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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Admiral Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald, Marquess do Maranhão, GCB, ODM (Chile) (14 December 1775 31 October 1860), styled Lord Cochrane between 1778 and 1831, was a senior British naval flag officer and radical politician. He was a daring and successful captain of the Napoleonic Wars, leading the French to nickname him ''Le Loup des Mers'' (''The Sea Wolf'' or ''The Wolf of the Seas''). He was dismissed from the Royal Navy in 1814, following a conviction for…mehr

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Admiral Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald, Marquess do Maranhão, GCB, ODM (Chile) (14 December 1775 31 October 1860), styled Lord Cochrane between 1778 and 1831, was a senior British naval flag officer and radical politician. He was a daring and successful captain of the Napoleonic Wars, leading the French to nickname him ''Le Loup des Mers'' (''The Sea Wolf'' or ''The Wolf of the Seas''). He was dismissed from the Royal Navy in 1814, following a conviction for fraud on the Stock Exchange and he then served in the rebel navies of Chile, Brazil and Greece during their respective wars of independence. In 1832, he was reinstated in the Royal Navy with the rank of Rear Admiral of the Blue. After being promoted several times following his reinstatement, he died in 1860 with the rank of Admiral of the Red, and the honorary title of Rear-Admiral of the United Kingdom. His life and exploits served as inspiration for the naval fiction of nineteenth and twentieth-century novelists, particularly C. S. Forester''s Horatio Hornblower and Patrick O''Brian''s Jack Aubrey.