In 1592 AdmiralYi Sun-sin put armor plates on his "tortoise-ships". These protected the sides and top from bullets, arrows and fire. This allowed his small fleet to be victorious in several battles with the esefleet.[2] The first Western ironclad battleship, "Gloire", was launched by the French Navy in November 1859.[3] The British Admiralty had been considering armored warships since 1856. They prepared a draft design for an armored corvette in 1857. In early 1859 the Royal Navy started building two iron-hulled armored frigates, and by 1861 had made the decision to move to an all-armored battle fleet. After the first clashes of ironclads (both with wooden ships and with one another) took place in 1862 during the American Civil War. It became clear that the ironclad had replaced the unarmored ship of the line as the most powerful warship afloat. This type of ship would come to be very successful in the American Civil War.[4]
By the 1870s, ironclads were the main warships of the world's most powerful Navies.[5] But the ironclad era only lasted about 50 years. By the 1890s most sailing ironclads had been replaced by modern battleships.[6]
↑Jack Greene; Alessandro Massignani, Ironclads At War: The Origin And Development of The Armored Battleship, 1854–1891 (Boston: De Capo Press, 1998), p. 16
↑Sondhaus, Lawrence. Naval Warfare 2011–2015ISBN0-415-21478-5, pp. 73–4.