bases at Kronstadt and Revel (now Tallinn). The fleet sailed on 11 March and reached the Skaw on 17 March.
A disagreement between Parker and Nelson saw Nelson's proposal for a pre-emptive show of force overruled and the demands made by a single frigate; the Danish refused to negotiate. The Danish had prepared for the attack and placed a line of defensive blocking ships along the western side of the harbour.
The Copenhagen road was both treacherous, and well-defended. With 12 of ships with the least draft, Nelson picked a way through the shoals and commenced action the morning immediately after negotiations had broken down.
For over four hours, the battle was a close run affair with three British vessels stuck on sandbars. At one point three hours into the battle, Parker signalled to Nelson to disengage, but Nelson ignored the signal. It was on this occasion that Nelson is said to have put his telescope to his blind eye, and maintained he could not read the signal.
Eventually, following an extensive shelling of harbour and nearby buildings, Nelson offered surrender terms to which the Danish agreed.
This was not to be the end of Danish difficulties with the British. In 1807 similar circumstances led to another British attack, in the second Battle of Copenhagen.
(to be added)
Background
The battle
Aftermath
The ships
Danish ships, Fischer's division
Danish ships, Steen Bille's division
British ships, Nelson's squadron
British ships, Parker's
Reference