French ship Indomptable

Five naval vessels have served in the Royal French Navy (Marine Royale Française), the French Navy of the Republic (Marine de la République), the French Imperial Navy  (Marine Impériale Française) and French Navy (Marine nationale française) have been named Indomptable:


 * FRENCH SHIP Indomptable (1789–1805), a double-deck 80-gun ship which fought at the Glorious First of June and the Battle of Trafalgar.
 * Indomptable (1810–1813), a ship captured by the English 38-gun frigate HMS Bacchante (1811).
 * FRENCH IRONCLAD Indomptable (1877–1910), a coastal battleship.
 * FRENCH DESTROYER L'Indomptable (1933–1942), a Fantasque-class destroyer, destroyed in the scuttling of the French fleet in Toulon in 1942.
 * FRENCH SUBMARINE Indomptable (1976–2005), a Redoutable-class submarine.

Insignia
The destroyer L'Indomptable, launched in 1934, was the first to carry the insignia of the French Foreign Legion. The ship's first commander asked Général Paul-Frédéric Rollet to have the Legion as the ship's patron and guardian. The fanion of L'Indomptable was green and red, with the cannons depicted carrying the words "Magenta", "Camerone", "Tuyen Quang", and "Laffaux" (after the battles of Magenta, Camarón, Tuyên Quang and the Aisne – four engagements in which the Legion distinguished itself), and displaying the Legion's grenade as an insignia. The nuclear ballistic missile submarine Indomptable launched in 1974 continued the association.