Today's featured article
Courbet was the lead ship of her class of four dreadnought battleships, the first ones built for the French Navy. In World War I, after helping to sink the Austro-Hungarian protected cruiser SMS Zenta in August 1914, she provided cover for the Otranto Barrage that blockaded the Austro-Hungarian Navy in the Adriatic Sea, and often served as a flagship. Although upgraded several times before World War II, by the 1930s she was no longer considered to be a first-line battleship and spent much of that decade as a gunnery training ship. A few weeks after the German invasion of France on 10 May 1940, Courbet was hastily reactivated. She supported Allied troops in the defence of Cherbourg during mid-June. As part of Operation Catapult, she was seized in Portsmouth by British forces on 3 July and was turned over to the Free French a week later. She was used as a stationary anti-aircraft battery and as an accommodation ship there. (Full article...)
In the news
- A fire heavily damages Notre-Dame Cathedral (pictured) in Paris.
- The Scaled Composites Stratolaunch, the largest aircraft by wingspan, makes its maiden flight.
- Beresheet becomes the first private mission to reach the Moon, but crashes during an attempted landing.
- Omar al-Bashir is deposed as President of Sudan in a coup d'état after nearly 30 years in office, amidst mass protests against his government.