'''Characters mostly as they were portrayed in the TV series, with dabs at the books.''' ''Spoilers ahoy! Major spoilers are unmarked.''

[[foldercontrol]]
!! Main Characters
[[folder:Hornblower]]
!!Horatio Hornblower
!!!Actor: Creator/IoanGruffudd
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Horatio_250_Hornblower_3179.png]]
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The hero, Horatio starts as an uncertain and awkward midshipman but quickly displays a knack for innovation and leadership that sets him rising up the ranks. Despite his abilities, he continually doubts himself.
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* TheAce: Nearly everybody is taken with him and foresees his great future in the Navy. He has some doubts about himself, which makes him a bit of a {{Downplayed}} BrokenAce. Ultimately, he's as good as it gets and he inspires nothing but absolute loyalty in his men.
* AdaptationalAttractiveness: In the novels, Hornblower considers himself something of a KavorkaMan (though his viewpoint is admittedly subjective). In the TV series and film, he's played by the likes of Creator/IoanGruffudd and Creator/GregoryPeck.
* AlliterativeName: '''H'''oratio '''H'''ornblower. His friend Duchess of Wharfedale likes to call him "Mr Aitch".
* AwesomenessByAnalysis: He uses analysis and planning carefully as his primary method of gambling, seamanship and war. It also makes him an excellent whist player.
* BadassBookworm: He reads a lot, and is not afraid to use it! In the book, he's known to read about the places where they sail ahead of time to inform himself properly.
* CardGames: He's an excellent whist player. In "The Even Chance", Simpson accuses him of cheating and he takes it as a chance to challenge him for a duel. In "Loyalty", he uses his skill to win some money when naval officers starve on a half-pay.
* TheCaptain: He's got his first command of a captured ship in "The Even Chance". He's visibly chuffed when Matthews addresses him as 'captain', and his division regularly call him that when they're on a mission away from the Indy.[[note]]All officers in command of a vessel are called 'captain' as a matter of courtesy, no matter their rank, but in Hornblower's case it's through respect as well.[[/note]] He starts as Midshipman, continues as Acting Lieutenant and Lieutenant, and finally gets promoted to the rank of Commander. The third (and thus far final) series ends when he's promoted to Post Captain.
* CombatPragmatist: He has a strong sense of honour but he does not hesitate to employ some dirtier tricks when he fights British enemies. War is war, and he intends to win.
* CowardlyLion: Every time he sends whatever ship he's on into and out of the fire, he's constantly second-guessing himself and feels like he's lying to his admiring crew because he doesn't give them any hint how honestly frightened he is of being killed or maimed.
* CunningLinguist: He studied Latin and Greek, speaks very good French, and learns Spanish while imprisoned in Spain, and he uses his knowledge of these languages in his naval service.
* DeathGlare: His eyes are quite expressive, and it's very lucky for some sailors, captains and admirals including, that literally speaking his look cannot kill.
* DressingAsTheEnemy: He could have patented this morally dubious strategy. He used it several times in Series One, sailing under foreign ensign in the first episode and later wearing French uniforms to try and slip through a Spanish fleet. (The latter fails.)
* EmbarrassingNickname: Their fellow midshipman of a bully calls him "Snotty" and his wife Maria calls him "Horry". The first one is clearly meant to be offensive, but Maria genuinely doesn't know that he dislikes hers. In the books, his crew uses "Old Horny".
* GoodWithNumbers: He's an extremely skilled mathematician. It's handy during his navigational exercises, when he plays cards and when he plans his strategic attacks.
* TheHero: Why, the show is titled ''Hornblower''!
* HeroicSelfDeprecation: He beats himself up over nearly every decision he makes. Despite being one of the finest promising officers in the Royal Navy, he has a hard time imagining that people meant their praise seriously. This feature of his is much more prominent in the book, where the reader is privy to every self-loathing thought.
* HeterosexualLifePartners:
** In the first and second series, he's best friends with his fellow middie/fellow lieutenant Archie Kennedy. Archie is the first person Horatio meets in the Navy and they get really close. Horatio saves Archie's life when Archie's desperate and decides to die in Spanish prison. Archie saves Horatio's life on a mission when he drags him from a bridge that's about to be blown up. Their relationship is ''deep''.
** In the third series, his closest friend is Lieutenant William Bush. They meet in series two aboard ''Renown'' and bond when they struggle together to save the ship commanded by a crazy Captain, and later even more so when they take over the Spanish fort and capture Spanish ships. He agrees to become his First Lieutenant on ''Hotspur''. Mr Bush is Hornblower's closest friend in the book 'verse, but still - they're not ''too'' close because Hornblower is a rather distant person.
* IGaveMyWord: His word binds him and he would never break his promise.
* InnocentlyInsensitive: When he offers to pay Maria's bills in Series 3, she warns him that she couldn't keep her reputation because there is a word for a woman who takes money from a man. He cheerfully says that word is "friend".
* InSeriesNickname: When a character has several InUniverse nicknames, you know he's really popular: "Snotty" by Jack Simpson, "Mr. Aitch" by the Duchess, and "Horry" by Maria.
* IronicFear: He's a naval officer who's prone to sea-sickness and who's really afraid of heights. He has to climb on masts and in the riggings quite lot, or jump from high cliffs.
* KavorkaMan: In the novels, Hornblower doesn't really ''get'' why women like him. ''Four'' known women fall in love with him during the books through little to no active effort of his own. One even ''tells him'' he's an easy man for women to love. The last one was a teenage girl who fell in love with him ''the second she met him''.
* TheKnightsWhoSaySquee: His reaction to meeting Captain Foster is dangerously close to squeeing. Foster enjoys his admiration and is taken with the promising acting lieutenant. Horatio ends up disillusioned when Foster takes some beef from Horatio's quarantine ship; he realizes that Foster doesn't care about anyone's life and has no sensible sense of caution (like: don't take beef from a ship that might be carrying the actual Black Death).
* LikeASonToMe: He arrives on Captain Pellew's ship with a bad reputation, but Pellew is satisfied with the result after testing his actions. From there he treats Hornblower as his protege, and his regard for the young officer grows to barely-concealed affection. The final episode/telefilm has Pellew spelling it out in nearly explicit terms by saying to the newly-promoted Captain Hornblower, "You know, Hornblower, it is very hard for a father to see his children grow up." (Hornblower, however, is a little oblivious in personal matters and it sails right over his head.)
* ManlyTears: He cries rather [[InelegantBlubbering inelegantly]] at the end of "The Frogs and the Lobsters".
* MoeCouplet: Reserved, serious, unemotional Horatio is paired with cheerful, high-spirited, outgoing, sarcastic Archie.
* MrFanservice: Shirtless scenes, being wet, swimming and diving, having a shower on deck completely naked, you name it!
* NervesOfSteel: He can hold his nerves very well and most of his plans work out because he's patient and careful.
* NewMeat: He's beyond green during the first part of "The Even Chance" when he comes aboard ''Justinian''. Luckily he has some time to adapt, but he has the worst first day ever -- he vomits while the ship is harboured and his fellow middies mock him. Suffering from sea-sickness and fear of heights also sound like excellent disposition for a sailor. On top of that, he has to deal with a sadistic bully.
* NoSenseOfHumour: A {{Downplayed}} example, but it's definitely a part of his personality. It takes him some time to figure out a sarcasm, but it gets to him. He tried to tell a mathematical joke about a bridge being slightly bigger that a river, and he did crack up some successful jokes. For example, when he suggested to the recovered Archie that he was going to call an inn-keeper and order him a proper English breakfast while they were in a bloody prison, or when he poked fun at Mr Bush's dislike of turnips.
* NotSoStoic: He usually doesn't show his emotions but when he breaks down, it's a major crisis.
* ObfuscatingStupidity: When adrift in "Even Chance," he asks the French captain to promise his crew's good behavior, then asks "what did they say?" after the captain orders his men to wait for the opportune moment to strike. The captain smugly believes he has a naive midshipman hoodwinked, and French-speaking Hornblower immediately enacts a contingency for the inevitable moment the French seize the boat.
* ObliviousToLove: Oblivious to Maria's romantic feelings for him, to Pellew's fatherly love, to Bush's admiration and affection for him in Series Three.
* PluckyMiddie: He's older than he should be when he starts his naval career and the first scenes left viewers wonder whether he is plucky or not. But he is, and very much so, saving the ''Indefatigable'' ''twice'', BigDamnHeroes style, while he still has the rank of a midshipman. He climbs up the officer ladder quickly.
* PowerTrio: FreudianTrio: With Archie Kennedy and William Bush in "Mutiny" and "Retribution". Horatio represents the '''ego''' since he is well-intentioned, heroic, but hesitant to mutiny, and he mediates between Archie and Bush. [[note]]Archie forms the '''id''' as he's quicker to speak up, emotionally driven and reacts instinctively. Bush is calm, rational, observant but not impulsive, and as such, he's the '''superego'''.[[/note]]
* RankScalesWithAsskicking: When he becomes The Captain, one would think that he will be sending his midshipmen and lieutenants to participate in landing parties and their missions. However, he insists that exercise will do him good and rarely stays aboard.
* TheStoic: His default mode. Though beneath his mask, he's rather troubled.
* TallDarkAndHandsome: As far as appearance goes, he's got it all: a tall slender figure, dark curly hair, dark eyes, tanned complexion, and a handsome manly face. However, he's really fairly skinny and by no means a {{Hunk}}, especially when he's younger.
* ThrowingDownTheGauntlet: He challenges Simpson to a duel when he accused him of cheating in cards. He felt kind of suicidal as death would be better that living aboard the ship with Simpson or desertion.
* SarcasmBlind: Generally, Horatio does not understand snarky remarks easily and it takes him a ''veeery'' long time to figure out that somebody is being ironic. However, he gets Archie's snarks quite quickly and they actually bring about most of his fairly rare smiles.
* SmartPeopleKnowLatin: Horatio studied both Latin and Greek before joining the Navy. He's one smart cookie.
* SugarAndIcePersonality: Horatio is reserved and formal with most people, even beyond the point required by naval hierarchy. However, there are a handful of people with whom he shows a warmer side, most prominently with Archie.
* ThousandYardStare: When he's troubled, he tends to stare and he appears unfocused.
* WorthyOpponent: Don Massaredo, Colonel Ortega and Wolfe consider him a worthy adversary. Don Massaredo gains a great deal of respect for Hornblower and refuses to believe that the escape attempt was his idea. Colonel Ortega recognizes his intelligence, astuteness, boldness and courage. Wolfe respects Hornblower considerably as an individual, but despises every single thing that Hornblower stands and fights for.
* WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes: He suffers from a fear of heights, which is established in the first episode, and as a naval officer, he must deal with it a lot. He's shown at least twice to face his fear voluntarily. He climbs a mast once just for the kicks of it to enjoy the sail, and he volunteers himself once during a military operation to descend from a high cliff.
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[[/folder]]
[[folder:Pellew]]
!!Sir Edward Pellew
!!!Actor: Creator/RobertLindsay
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Captain_Pellew_250_Hornblower_3268.png]]
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Captain of the ''Indefatigable'', where Horatio is assigned when war is declared. He soon takes a shine to his new midshipman and remains a mentoring figure throughout each series, to the point of outright favoritism on occasion.
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* AscendedExtra: He was more than an extra in the books and does show affection for Hornblower, but here he is outright fatherly and a prominent feature throughout Hornblower's career.
* TheCaptain: An excellent one; he's strict, just, caring and fatherly. He's considerably less awesome as Admiral though.
* TheChainsOfCommanding: He's well used to them, but we see his own struggles in "The Wrong War" when he receives orders which he knows are not only bad but almost certainly known to the enemy, and has to send his men to carry out the expedition anyway--including Horatio, of whom he is now rather fond. At the end, when Horatio is himself very upset at the disaster, Pellew is sympathetic but instructs him that as an officer he serves not only King and Country but the men under his command, and he must master his emotions to keep up their morale.
* ChewOutFakeOut: He excels in these speeches which are given mainly to Horatio. He starts dressing him down, reprimanding him for breaking rules or not following his orders, and then says how excellently executed Hornblower's action was. Sometimes it's followed by handing him a promotion.
* CompositeCharacter: In the third series, he becomes a composite of himself and Admiral Cornwallis, who oversaw the British blockade for the duration of ''Hornblower and the Hotspur''. Cornwallis was also the one who attended Hornblower's wedding, and some of his dialogue was given to Pellew. (Pellew did appear in the book as a captain in the fleet and hosted the same dinner, but the historical figure attained flag rank and was sent somewhere else in the midst of the book's timeframe and Forester had him depart accordingly.)
* DeadpanSnarker: A delightful example. He snarks a lot and is so deadpan that it takes forever to Horatio to figure it out, and Pellew clearly enjoys putting him on the spot.
* ImprobableAimingSkills: {{Lampshaded}} in "The Even Chance" when he shoots Jack Simpson from a very long distance.
* AFatherToHisMen: He really cares for every single man aboard his ship. He has special fondness for young Hornblower and he considers him one of the most promising young officers. Later Pellew openly admits he holds Hornblower so dear to him as one of his very own (he almost did say "my son").
* HeroicBSOD: He gasps "poor devils!" and stops as their enemy ship's black powder's magazine blows up violently. However, he recovers quickly.
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Pellew,_1st_Viscount_Exmouth Edward Pellew, 1st Viscount Exmouth]]. The fictionalized Pellew's high regard for life does have basis in fact. He once refused to burn two scuttled enemy ships because they contained wounded men, rescued men who fell overboard by swimming out to get them, and his elevation to baronet was for using his swimming skill to bring a line to a foundered merchant vessel, thereby saving many lives.
* LikeASonToMe: He treats Hornblower as his protege and he's very fond of him to the point of favouritism. In "Retribution", when Captain Collins asks about Hornblower, Pellew admits he's so dear to him as... and almost says son, but then changes his wording to "one of my very own". The final installment "Duty" has Pellew spell it out in nearly explicit terms by saying to the newly-promoted Captain Hornblower "You know, Hornblower, it is very hard for a father to see his children grow up."
* MentorArchetype: He's Horatio's mentor with the interesting twist that he sometimes pretends to be furious with him just to mess with him and have some fun.
* MrFanservice: He has some shirtless and getting-dressed scenes.
* OfficerAndAGentleman: He's as capable in social situations as he is in battle, confident, funny, and charming to whomever he's with. He's amazing at the dinner party in "The Duchess and the Devil".
* OhCrap: When Hornblower reports that the port they were to purchase supplies from has been struck with with plague (and that Hornblower's crew has been exposed), Pellew is absolutely horrified and is clearly exerting all his self-control to maintain a collected tone.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: He is a hard captain, but with a strong sense of justice and concern for the lives under his command. Although he never hesitates about bringing the ship into danger, he does not consider ordinary seamen to be expendable, unlike some of his peers.
* RousingSpeech: He can speak very effectively when he wants to cheer his men and put them in action.
* SecretTestOfCharacter: Near the end of ''Loyalty'', he says that the Irish should just put up with the terrible conditions in their country and owe unquestioning loyalty to England (despite England being the cause of those conditions). Hornblower disagrees, and Pellew smiles and expresses [[SoProudOfYou his approval of the way Hornblower has grown up]].
* SinkOrSwimMentor: His first assignment to Hornblower. Pellew is disgusted with the report that Hornblower not only initiated a duel but let another officer fight (and die) for him. However, he also determines to judge Hornblower by his actions rather than rumor and gives him Simpson's old division, an "ill-disciplined rabble," with orders to make them an effective unit.
* TallDarkAndHandsome: He is an older version of this trope. He has a tall and well-built figure (appropriate for a naval captain), dark eyes and dark hair, his complexion is tanned and slightly weather-beaten (he spends his life aboard a ship after all), and his facial features are very fine and quite pleasant.
* TallDarkAndSnarky: He's the non-arrogant, non-evil example that does not need to be redeemed. However, his personality and appearance fits the description. He does not always welcome the Admiralty's plans and snarks both at his superiors or at his crew.
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Kennedy]]
!!Archie Kennedy
!!!Actor: Creator/JamieBamber
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Archie_Kennedy_250_Hornblower_4414.png]]
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Horatio's first friend in the Navy. They meet as midshipmen. After suffering at the hands of Simpson and time in a Spanish prison, he starts to come into his own by the end of the first series and is a capable lieutenant in the second.
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* AscendedExtra: Midshipman Kennedy appears in one relatively inconsequential scene in ''Midshipman'' after Hornblower is transferred to the ''Indefatigable'' and is never mentioned again the book series. In the TV miniseries, he's Hornblower's close friend who gets lots of focus and character development through AdaptationExpansion.
* AlmostDeadGuy: He's severely injured when their ship is taken by escaped Spanish prisoners. He lives long enough to commit a Heroic Sacrifice and falsely testify at their trial to save Horatio's life and career.
* AnyoneCanDie: Not even a cute best friend of the hero is safe in the war.
* BadassAdorable: Manifested especially in the scene after his first battle. He runs to Horatio to babble excitedly about how he "killed two! well, one, certainly!", all covered in blood and looking cute. He gets increasingly more competent in action throughout the series, yet he remains as adorable as ever.
* BewareTheNiceOnes: Archie has a sunny disposition and is never seen being too strict on his men when he's in command. However he really does not like seeing Wellard abused in Series Two; this probably has a great deal to do with the suffering he endured as a midshipman. When Randall, one of the lower-deck sailors and below Wellard in rank, calls the latter "little boy" and mocks him, Archie gives him a pretty epic shout-down. And when Sawyer has Wellard beaten multiple times for no good reason, the rest of the lieutenants are angry at the injustice but he is positively seething.
* BloodFromTheMouth: When Horatio finds out that Archie is injured, he's shattered and just hugs him. Archie tries to cheer him up that it's not as bad as it looks, but the ominous blood coming from his mouth indicates that Archie's dying.
* BreakTheCutie: Jack Simpson made his life on the ''Justinian'' a living hell, and the Spanish jail did not help his spirits either. Poor lamb.
* CatapultNightmare: Jack Simpson obviously haunts his dreams. He wakes flinging himself up and gasping the dreaded name in "The Duchess and the Devil".
* ChekhovMIA: In "The Even Chance", he gets lost in an importantly inconclusive way -- he's lost at sea during a stealth raid, and ''presumed'' dead. He resurfaces as Hornblower and Hunter's cell-mate in "The Devil and the Duchess".
* CompositeCharacter: In the ''Midshipman'' story "The Duel" (partially adapted from "The Man Who Felt Queer"), the sailor suffering a seizure is a seaman named Hales who becomes missing in action after the longboat is lost in the expedition. In "The Wrong War" (adapted from "The Frogs and the Lobsters"), the facetious midshipman is Bracegirdle. Archie gets his lines during the corresponding episode thanks to his expanded role and the fact that Bracegirdle is the first lieutenant in the miniseries.
* ConvulsiveSeizures: He suffers from epilepsy or something similar, and his fits appear to be stress-induced.
* TheCutie: He is extremely attractive, kind, and so darn cute! His cuteness does not interfere with being a competent officer though.
* DeadpanSnarker: To a lesser extent than, say, Captain Pellew, but his smartass comments are quite precise, and he manages to have a straight face. He sometimes laughs or sneers when snarking.
--> '''Archie:''' [to Horatio] From Acting Lieutenant to commander of a dung cart in no more than a step. My career is looking up!
* DespairEventHorizon: He loses his will to live in "The Duchess and the Devil". Being tormented and abused, lost at sea, imprisoned, tortured, constantly overshadowed and surpassed by your friend, and feeling like a burden to your fellows will do that to a guy.
* DisabledSnarker: In "The Even Chance" and "The Duchess and the Devil". Later, he seemed to have recovered from his trauma-induced seizure disorder, but luckily, he kept his snarky commentary tinged with slight self-depreciation.
* DismissingACompliment: He dismisses Horatio's reassurances that he's a capable officer in "The Duchess and the Devil" and "The Frogs and the Lobsters".
* DrivenToSuicide: He decides to starve himself to death when his spirits are completely broken in the Spanish prison. Horatio tries to help and Archie ultimately makes it through.
* DyingMomentOfAwesome: His death was inevitable, being fatally wounded from a battle, so at least he used it to save his friend from the gallows.
* FirstNameBasis: He and Horatio call each other by their Christian names since their first days on the ''Justinian''. He only refers to Horatio with "Mr Hornblower" or "sir" in formal contexts, and when he wants to tease him.
-->'''Archie:''' [saucily] I remember when you used to be scared of heights, Mr Hornblower.
* HeroicSacrifice: Interesting that he does not sacrifice his life as he was fatally wounded and dying anyway, but he sacrificed his honour and his good name which mattered a lot back then.
* {{Foil}}: Archie's cheerful, open manners and sunny disposition contrast with Horatio's reserved and serious nature. He is also in many ways Horatio's alter ego. Horatio from the books is full of introspection, self-loathing and self-doubt, while Horatio of the series has this characteristics in much smaller degree, but Archie openly admits his fears and misgivings. Archie's career in the Navy shows that he is an intelligent and competent person but without Hornblower's extraordinary luck or heroic qualities. When Horatio meets Archie again in the Spanish jail, it humbles him as a reminder that not everything is going swimmingly and that even his career might have been shaped differently. Archie also represents Horatio's conscience as it is him who first voices Sawyer's incompetence, his horrifying mistreatment of Wellard, the injustice, and the lack of discipline on the ''Renown''.
* ForgottenFallenFriend:
** His friendship with Clayton was significant enough but when Clayton dies, Archie appears to be too go-hung and excited by the upcoming war that he barely remembers him. He mentions him exactly once because Horatio mourns Clayton. Archie says that it was Clayton's dream to serve aboard a frigate.
** He himself becomes a forgotten pal to Horatio. Horatio never mentions Archie in "Loyalty" or "Duty", despite the fact that he was clearly established as one of the most important and closest people in Horatio's life. Fans were not pleased.
* GoOutWithASmile: Archie smiles tearfully at Horatio before he dies.
* HealTheCutie: After much suffering and breaking him in "The Even Chance" and "The Devil and the Duchess", Archie gets healed in "The Frogs and the Lobsters" when he deals successfully with his task of defending a bridge, even though he briefly panics. By the second series, he's a self-assured, competent lieutenant and as adorable as ever.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: Horatio and Archie became friends nearly immediately after they had met, and more or less from the ending of "The Duchess and the Devil" they just belong together.
* HiddenDepths: He obviously loves theatre as he claims he knew Drury Lane as if it was his home. He has probably a special love for Creator/WilliamShakespeare because he often quotes or paraphrases him.
* KillTheCutie: There are several scenes in "Retribution" that endear him to the audience even more, only to kill him off and break the audience's hearts.
* InnocentBlueEyes: He has sweet blue eyes. They express his vulnerability, innocence and amiable nature.
* TheLancer: To Horatio's Hero. While Horatio is reserved and melancholy, Archie is friendly and cheerful. Meanwhile Horatio has a natural ability to command while Archie doubts his own abilities as an officer. They encourage each other's good qualities and make up for each other's weaknesses.
* LostAtSea: We don't know much about what he experienced during this time and how he dealt with it. Ultimately, he got captured by enemies which saved his life, but ended up in Spanish prison.
* MrExposition: In "The Even Chance", he explains Horatio and the audience his view on the situation in France, and he also informs us later that the French killed their king.
* MrFanservice: Wet scenes and shirtless scenes, all very nice.
* TheMcCoy: He is the show's heart and soul, especially in "Mutiny" and "Retribution". He's very humanistic, cares about people (like Midshipman Wellard), and he always, always wants to do what is right and just.
* MoeCouplet: Reserved, serious, unemotional Horatio is paired with cheerful, high-spirited, outgoing, sarcastic Archie.
* MoreExpendableThanYou: Archie knows he's dying anyway, so he takes sole blame for the mutiny to save Horatio's life and career. He realized that Captain Hammond had decided that Hornblower would make a great scapegoat.
* MortalWoundReveal: Horatio is worried when he notices that Archie got blood on himself. Archie insists it's just a scratch, but looks sick as hell. Hornblower rips his uniform open and is absolutely horrified and sees how serious Archie's wound really is.
* MotorMouth: He talks super quickly when he's excited. He talks Horatio's ears off when he welcomes him aboard the ''Justinian'' and shows him around.
* NamedByTheAdaptation: In the book, he's addressed only on a LastNameBasis, thus his first name is never given in the book. M'man Kennedy becomes M'man Archie Kennedy. (Interestingly, it's always the diminutive and the full name Archibald is never used in the series.)
* PowerTrio: FreudianTrio: Formed with Horatio and William Bush in "Mutiny" and "Retribution". Archie represents the '''id''' as he's quicker to speak up, he's emotional and intuitive. [[note]]Bush is rational, observant and not impulsive, and thus is their '''superego''', while Horatio's '''ego''' mediates between the other two.[[/note]]
* PrettyBoy: Longish fair hair, blue eyes, a chiselled jaw line, a cutest smile ever, a body to kill for, and Horatio's taller.
* PluckyMiddie: Even though he is slightly prone to panic, he's a very good officer. He's even promoted to Acting Lieutenant and Lieutenant. You go, Archie!
* SecretStabWound: In "Retribution", he tries to keep secret from Horatio that he has been shot. When Horatio notices, he insists that it's just a scratch and not as bad as it looks. It's however just as bad as it looks.
* ShoutOutToShakespeare: Archie seems to be a big fan of the bard. He knows him well enough to quote and paraphrase him.
** When Hornblower and the other midshipmen on the ''Justinian'' await their possible transfer, Archie enthusiastically announces: "We few, we fortunate few! Keene has recommended our transfer to the... ''Indefatigable''!" It very much resembles King Henry's line "we few, we happy few, we band of brothers" from ''Theatre/HenryV''.
** He quoted lines from ''Theatre/AntonyAndCleopatra'' in "The Duchess and the Devil" when he was delirious.
** He mentioned several possible roles of Kitty Cobham: Cleopatra, [[Theatre/{{Hamlet}} Gertrude]], Lady Theatre/{{Macbeth}} or [[Theatre/MuchAdoAboutNothing Beatrice]].
** In "Retribution", he reports the result of Mr Bush's shot on a Spanish ship by shouting "A hit, a hit, a palpable hit!" paraphrasing Osric's "a hit, a very palpable hit" from ''Theatre/{{Hamlet}}''.
* SilentScapegoat: In "Retribution", he decides to take the blame for Captain Sawyer's fall, even though probably nobody ever believes him. He's legally declared guilty and as such, his truly Heroic Sacrifice counts.
* ThousandYardStare: Archie's blank, vacant and unfocused stare into nothingness is one of his trademark looks in the first series.
* TraumaButton: Implied with Archie Kennedy's reaction to Wellard's beatings. Wellard is a young midshipman who suffers the most because of Captain Sawyer's growing paranoia. It is Lieutenant Kennedy who tries to intervene, openly calls it injustice and is visibly upset while other Lieutenants try to hand-wave it at first as Captain's harsher ways and naval discipline. In the first series, Archie was the young midshipman who suffered at the hands of a powerful bully.
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bush]]
!!Lieutenant William Bush
!!!Actor: Creator/PaulMcGann
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mista_bush.png]]
%% [[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mr_bush.png]]
->''"I expect you to know this ship like the back of your hand, or else you shall know the back of mine. Is that understood?"''
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A serious-minded lieutenant who first appears in the second series. Initially unimpressed with Hornblower and Kennedy, he soon realizes that they're the only other competent officers on the ship. Though he's Hornblower's only friend in the books, in the series he forms a PowerTrio with him and Archie.
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* AdaptationalAttractiveness: Bush's appearance in the books is described as craggy, weatherbeaten, and hardbitten. He's played by Paul [=McGann=].
* CrashIntoHello: With Horatio. Twice.
** In "Mutiny," he's only just stepped aboard before Horatio has to tackle him to the deck so that a cargo net doesn't bash into him. Bush remarks on the "interesting welcoming ceremony" and thinks it's a sign of his new comrade's incompetence as an officer.
** Less dramatically, they reunite in "Loyalty" when Horatio knocks into him on the street. Bush snaps at him to watch it until recognition gives in, and then they shake hands warmly.
* CutHisHeartOutWithASpoon: Makes some creative threats to subordinates who displease him, especially Styles.
-->"Learn to cook or I'll cook you."
* DeadpanSnarker: He's sarcastic and very deadpan in his first scene. He continues to speak as such throughout the series.
* DoesNotLikeSpam: Does not like turnips. Never touches 'em.
* FascinatingEyebrow: When Horatio walks off, calling himself a fool for Doughty's "accidentally" being left right where he can escape, Bush just raises an eyebrow as he goes about his own business.
* FirstNameBasis: In "Loyalty" and "Duty", he becomes Horatio's first officer. They start to call each other William and Horatio respectively.
* MrFanservice: There are moments with his shirtless scenes, wet clothes scenes and similar hot stuff.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: The match with Horatio was made in "Loyalty".
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Though not a full-blown jerk so much as strict and reluctant to break discipline. After being at odds with the other officers for much of "Mutiny," he takes note that Wellard is shaking and offers to take the watch so that Archie can get some sleep. Archie elects to stand the watch with him.
* TheLancer: To Horatio's [[TheHero Hero]] in "Loyalty" and "Duty". Bush is a much more conventional officer than his MilitaryMaverick friend, inclined to caution and with a stern adherence to discipline. He's also much more perceptive in certain areas and not prone to self-doubt. This not only makes him an excellent first officer but a good friend to Horatio. His steady nature means he can always be relied on and he's capable of seeing through whatever pointless emotional trouble Horatio is inflicting on himself.
* LoopholeAbuse: At the end of "Loyalty," the flagship signals the retreat. Bush orders Hammond to double-check the signal and use the book, figuring that in the time it takes Pellew will change his mind and give a more preferable order to follow.
* NumberOne: In Series Three, he becomes Horatio's First Lieutenant and is responsible for the crew and that the ''Hotspur'' runs smoothly. He enforces discipline and guards Horatio from having to deal with the minutiae of the ship's operation, whether it's stroppy French officers or deficiencies of the crew.
* PowerTrio: FreudianTrio: With Horatio and Archie in "Mutiny" and "Retribution". He's calm, rational, observant, evaluates the situation but does not act impulsively: he's the '''superego'''. [[note]]Archie represents their '''id''' as he's quicker to speak up or act, emotional and reacts intuitively, while Horatio's '''ego''' mediates between them.[[/note]]
* TheReliableOne: His job in the third series, which he takes ''very'' seriously.
* SixthRanger: In "Mutiny." He's pleased to be serving under the distinguished Sawyer and grows irritated with Horatio and Archie's attitude towards the captain, making them and Buckland mistrustful of him. When he seeks out their mutinous assembly belowdecks, they're frozen until he says that he'd like to join them.
* TheStoic: Somewhat less so than in the books, but he faces most troubles with a straight face. He watches the events through most of "Mutiny" with an impassive expression and won't join in their increasingly open criticism of Sawyer, causing them to mistrust him. In truth he's simply assessing the situation for himself and eventually concludes, like they have, that Sawyer has lost his ability to command a ship.
* TallDarkAndHandsome: He's a very attractive manly man. His wonderful blue eyes contrast nicely with his dark brown hair.
* TallDarkAndSnarky: He is not arrogant or obnoxious, but he's just a really handsome Deadpan Snarker. He can appear intimidating at first, especially to younger officers -- in Series 2 to Archie and Horatio who are his subordinates as third and fourth lieutenants, as well as Midshipman Wellard, and in Series 3 to midshipmen Jack Hammond and Charles Orrock.
* WouldNotShootACivilian: Finds himself unable to shoot Wolfe in spite of Horatio's order, because the man is unarmed. When Wolfe tries faking it a second time, though, Bush promptly fills him with lead.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Matthews]]
!!Matthews
!!!Actor: Paul Copley
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mattews.png]]
\\
The most experienced man on the lower deck. He offers Midshipman Hornblower some tactful help and advice. He's later promoted to petty officer.
----
* AdaptationExpansion: Appears in two scenes with Styles in ''Midshipman'' and doesn't reappear in any other book.
* AirHugging: He air-hugs Horatio in "Retribution". This trope is often played to feel awkward or express problems showing affection, but this particular Air Hug is the sweetest thing ever.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: He and Styles are nearly inseparable since the very first episode.
* MentorArchetype: He's a very experienced sailor and extremely competent. He can offer valuable insight and a piece of advice to younger seamen, which includes even to young officers. He's very caring and never condescending or patronizing, and always absolutely cool. He's a mentor mainly to Hornblower, and it's very prominent even when Hornblower is a 3rd Lieutenant aboard ''Renown''.
* NoNameGiven: It's just Matthews.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: For the lower deck. As the eldest and most sensible he's their de facto leader in Series 1, and is promoted to petty officer for the next two series.
* SergeantRock: Very much viewed as this, especially in the later series, by both the Officers and Men. So much so that even just after recruiting a full crew, Bush does not even hesitate for a second in noting that they can always make a place for Matthews on their ship. Styles on the other hand...
* TheReliableOne: Easily the steadiest man on the lower deck.
* ShootTheDog: Capable of this when required. In "The Wrong War," he volunteers to light the fuse on the bridge when Kennedy hesitates to do so before Horatio returns--Matthews is fond of his commander but can set it aside to destroy the bridge so that the Republicans can't overwhelm the British.
* ATasteOfTheLash: It's him who leads Bunting through the gauntlet, as boatswain he has to cane Mr Wellard, and he even has to flog his best friend Styles.
* ThoseTwoGuys: With Styles. In the first series, they formed a larger group with other sailors like Finch and Oldroyd, but they fit this trope quite well since "Mutiny".
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Styles]]
!!Styles
!!!Actor: Sean Gilder
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/styles.png]]
\\
A troublemaker, but Matthew's best friend. Styles is surly and sarcastic, but didn't take the Surly Seaman of the Week role until the third series.
----
* AbusiveParents: Mentions that the beating Randall gave him wasn't as bad as the ones he used to get from his dad.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: Styles and Matthews belong together, there is no denying it. They appeared in all three series.
* LethalChef: He's rather hopeless as a Captain's steward in "Loyalty".
* NoNameGiven: His first name is never mentioned.
* SpitefulSpit: He spits on Hobbs and calls him "Judas" after Buckland says that Hobbs will corroborate his accusation against Horatio. When on the stand, however, Hobbs refuses to do so.
* ThoseTwoGuys: With Matthews. They were part of Hornblower's division with Finch and Oldroyd, but they fit this trope since "Mutiny" when Matthews is a boatswain and Styles his mate.
* TookALevelInJerkass: Between series two and three. None of the trouble with Doughty would have happened if Styles hadn't been so jealous of him.
\\
[[/folder]]
!!Series 1
[[folder:Clayton]]
!!Midshipman Clayton
!!!Actor: Duncan Bell
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Clayton_250_Hornblower_4836.png]]
\\
One of the midshipmen on the ''Justinian''. Resigned to Simpson's tyranny until Hornblower turns up and tries to fight back, shaming him into action.
----
* BloodFromTheMouth: Ah, poor Clayton, did we ever know ya? He's shot in the duel with Jack Simpson and the blood pouring from his mouth indicates that he's not going to make it, even tough he does not die instantly.
* DeathIsDramatic: He has a heart-breaking scene with Horatio at his deathbed, explaining why he did what he did.
* ForgottenFallenFriend:
** Averted in "The Even Chance" as Horatio deeply mourns his death...
** ...but played straight later as he's not mentioned in the subsequent episodes at all. Archie in particular seems to forget him right away.
* HopeSpot: The pistols go ''bang'', Simpson yells, and the camera cuts to Clayton's face. He gets out the word "gotcha," but when he adds "bastard", the blood pours out of his mouth.
* LiquidCourage: He drinks from his flask, then goes belowdecks and knocks Horatio out before he takes his place in the duel with Simpson.
* MoreExpendableThanYou: He steps in in the first episode to get Hornblower out of a duel with nasty Simpson. He thinks he should do the dirty work by himself, but he also thinks he can win -- at least in that it's more likely than with inexperienced Horatio. Little does he know...
* NiceGuy: He was sweet and compassionate when he took care of sea-sick Horatio. He suffers a fate of many a Mr Nice Guy by becoming Mr Dead Guy.
* NoNameGiven: Only his surname Clayton is known, even though he's such a prominent character and close to The Hero and his Lancer in "The Even Chance". He uses Christian names when he talks to Horatio and Archie, but they always refer to him as Clayton or Mr Clayton. Interestingly, he also calls the evil Jack Simpson "Jack", but Simpson calls him Clayton.
* PluckyMiddie: He's a midshipman but when he's around and alive, there is no war and his ship is stationed at Spithead. He's probably one of the most senior midshipmen, but he does not stand up to their bully properly, and it shames him that Horatio, a boy much younger than himself, does. He tries to make amends. Archie later mentions that it was Clayton's dream to serve on a frigate like the ''Indefatigable''.
* PercussivePrevention: He [[TapOnTheHead clubs]] Horatio to prevent him from fighting a duel with Simpson.
* SorryThatImDying: The scene at Clayton's deathbed is heart-wrenching. Clayton's sorry he's dying so very young and feels shamed by much younger and inexperienced Horatio who was more courageous when dealing with their nemesis. Clayton says he's sorry he didn't manage to kill Simpson. He thought he had an [[TitleDrop even chance]].
* TooGoodForThisSinfulEarth: He is extremely kind to Horatio and Archie and tries to stand up to Simpson as well as he can, such as in the I-will-trim-the-walls-with-your-brains scene but unfortunately, he is not very effective. He dies way too young and his fate is utterly tragic. Poor guy.
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bowles]]
!!Master Bowles
!!!Actor: Colin [=MacLachlan=]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Master_Bowles_250_Hornblower_3213.png]]
\\
The sailing master of the ''Indefatigable'', higher than an ordinary seaman but lower than the officers. He's a competent, sensible man.
----
* ADayInTheLimelight: Though he is a steady and sensible presence since the first episode, he gets a subplot of his own in "The Wrong War" when he's assigned as Pellew's liason to General Charette and has to make a harrowing escape when the Royalist troops are wiped out.
* DressingAsTheEnemy: He is sent to accompany General Charette to brief Captain Pellew about their progress and success. Nearly everybody in the troop gets killed except him, and the General advises him to disguise himself and return back to his ship, as it is not right to die in a foreign war. Luckily Styles does not shoot him as Oldroyd recognized him in advance.
* MuggedForDisguise: He kills one French soldier from the Republican forces when he needs to return to his ship. Going in British naval uniform would not get him very far in France.
* NoNameGiven: He's only referred to as Mr Bowles.
* OldSoldier: As the ship's Master, he is the highest-ranking [[SergeantRock Petty Officer]], and far more experienced than most of the officers. He often serves an advisory role to the officers as a result.
* PlayingPossum: He plays dead and kills a French soldier whose uniform he needs to disguise himself and return back to his ship. He's British and of the Royal Navy, never mind his playing dirty, which was not a war crime or illegal in the era. In addition, the French soldier was stealing valuable things from the dead and had it coming.
* PutOnABus: He doesn't appear in series two or three, probably because he's still on the "Indy".
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Eccleston]]
!!Lieutenant Eccleston
!!!Actor: Robert Bathurst
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Eccleston_250_Hornblower_7556.png]]
\\
First lieutenant of the ''Justinian'', and later transferred to the ''Indy''. Although he tries to keep discipline, it's an uphill battle.
----
* BloodFromTheMouth: Variation of the trope, as the blood doesn't seem to come from internal bleeding, but his mouth or lips have been cut. Visually it's very much this trope.
* CorporalPunishment: He has Horatio entangled in the ship's rigging when he's certain that Horatio has been fighting, but keeps claiming that he fell. Horatio was fighting, but couldn't tell it was with their resident bully Simpson.
* NoNameGiven: Just his rank and surname is known.
* NumberTwo: First lieutenant on the ''Justinian'', then (briefly) the ''Indefatigable''.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Very much this. He tries hard to get Horatio to tell him who beat him and only resorts to punishment when Horatio refuses. He also takes Horatio seriously when he claims Simpson tried to murder him, promising that it will be sorted back on the Indy. Pity that he dies seconds later.
* YouAreInCommandNow: They dropped a yardarm on him after the cutting-out of the ''Papillon''. He's dying, but manages to delegate command to Horatio. Simpson is the senior midshipman but he was not assigned on the ''Indefatigable''. It was also a reasonable thing to do since Horatio just accused Simpson of trying to murder him, and Eccleston was aware who is more trustworthy.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Chadd]]
!!Lieutenant Chadd
!!!Actor: Roger May
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Chadd_250_Hornblower_470.png]]
\\
Lieutenant on the ''Justinian'' who also transfers to the ''Indy''. His rank is below Eccleston.
----
* NoNameGiven: Just Chadd.
* TheQuietOne: Lieutenant Chadd hardly opens his mouth, and mostly he only grins or looks worried, awed or amused, as the situation requires. He speaks exactly twice. First when he orders his men to fire guns, and second when he gets a splinter in his arm, he allows Doctor Hepplewhite to take care of Hornblower's sailor ahead of him because the poor guy lost his leg.
* CharacterDeath: He dies during a battle after they successfully boarded a French ship.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Hepplewhite]]
!!Dr Hepplewhite
!!!Actor: Simon Markey
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Hepplewhite_250_Hornblower_3463.png]]
\\
A doctor who serves aboard the ''Justinian'' and transfers to the ''Indy'' after the war with France is declared. He also acts as the person who makes sure that the rules are being followed during both Hornblower and Simpson's duel.
----
* TheMedic: He's the surgeon aboard the ''Justinian'' and got transferred to the ''Indefatigable''.
\\
\\
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Hether]]
!!Midshipman Hether
!!!Actor: Richard Lumsden
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hether_250.png]]
\\
A midshipman aboard the ''Justinian''. There are Kennedy, Clayton, Cleveland, newly transferred Hornblower, Simpson and other unnamed midshipmen among his peers. He transfers to the ''Indy'' as well.
----
* BigYes: He gives a Big Yes when Archie tells that they are being transferred to the ''Indefatigable''. Complete with jumping excitedly from a chair and cheerfully hitting the ship's ceiling.
* DeadpanSnarker: Hether presents himself as a snarker in his first scene when addressing rather ill-looking Hornblower.
--> '''Hether:''' And whose pretty ass did you neglect kissing to find yourself among the fleet's forgotten, eh? Well, speak, Apparition!
* NoNameGiven: Just known by his rank and surname.
* PutOnABus: He appears only in the first episode. He doesn't die, so presumably he was transferred to another ship.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Cleveland]]
!!Midshipman Cleveland
!!!Actor: Frank Boyce
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cleveland_250.png]]
\\
A very plump midshipman serving on the ''Justinian'', also terrified by Simpson but forced to do stuff for him when ordered. Transfers to the ''Indy''.
----
* NoNameGiven: He's just known by his rank and surname.
* PutOnTheBus: Appears in the first season, most prominently in the first episode and still is aboard the Indy in the second episode. In the second season, he's out of the picture.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Simpson]]
!!Midshipman Jack Simpson
!!!Actor: Dorian Healy
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Simpson_250_Hornblower_6878.png]]
\\
The oldest midshipman on the ''Justinian'', Simpson is a petty tyrant who dominates all of the junior officers through physical and psychological torment. Everyone is completely cowed by him, until Hornblower decides it'd be better to die in a duel than keep on living with him.
----
* TheBully: He bullies all the other midshipmen, and probably does something much worse to Archie.
* CrocodileTears: He sheds some fake tears when he comes aboard the ''Indefatigable'' after being rescued from the ''Justinian''. Captain Pellew and other officers are visibly uncomfortable.
* DirtyCoward: He's unable to FaceDeathWithDignity and begs for his life when Horatio has right to fire at will at their duel. Horatio's you-are-not-worth-the-powder sneer absolutely psychs him out morally, and he tries to stab Horatio In The Back.
* DuelToTheDeath: He kills Clayton in a duel with pistols who fights by proxy in Hornblower's stead, and another duel with Hornblower marks his demise, even though Hornblower decides for a cruel mercy and spares his screwed life. Captain Pellew shoots him from distance because Jack's going to murder Horatio by stabbing him InTheBack.
* EnemyEatsYourLunch: He takes Horatio's meat from his plate in his very first scene. Archie is forced to inform him that he usually takes the best of their meals, their spirit rations and clean shirts.
* EvilLaugh: He gives horrifying, sneering fits of laugh.
* FaceFramedInShadow: He frequently comes from the shadow when he makes his appearance at the scene. He is a very dark character and pure evil.
* HateSink: The man is a snivelling coward, a sadistic bully, and an apathetic, lazy leader, not to mention an attempted murderer. Simpson is scum, pure and simple. However, true to the trope, viewers love to hate him. He's a compelling villain.
* IKnowWhatYouFear: He finds out that Hornblower is afraid of heights and uses the knowledge to torture him.
* InTheBack: He attempts to murder Horatio by stabbing him in his back. Luckily Captain Pellew intervenes.
* KickThemWhileTheyAreDown: There is no limits to his level of evil. He knocks Horatio down and he looks finished, yet Simpson keeps kicking him pitilessly.
* KubrickStare: He has this creepy and ominous look on the "Indy" when Horatio makes it clear that these are new times and he's not going to bother them anymore. He tilts head down and looks up beneath eyebrows, being half in a shadow.
* TheNeidermeyer: He's a poor officer who likes to delegate his duties to others under him and demands respect he doesn't actually deserve.
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: Simpson beats the living crap out of Horatio, smacks his face against a table, and kicks him mercilessly in the stomach. Horatio's bruised face is a horrible sight after the incident.
* PluckyMiddie: The inverse of this trope. Simpson keeps failing his lieutenant's exam when most midshipmen are able to pass after a couple of goes. He's extremely bitter as a result, since the only way he'll be promoted is by the automatic bump to lieutenant at age ''fifty.''
* PrepareToDie: Before duelling with Hornblower, he takes some time to boast, and actually blabs that he attempted to murder Archie Kennedy.
--> '''Simpson:''' I am going to kill you, Snotty. Just as I killed Clayton. And your little pal Archie.
* {{Sadist}}: He enjoys torturing his fellow middies both physically and psychologically.
* SleepDeprivationPunishment: Torturing people with sleep deprivation is one of his specialities. He orders Archie Kennedy to wake Horatio up every half an hour. When Archie gets a fit, he orders Clayton to take over his "duty". All the more cruel since Archie, Horatio and Clayton are friends. And their exhaustion makes them appear incompetent.
* TattooAsCharacterType: He has an ominous-looking skull tattooed on his hand.
* UnfriendlyFire: Jack tries to murder two fellow midshipmen during a boarding party. He unties a boat with unconscious Archie and shoots Hornblower. Horatio survives, but unfortunately has no proof that Simpson tried to kill him.
* UngratefulBastard: The fact that it's Horatio's boat which saves him from drowning in the wreck of the ''Justinian'' does absolutely nothing to change his attitude.
* VillainousBreakdown: He's usually very calm and enthusiastic in his evil games, but when Horatio informs him that Lt. Eccleston gave him a command of the ''Papillon'', he loses his cool and throws a tantrum, insisting that he is the superior midshipman while stamping his foot. The crew follow Horatio's orders.
* VillainsWantMercy: When his gun conveniently "misfires" during the second duel with Hornblower, he thinks he has killed his opponent. Turns out Hornblower has been shot in his shoulder and will live. When Hornblower is instructed to fire at will, Simpson goes down on his knees and begs Hornblower not to shoot him.
-->'''Hepplewhite:''' You must stand your ground and take fire, Mr Simpson!
-->'''Simpson:''' Don't shoot! No! For the love of God, please don't shoot. Don't shoot me! I beg you!
* YourMom: During the Inquisition scene, Simpson insults Horatio's mother by hinting that she's a prostitute. Horatio is absolutely infuriated.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Keene]]
!!Captain Keene
!!!Actor: Michael Byrne
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Captain_Keene_250_Hornblower_6075.png]]
\\
The ''Justinian's'' elderly commanding officer and (in the series) a friend of Hornblower's father.
----
* TheCaptain: A very frail captain, nearly unable to perform his duties.
* DeadpanSnarker: He snarks quite nicely, and his picking on Simpson is satisfying to watch. (According to the book, this is how he vents the pain from his mortal illness.)
* GratuitousLatin: He enjoys dearly mocking his midshipmen and wonders what ''terrae incognitiae'' (unknown lands) they might have discovered during their navigational exercise.
* IncurableCoughOfDeath: He's a very old and frail man who coughs and wheezes all the time. It's clear that he's dying, and he really ends up dead after the obligatory two thirds of the episode, but interestingly enough, he died when his ship Justinian was attacked and sunk by the French.
* IronicName: Clayton observes that 'Keene' sounds quite ironic for such an old and tired captain.
* SmartPeopleKnowLatin: When Horatio comes aboard, Captain Keene asks him about his education. Horatio says he was a Grecian at school, meaning that he studied both Latin and Greek. Keene promptly tells him that in the Navy there is no use for absolute ablatives and similar stuff. However, there is, apparently. He uses it as a means of mocking his middies with style.
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bracegirdle]]
!!Bracegirdle
!!!Actor: Jonathan Coy
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Bracegirdle_250_Hornblower_6986.png]]
\\
First lieutenant of the ''Indy'', a promotion from his book incarnation. He's a reliable NumberTwo to the captain and offers a few pieces of advice to Hornblower as well. Returns in the third series as a captain whose ship was destroyed.
----
* CompositeCharacter: His ultimate fate seems to hearken back to "Hornblower During the Crisis," when the commander who takes over the ''Hotspur'' after Hornblower's promotion to post-captain runs aground on a sunny day and spends his time in sullen despair until he dies by hastily volunteering for a dangerous operation, hoping to save his reputation.
* DeathByAdaptation: In the books, Bracegirdle is a fellow Midshipman of Hornblower's (Archie often takes on his role in the show) in ''Mr Midshipman Hornblower'' and reappears in ''Hornblower and the Atropos'' as a Flag Lieutenant. In the series he gets promoted to captain, but then dies in an explosion.
* DecompositeCharacter: His role as Hornblower's fellow midshipman and best friend on the Indy are taken over by Archie Kennedy.
* DroppedABridgeOnHim: It would seem he appeared in "Loyalty" just to contrast him with the more successful Horatio. Then they dropped an exploding cannon ball on him.
* FateWorseThanDeath: Reacts to the destruction of his ship this way. Not only did he lose his crew, his career will likely be shattered in the obligatory court-martial.
* TheMentor: Less so than Pellew, but he gives Horatio a few pieces of valuable advice on being an officer while Hornblower is a midshipman.
* NoNameGiven: Only his surname is known, and his rank. He's a Lieutenant and in Series Three a broken Captain.
* NumberOne: He's Pellew's first mate in the first series.
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Oldroyd]]
!!Oldroyd
!!!Actor: Simon Sherlock
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Oldroyd_250_Hornblower_9563.png]]
\\
An ordinary seaman from Simpson's division. Not very bright.
----
* DopeSlap:
** Styles keeps smacking him in "The Duchess and the Devil". He joined Hunter's gang and tried to escape with them, and caused Mr Hornblower's punishment.
** He ducks another one from Styles in "The Frogs and the Lobsters" after he cheerfully yells "Yeah! Vive le Roi!" with the French troops.
* ElSpanishO: He is usually the one who tries to add the flavour of the foreign accent to his native English. It's usually French: "Come along-'ie, French-'ie, this-'A way-'A!" Or "No steal-ie, savvy! You steal-ie, get chop! plenty!! ''damn''!! '''vite'''!!!" The ending is [[PunctuatedForEmphasis properly emphasised]].
* NicknamingTheEnemy: He calls the French sailor a Frenchie in "The Even Chance", and continues to do so in "The Frogs and the Lobsters". He drops some Frogs, too. He has a soft boyish voice and it sounds quite cute.
* NoNameGiven: As most lower-deck sailors, he's only known by his surname.
* PutOnABus: After the first series, he was put on another ship. Or more simply, he was not transferred to the ''Renown'' as other ''Indefatigable'''s men from Horatio's division.
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Finch]]
!!Finch
!!!Actor: Chris Barnes
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Finch_250_Hornblower_35.png]]
\\
An ordinary seaman in the division transferred from Simpson to Hornblower. He saves Hornblower from drowning after Simpson's treachery, but dies of scurvy in the second episode when supplies run low.
----
* BurialAtSea: He gets one, and Matthews tries to raise money for his widow by selling off his stuff.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: He had a close friendly relationship with Bunting. However, it never appeared on-screen and feels like an InformedAttribute.
* IncurableCoughOfDeath: He suffers from it and promptly dies in "The Examination for Lieutenant".
* MauveShirt: Named, likeable, saves Hornblower's life in the first telefilm. So his death of scurvy makes an impact.
* LivingEmotionalCrutch: To Bunting; Finch helped him out when Bunting was first pressed into service. When he dies, Bunting goes off the rails.
* NoNameGiven: He's only known as Finch.
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Foster]]
!!Captain Foster
!!!Actor: Denis Lawson
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Foster_250_Hornblower_971.png]]
\\
A fighting captain regardless of the situation. Foster's reputation for action is well-deserved, but he's reckless and spendthrift with the lives of his men.
----
* AwesomeEgo: In-Universe. He spends a lot of time boasting how he nailed his missions and how awesome he was. His fan-boys aboard the "Indy" agree. Pellew's Mileage May Vary.
* BrokenPedestal: Hornblower's admiration for Foster is dashed when Foster insists on taking meat from Hornblower's supply ship, which is still under quarantine for plague.
* TheCaptain: A fearless captain who has earned his place in history.
* EstablishingCharacterMoment: Taking command of a supply ship with two small rail guns and attempting to do battle with a Spanish ''frigate.'' Courageous? Yes. Unconscionably reckless? ''Also yes.''
* FearlessFool: He certainly doesn't lack for physical courage, as seen when he boards the fire ship. What he ''does'' lack is any sense of caution or consideration for the men under his command.
* {{Foil}}: To Captain Pellew. Foster will take on any enemy but considers the lives of common seamen not worth the trouble of counting. Pellew is himself a courageous fighting captain, but feels a deep responsibility for every life under his command and won't risk them in pointless action.
* InSeriesNickname: Captain "Dreadnought" Foster, the name of his ship and an accurate description of his personality. He fears nothing, not even attacking a ship when he has no chance to win, or taking meat from a plague ship. He's quite a legend in the Navy.
* IOweYouMyLife: After the fire ship incident, he says somewhat awkwardly that he's in Horatio's debt.
* LeeroyJenkins: Attacking a French frigate with a supply ship. The next we see him, he's floating in the wreckage with the few survivors.
* LivingLegend: He's an ultra-famous captain and lots of people aboard the "Indy" admire him immensely, young Horatio included. Pellew is reluctant to join in heaping praise on him and doesn't like Horatio's boundless admiration.
* NeverMyFault: Refuses to consider that maybe his insistence on fighting in every situation can do more harm than good. It's not that he deflects blame for his mistakes, it's that he doesn't acknowledge they ''are'' mistakes and accuses those who disagree with him of cowardice.
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Hammond]]
!!Captain Charles Hammond
!!!Actor: Creator/IanMcElhinney
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Hammond_250_Hornblower_540.png]]
\\
First appears as a member of the examination board for Lieutenant, where he gets into a shouting match with Foster. He shows up again as a naval court judge in Series 2 and finally fulfilling his function as a fighting officer in the third.
----
* TheCaptain: He is a very respected captain. However, not a lot of his commanding abilities or interaction with his crew are shown. His dramatic role in the series is different.
* DrivenToSuicide: He blew his brains out after his cause failed and his nephew is killed.
* HangingJudge: In the second series. He really wants to execute ''someone'' for what happened on the ''Renown'' and zeroes in on Horatio. The fact that Hammond's a spy implies that he saw Hornblower as the most competent officer, and thus the one Britain would most miss.
* JerkassHasAPoint: As unreasonable as his determination to scapegoat Hornblower appears in "Retribution," he was right in that ditching Bush under the walls of the fort without even a "brb sir I think there's a tunnel" was not a good thing to do, since Bush thought he'd genuinely been abandoned and was on the point of surrender by the time Horatio's party turned up again.
* InSeriesNickName: He is known as "Black Charlie" Hammond.
* TheMole: It was revealed in "Loyalty" that he has been secretly working for the Irish resistance his whole life.
* SparedByTheAdaptation: Ambiguously. In ''Hornblower and the Crisis'', Hornblower meets "Dreadnought" Foster again and [[CallBack remembers that Hammond had challenged him to a duel]] after the fire ship incident, and evidently Foster won. Nothing is confirmed, though, and it was common enough for a duel to end in a draw.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tapling]]
!!Mr Tapling
!!!Actor: Ian [=McNeice=]
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Tapling_250_Hornblower_7009.png]]
\\
An officious man from the Diplomatic Service who's sent to negotiate the purchase of rations from Oran.
----
* AssInAmbassador: He's demanding and rude and constantly complains about conditions on naval vessels, but his attitude improves after Horatio puts him to work with the steward.
* CharacterDevelopment: At the start he's a pompous whiner who hates his job and makes Horatio's life that much more difficult. After experiencing the satisfaction of a job well appreciated and seeing Horatio's leadership and bravery, however, he's much more agreeable and even tries to console him about Bunting's death.
* MomentKiller: The crew is having a good old laugh when the treasurer's men pitch over the side of their boat in their desperation to get the gold aboard until Tapling roars "And what did they give us in return?!" The cheerful mood dies immediately.
* NoNameGiven: He's known only as Mr Tapling of the diplomatic service.
* PlayingSick: He claims that he's feeling the plague already when the Ottomans send a boat to collect their payment. Horatio calls his bluff by taking his food, saying "I would consider it my duty to speed your release from this world."
* TookALevelInKindness: He starts as whiny diplomat, but he improves: working in the kitchen and being appreciated brings him satisfaction. And he actually tries to comfort Hornblower when he suffers over the loss of one of his men.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Bunting]]
!!Bunting
!!!Actor: Andrew Tiernan
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bunting_250_hornblower_1883.png]]
\\
Surly Seaman of the Week. Thinks that the officers are still on full rations when supplies run low, tries stealing from the hold, and then attempts to desert after his friend falls victim to scurvy.
----
* BurialAtSea: He was shot on dry land, but Hornblower decided to take his body and give him a sailor's burial.
* BetterToDieThanBeKilled: After two attempts at desertion, he considers Horatio's attempts at recapture to be CruelMercy since he's certain to be hanged. So he'd prefer to be shot here, thank you.
* CanonForeigner: Can be found nowhere in the books.
* DangerousDeserter: Desperate and afraid that they will starve, he starts talking mutiny and decides to desert. He's caught, but Hornblower gives him a chance to prove himself worthy. However, Bunting knows it still means a court-marshal, and he tries to escape whenever he can. He's the only one who tries to mutiny and desert, so he's not that dangerous to the crew.
* PressGanged: Matthews implies that he did not join the Navy quite voluntarily. Matthews also says that Finch helped him settle down.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: He and Finch were close pals, and he suffers a lot when Finch dies. Finch was a prominent lower-deck character and a pal of Matthews, Styles and Oldroyd in "The Even Chance", while Bunting appeared only in "The Examination for Lieutenant".
* NoNameGiven: As most of the common seamen, his first name is never mentioned.
* RememberTheNewGuy: He's mentioned as being a close friend of Finch's, which is why he's so angry over Finch's death, but he wasn't present nor mentioned in "The Even Chance".
* SuicideByCop: When he attempts to desert for the last time, Hornblower catches him and wants to have him court-marshalled, which means he'll swing. Bunting considers it cruel and far worse than dying on the spot. He tries to escape and twists Hornblower's pistol, knowing that it'll force Hornblower to shoot him.
* ATasteOfTheLash: He gets a gauntlet for stealing food when the crew is on half rations.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Hunter]]
!!Hunter
!!!Actor: Christopher Fulford
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Hunter_250_Hornblower_2658.png]]
\\
A fellow midshipman on the ''Indy'', Hunter is the third episode's Surly Seaman. He's violent and antagonistic.
----
* AgitatedItemStomping: Gets angry when the Duchess brings them a basket of fruit when they are in prison. He crushes the basket underfoot and flings the battered fruit into an oubliette.
* BloodKnight: He has to be restrained from shooting every enemy he encounters and seems to enjoy violence. He also runs out of patience very quickly when captured and leads a disastrous escape attempt that involves attacking rather than evading the guards.
* DeathSeeker: Jumps into the water with a still-wounded leg to help a Spaniard get to the boat at the end. It's hard to tell if he's genuinely swept off or if he deliberately let go of the gunwale before Horatio could pull him back in.
* GetItOverWith: After his escape fails and he's shot in the leg, Hunter lies on the ground wailing "lemme die!"
* {{Jerkass}}: Understated, compared to other examples here, but he needles and resents Horatio, plus he's rather violent.
* JerkassRealization: He thinks his bravery and sense of duty are superior to Horatio's until his disastrous escape attempt. Horatio takes the entire blame for the incident, in spite of both Massaredo and Archie pressing him repeatedly to tell the truth, and gets shoved in the PunishmentBox--a conversation Hunter hears in its entirety from the cell. Hunter becomes quite subdued and anxious about how much Hornblower is suffering in his stead.
* NoNameGiven: He's just Hunter or Mr Hunter.
* NotSoAboveItAll: Reckless, resentful, and continually pushing at Horatio's authority--but when the Duchess of Wharfdale comes aboard he's as tongue-tied as the rest and trips over himself as he returns to his duties.
* PatrioticFervor: No Spanish fruit, dammit! It's British beer and beef he wants!
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Duchess of Wharfedale]]
!!Duchess of Wharfedale AKA Katherine "Kitty" Cobham
!!!Actress: Cherie Lunghi
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Duchess_Kitty_250_Hornblower_4715.png]]
\\
Despite her title, or maybe because of it, she's completely informal and enjoys teasing a certain awkward acting-lieutenant when he's asked to bring her back to England. However, she proves that she's willing to put her life on the line for England.
----
* AffectionateGestureToTheHead:
** She gently touches Horatio's face when she teases him about not having any razors to shave himself. That lady knows how to flirt.
** She affectionately strokes Archie's forehead when he lies in bed, slowly recovering from his suicide attempt by starvation. Lucky Duchess and lucky Archie.
* AlliterativeName: Her real name is Katherine "Kitty" Cobham.
* BlueBlood: She is a British duchess, and appropriately titled as "Her Grace". She's quite cheeky and spirited. However, she's no duchess.
* BrainyBrunette: She is an older, but still very sexy brown-haired woman with brains.
* TheGadfly: The Duchess of Wharfdale is a flirtatious older woman who loves needling the uptight Royal Navy officers with her boisterous attitude. She especially loves teasing the young and awkward "Mister H", as she takes to referring to Hornblower. Turns out she's not even a Duchess, but rather an actress trying to bluff her way back to England what with all of Europe engulfed in war. She assures Hornblower that her portrayal of the Duchess is quite accurate though.
* HeroicSeductress: She used her sexiness and sex to preserve her alias, and consequently to save her and Horatio's life. It also saved Horatio's super important dispatches for the Admiralty she's hiding for him. The inquisitive French soldier she had to sleep with was sleazy and she was not happy about it but she saw it as the only way.
* MasterActor: She is impersonating The Duchess of Wharfedale, and for a long time nobody suspected it. She does such a good job acting her part that if Archie and later de Vergesse hadn't recognised her, she would have been escorted home with absolutely no one suspecting she wasn't who she seemed.
* MrsRobinson: She's toying with Horatio and flirting with him endlessly, perhaps trying to seduce him, but their relationship is in all likelihood innocent.
* PimpedOutDress: Many of her outfits were really beautiful with pearls or little ribbons.
* TheReveal: The Duchess of Wharfedale is revealed to be no duchess at all. She's Katherine Cobham, an actress. Horatio is horrified that he entrusted her with Admirality's super important dispatches. Although a commoner, she's actually more than a decent person who can be trusted and depended upon.
* SilkHidingSteel: She can take a good care of herself, and nobody in the Spanish prison suspected she could be hiding Horatio's dispatches for the Admiralty. When at last a French officer starts to be inquisitive, she's able to pull off a FemmeFatale on him.
* SlutShaming: Katherine Cobham (posing as Duchess of Wharfedale) sleeps with a French soldier, pulling off a HoneyTrap -- to save herself, Hornblower and the dispatches. On the next day, Hornblower is considerably colder to her and perhaps a tad jealous. She makes it clear that she doesn't like being treated this way, but she herself feels the shame in the situation.
-->''"Your lack of civility does you no credit, sir. (...) I did what was necessary to preserve my alias. So I sacrificed some small insignificant things -- such as my pride and my self-respect."''
* WhatTheHellHero: Horatio tries to pull this on her after she has to sleep with de Vergesse to save herself and Horatio from espionage charges. Horatio also learned her secret and is both outraged at the deception and jealous of the tryst, but she turns it on him by pointing out that she simply sacrificed some "unimportant things" like her ''pride and self-respect'' (since what de Vergesse did was rape by coercion). Horatio is duly ashamed and apologizes.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Massaredo]]
!!Don Massaredo
!!!Actor: Ronald Pickup
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Massaredo_250_Hornblower_4913.png]]
\\
The commander of the Spanish fortress where Horatio and his men are held in "The Dutchess and the Devil". Though an amiable, courtly man, he himself warns Hornblower that he is quite capable of being cruel if the prisoners misbehave.
----
* AffablyEvil: He likes Hornblower and gives him a wide latitude of privileges, loaning him books to study Spanish and even dining with him. He is perfectly capable of cruelty, having kept Archie in the oubliette for a month and throwing Hornblower down there for a week after the escape attempt, but once that's done with he resumes his gentlemanly attitude towards his prisoner.
* OfficerAndAGentleman: As his title implies, Don Massaredo is of high rank and he behaves with courtesy and charm even to his defeated enemies.
* PunishmentBox: His favourite method of punishment. He's not afraid of being cruel, as he himself puts it.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Moncoutant]]
!!Colonel, Marquis de Moncoutant
!!!Actor: Antony Sher
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Moncoutant_250_Hornblower_1642.png]]
\\
A French exile who joins General Charette's expedition largely to reclaim his old lands from the revolutionaries. The fact that he packs a guillotine in his luggage tells you what that's going to be like.
----
* AristocratsAreEvil: Shooting citizens, children and beheading villagers counts.
* BlueBlood: He's a French Marquis. He's very proud that he's an aristocrat, and he believes that common people are inferior and impossible to improve.
* CatchPhrase: "Vive le Roi!" That's about his only concern about the Restoration of the monarchy, and he repeats it whenever he can.
* DisproportionateRetribution: He comes very close to shooting a young boy in the face for reflexively singing ''La Marseillaise''.
* FaceDeathWithDignity: Possibly the nearest thing he has to a redeeming feature; when the villagers and Republican forces give him a taste of his own medicine, he meets his end fearlessly with a defiant cry of "Vive le Roi!"
* FrenchJerk: He's a very unsympathetic French character.
* JerkassHasAPoint: Admit it, can you really ''blame'' him for being angry that the townsfolk wrecked his house and used his possessions as fuel for the fires while he was off living in exile? Especially after the mayor acts like him being pissed is somehow unreasonable?
* JustJokingJustification: He provokes Horatio at dinner and accuses him of revolutionary sympathies, and then says he's just teasing once he gets a rise.
* KarmicDeath: The villagers gleefully behead him when the royalist forces collapse.
* OffWithHisHead: He owns his personal guillotine, and beheads quite a few villagers. And it bites him in the butt, as he's executed when the republican forces reach his village.
* SkewedPriorities: Moncoutant is very disgruntled to leave off executing half the village when Hornblower insists that he should maybe do something about the attacking Republican forces.
* VillainousBreakdown: Seeing his home in ruins, along with his books and paintings used to fuel the fires, quickly sends him over the edge.
* WouldHurtAChild: His actions show that he would kill a small boy. Though, to be fair, singing ''Marseillaise'' even after it got the mayor shot is kind of testing his limits and pushing his buttons. Horatio talked him out of it.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Charette]]
!!General, Le Baron de Charette
!!!Actor: John Shrapnel
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Charette_250_Hornblower_4509.png]]
\\
A French exile leading a counter-revolutionary force into France, hoping to raise an army of royalists across the countryside. The British support him because they're at war with Napoleon.
----
* BlueBlood: He's a French baron. General, Le Baron de Charette, commander in chief of His Majesty King Louis's army in exile.
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/François_de_Charette François de Charette]], although he was considerably younger than portrayed here.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: He's shown to be a capable French officer, respected by Royalist soldiers as well as by their English allies. It's significant that the locals appear to genuinely welcome Charette and his troops, compared to the sullen resentment of Moncoutant's villagers. His plan falls to pieces quickly, but he seems like a decent man and tells Bowles to get out of there when they're ambushed.
* RousingSpeech: He gives quite an effective rousing speech to his French royalist troops.
* WideEyedIdealist: Believes that raising an army of royalists from the countryside will be effortless and that they'll retake Paris in short order.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Hood]]
!!Admiral Lord Hood
!!!Actor: Creator/PeterVaughan
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/adm_hood_250.png]]
\\
A high-ranking admiral from the British aristocracy. He sends the ''Indefatigable'' and three other ships on a mission to France with French refugees who plan to restore the monarchy.
----
* ArmchairMilitary: He's the one who represents the Admiralty, sends Captain Pellew's ''Indefatigable'' and three other ships to sail to France, but he himself stays in London. He does not abort the mission when a copy of General Charette's plan gets stolen, probably by spies, and very likely falls to enemy hands. He also insists that General Charette should not be informed about the incident. Pellew is disgusted that men (and among those are his ''own'' men for whose lives he feels responsible) are sent to die in a doomed mission.
* BlueBlood: He comes from the British aristocracy. Sir Edward Pellew addresses him as "My Lord".
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Hood,_1st_Viscount_Hood Samuel Hood, 1st Viscount Hood]], notable among other things for being a mentor and early patron of the young Horatio Nelson.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Averted. He insists that Pellew and three other ships pursue their mission even though it has little sense and some documents have been stolen by spies, making it all the more dangerous.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fauré]]
!!Pierre Fauré
!!!Actor: Jean Badin
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/le_maire_250.png]]
\\
Mayor of Muzillac in the new republic after the revolution. He has the dubious pleasure of welcoming a returning local aristocrat, Colonel Moncoutant, who wants his land and house back.
----
* DefiantToTheEnd: When it's clear that he either submits to Moncoutant or be killed, he chooses to be killed. He starts singing ''La Marseillaise'' to Moncoutant's face. Liberty, equality, fraternity!
* HonourBeforeReason: He refuses to submit to Moncoutant and never acknowledges his power over his former property, even when it's clear that it will get him killed.
* SelfMadeMan: Mayor of Muzillac. From a vendor of the unmentionables to career in politics.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Mariette]]
!!Mariette
!!!Actress: Estelle Skornik
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Mariette_Frogette_250_Hornblower_7466.png]]
\\
A schoolteacher in Moncoutant's old village. She hates both the royalists and the revolutionaries, seeing them as equally brutal. She falls in love with Horatio.
----
* BeautifulDreamer: She lets Horatio spend the night at her home, but he just tucks her in and watches her sleep from a chair.
* CompositeCharacter: She has elements of Marie and Maria from the books. However, she has considerably ''less'' personality than either of those women.
* DiedInYourArmsTonight: When Mariette and Horatio flee from Muzillac, trying to reach the strategically very important bridge and the British troop. Revolutionaries' forces advance on the bridge as well. As they run, Horatio holds and supports Mariette because she has hurt her leg. She is then suddenly shot at her back. Horatio is heartbroken, holds her in his arms, caresses her face and keeps cradling her despite the fact that the bridge is under fire.
* EveryoneLooksSexierIfFrench: Probably a reason why Horatio likes her in the first place. She's a pretty French girl.
* EverythingSoundsSexierInFrench: Her English has a French touch. But how come a French peasant girl learned to speak English?
* FriendToAllChildren: A peasant girl who became a schoolteacher. Whenever Mariette is shown, she's protecting a child, holding a child, picking up a child, carrying a child, cradling a child, or putting down a child. Because she's such a Nice Gal.
* HiddenDepths: She has very little personality, but after all, she is a French peasant girl who learned to speak fluent English.
* NiceGal: She's very nice to Horatio, all right. She appears to be a very meek girl, dissatisfied with the situation in France because it only brings violence and destruction.
* SatelliteLoveInterest: Nearly everything she does in the episode is related in one way or another to Horatio who likes her and she reciprocates. For example, when she's insulted by the chauvinistic, classist Marquis, it's just a set-up for Horatio to act like a gentleman even to a peasant girl.
* {{Schoolmarm}}: She's the only teacher at school in the village of Muzillac.
* TemporaryLoveInterest: She exists solely to have a brief romance with Horatio and then die. Viewers were not impressed with the level of their chemistry. [[CompositeCharacter The characters in the novels she's partially based on]], Maria and Marie, are ''much'' more involved with Hornblower.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Edrington]]
!!Major Edrington, Earl of Edrington
!!!Actor: Samuel West
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/edrington_250.png]]
\\
A snobbish Army officer sent on the expedition to Muzillac who makes it clear that he's unimpressed with the Navy and the French forces (though the latter with justification). However, he is a highly competent officer and ultimately, not a bad fellow.
----
* BlueBlood: He's the Earl of Edrington, and prefers to be addressed "My Lord".
* {{Foil}}: Narratively speaking, he serves as a contrast to Colonel Moncoutant, a man of nearly equivalent rank and status. Where Moncountant is sadistic and obsessed with status, Edrington is a quiet professional who is a least willing to grant subordinates some earned respect. When the Republicans attack, Edrington is leading his troops on the front lines, while Moncoutant has to be dragged away from his executions when it's time for a last ditch defense.
* GentlemanSnarker: He snarks and sneers delightfully, yet he never betrays his perfectly gentleman-like behaviour.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: He starts off as a snob and makes frequent digs at the French, the British sailors, and Hornblower. He turns out to be a decent chap who sympathizes with Hornblower's loss and hurries to explain the situation to Pellew.
* MajorlyAwesome: He ranks as Major in the British Army and he's an excellent soldier.
* OfficerAndAGentleman: Politeness, good manners and etiquette never leave him. He's very civil to his superiors and people of proper social rank, and to certain extent to all people. It becomes clear he does not respect Moncoutant at all, yet he never confronts him openly. Though, in fairness, as senior British officer, he has to keep the peace with their allies.
* StiffUpperLip: As expected for an officer at the time, he remains stoic and calm on the battlefield. He leads his troops into battle, never takes cover and [[CasualDangerDialogue engages in conversations]] even while bullets are flying around.
* TheProudElite: He's definitely a stuck-up member of the proud elite and looks down upon French disorderly soldiers and even British sailors, who are way less polished than his men. However, he has some redeeming qualities. Not only is he a capable soldier and leader, but he also comes to acknowledge the sailors' competence, and most importantly, he shows that he cares about Archie and Horatio on a personal level.
* TheyCallMeMisterTibbs: Hornblower addressed him "Major" Edrington. Edrington informs him the right form of title is 'My Lord'. At first it seems to identify Edrington as an annoying toff but he turns out OK, and Horatio has no problem calling him as he pleases.
* UpperClassTwit: Edrington is a subversion. His first scene shows him up as a twit who sneers at Hornblower and his most excellent seamen who look scruffy compared to soldiers in their flawless uniforms, and asks to be addressed not by his rank "Major", but by his title "My Lord" because he's, ''in fact'', the Earl of Edrington... But he soon turns out to be a competent and reasonable officer and a wellspring of good, well-meaning and only slightly patronizing advice.
[[/folder]]

!!Series 2
[[folder:Sawyer]]
!!Captain James Sawyer
!!!Actor: Creator/DavidWarner
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Sawyer_250_Hornblower_8324.png]]
\\
The captain of the ''Renown'' and a hero of the Nile, but now just under the threshold of paranoid insanity. He tyrannizes his lieutenants and destroys discipline on his own ship by favoring bad men and constantly rooting out plots that don't exist.
----
* AdaptationExpansion: The series gives him a backstory as a renowned captain, a hero of the Nile, and one of Nelson's own, with the trauma of his long years of battle catching up to him.
* AdaptationalAngstUpgrade: His mental break was never given an explanation in the book. The show explains it as an unfortunate consequence of being a brave and skillful captain during England's brutal naval wars; having fought for many years with no relief (and certainly with no concept of mental health risk), Saywer's mind collapsed under the weight of the trauma.
* AlasPoorVillain: Captain Sawyer may have been unjust, insane, and violent but seeing how far he's fallen from the officer he used to be, and by the time he is killed, it's hard not to pity him.
* BloodKnight: He's a fighting captain who actively encourages his sailors to fight each other, calling it "sport" and "high spirits." He himself likes nothing better than battle, and doesn't care if he's attacking or ''being'' attacked.
* BrokenPedestal: He's a hero of the Nile and one of Nelson's own and all his lieutenants admired him. Horatio and Archie are pre-broken, seeing his errors and incompetency. Bush joins the crew later and comes to realize over the course of "Mutiny" that Captain Sawyer is unable to command a ship and unable to admit it.
* ConspiracyTheorist: He sees conspiracies against him everywhere and he interprets every event as an attempt to undermine his authority. He targets his officers, especially Midshipman Wellard and Lt. Hornblower. It's part of his growing paranoia.
* CorporalPunishment: Not only does he like inflicting ATasteOfTheLash, he has some more imaginative ideas up his sleeve: he lets Horatio be on a continuous watch that is being constantly extended - to whole days. Needless to say, if the officer of the watch is found asleep, he's dead already.
* DeathSeeker: He wants to die, and would love to go with the glory of dying in battle. At one point, he begs Horatio to shoot him, and later he gets his ship ''Renown'' under heavy fire and aground. They are helpless there, and it was a freaking miracle that his lieutenants got the ship afloat and that she was not blown to pieces or burnt down by hot shots.
* DyingAsYourself: The mad Captain Sawyer seems to regain his sanity when Wellard enters the cabin, intending to kill him so that he won't name either Hornblower or Kennedy as the man who pushed him. Sawyer confronts this calmly and admits that Wellard is worthy of respect. Though Wellard can't go through with it, the Spanish break in moments later and Sawyer stands side-by-side with Wellard, calling him a brave lad just before they're both shot down.
* FaceDeathWithDignity: He regained some lucidity and admitted Wellard was worthy of respect, standing side-by-side with him as the Spanish burst into the cabin to kill them both.
* InsaneAdmiral: He is an Insane Captain which puts his lieutenants into a horrible, horrible position. A captain at sea is basically the emperor of his ship. Sawyer starts as viciously critical and unjust, continues to be extremely paranoid and ends up genuinely mad. The ship's surgeon, the only person who can intervene, is Captain's friend, an alcoholic and unwilling to pronounce him unfit for command due to loyalty and friendship. Whatever steps the officers consider to take would be ultimately considered a mutiny.
* IHatePastMe: During his barely-lucid nightshirt wandering, he says that he was once "young, intemperate, and a danger to my fellow officers" like he believes Hornblower to be. (Of course, he later calls Horatio too squeamish for thinking it's bad for a man to be kicked to death.)
* IWillPunishYourFriendForYourFailure: He gets angry at Horatio for no better reason that he informed him that he's shortening sails (perfectly according to the orders), and not asking him beforehand whether the captain permits that. He decides that he will teach Horatio a lesson by getting men from his division punished. The last man to get down from the mast gets flogged, which causes panic and a lethal accident as one sailor falls down. Horatio, Archie, Styles and Matthews must scrub him off the deck. Sawyer even orders them to toss him overboard immediately without a funeral.
* LargeAndInCharge: In the TV Series, he is noticeably taller and more physically imposing than any of his crew including Hornblower and all of the Lieutenants.
* LivingLegend: He's a national hero and one of Nelson's own. It causes several problems, such as Horblower and especially Mr Bush realizing with delay that he's unable to command the ship. In addition, if he weren't this famous, the court-martial might have been a mere formality or the jury wouldn't have been so hard-ass on the lieutenants. They felt they had to preserve Sawyer's reputation and that general public must never suspect that he lost his sound mind and that his last command was taken from him.
* TheParanoiac: Is deeply suspicious of his officers, spies on them with his toadies, and interprets nearly every action is a demonstration of their "plotting". For example, when a sail gets caught and Midshipman Wellard orders the hands to stop hauling, Sawyer concludes that he deliberately ensured that it would get caught to make Sawyer look bad and has him beaten. He takes a great deal of satisfaction in doing so and shortly after has Wellard beaten again to supposedly get the truth out of him. He purposely weakens the authority that the lieutenants have over the hands so that the hands will be loyal to him instead. Of course, all of this induces the lieutenants to seriously consider mutiny, and (maybe) for either Hornblower or Wellard to push Sawyer down the hold. He's actually worse here than he is in the book.
* SanitySlippage: He starts off as viciously critical, soon falls into outright paranoia and then genuine madness.
* SelfFulfillingProphecy: Captain Sawyer is erratic, violent, paranoid, and accuses his lieutenants of conspiring against him. Because of this behaviour, his lieutenants... begin conspiring against him.
* ShellShockedVeteran: Horatio, at least, imputes his madness to many long years as a fighting captain. Given that he mistakes Archie for Admiral Brueys but then recalls that Brueys was cut nearly in half in a battle[[note]]Brueys was a real French admiral and he did die in this manner at the Nile[[/note]], and the harrowing report he reads to himself about that battle with the three French frigates, it's pretty plausible.
* ATasteOfTheLash: He has made poor young Wellard his whipping boy.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Buckland]]
!!Lieutenant Buckland
!!!Actor: Nicholas Jones
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Buckland_250_Hornblower_5298.png]]
->''"I never expected [command] to be easy. I expected to be fit for it."''
\\
The ''Renown's'' first lieutenant. Although he's not incompetent, he's weak-willed and unprepared when he winds up commanding the ship when Sawyer is declared insane. He's all too aware of how inadequate he is next to Hornblower.
----
* AdaptationalAngstUpgrade: Compared to the book, it is clear that Buckland knows full well that he is not remotely up to the task of command in a crisis, and certainly not compared to the decisive and clever Hornblower.
--> "I thought I'd be ''fit'' for it."
* AdaptationalVillainy: In the book, Buckland gets cranky about Hornblower's initiative several times and says "damn you to hell!" after Hornblower is promoted over him, but he never attempts to bring him down as happens in the series. (Granted, the attack and the Navy's subsequent inquiry into the matter go off quite differently.)
* TheDitherer: Patently terrified of the responsibility that he's thrust into. He wavers and shies away from any decision he'll have to account for later--it takes a lot of persuasion and prodding from his juniors to actually commit to a course of action. He's unhappily aware of it, too, and is highly envious of Hornblower's natural leadership.
* DrowningMySorrows: He's not fit for command, and alcohol helps him to deal with it.
* TheDrunkenSailor: By the end of "Retribution". He starts drinking when he realizes he simply isn't made for captaincy and turns full-on drunkard after he's humiliated in court. The last view we have of him is watching his wineglass overflow as he pours.
* GotVolunteered: When he's in command, he makes Horatio volunteer in a SuicideMission.
* InstantlyProvenWrong: When Ortega realizes he's being stalled at dinner, Buckland goes into an indignant spiel about how officers of the Navy are men of honor who hold by their word. Then the gun the lieutenants have hauled up the cliff fires, interrupting him. Buckland gets a very satisfied look on his face as he explains to Ortega how he's been tricked.
* NoNameGiven: His Christian name is never revealed. Not surprising as lieutenants in the Navy generally are on LastNameBasis, and he wasn't especially close to any of them, being much older than the rest of the officers aboard the ''Renown''.
* TheUriahGambit: Everybody suspects he sends Hornblower to blow up the fort because he feels overshadowed by Hornblower's excellent skills and his inability to command shines all the more brightly for it.
* WhosLaughingNow: He spends the whole story being mocked by his captain, the crew, and even Colonel Ortega makes a point of insulting his lack of leadership while tying him up. When Collins calls him the "captain who was caught napping" and the whole court bursts out laughing, Buckland goes over the edge and screams that Sawyer was pushed by Horatio. But this, too, backfires when Hobbs refuses to corroborate it and Archie confesses instead.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Hobbs]]
!!Gunner Hobbs
!!!Actor: Creator/PhilipGlenister
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Hobbs_250_Hornblower_6988.png]]
\\
Sawyer's chief toady and Surly Seaman of the Week. His loyalty is absolute and genuine, but he refuses to see how badly Sawyer's abilities are deteriorating and he's highly suspicious of Captain's "fall" into the hold.
----
* AdaptationalAttractiveness: In the book, Hobbs is a fat old man. Here he is neither.
* AdaptationalExpansion: Hobbs gets upgraded from merely being an old toady to someone who has a long personal history serving under Sawyer and is therefore deep in denial over Sawyer's incapacity.
* EveryoneHasStandards: Although he insists that the captain likes his men fighting, he tells Randall off for stealing Styles' drink, sensing that the unrest belowdecks is going too far. And by the end of "Mutiny" he's having a hard time remaining in denial about Sawyer's condition.
* NoNameGiven: No first name given. He's only known as gunner Hobbs.
* UndyingLoyalty: His loyalty towards Captain Sawyer is admirable to a certain degree, but unfortunately it's really misplaced. He fails to recognize that Captain Sawyer lost his mind and is thus unable to command his ship. He may have even realized that Sawyer is unfit for command, but he stands by his captain's side because Hobbs remembers Sawyer from his glory days.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Clive]]
!!Doctor Clive
!!!Actor: David Rintoul
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/dr_clive_250_hornblower_1922.png]]
\\
Sawyer's good friend and the ship's surgeon. He's clearly trying to manage Sawyer's deteriorating mental state, with dwindling success, and copes with most problems by applying generous amounts of laudanum.
----
* TheAlcoholic: When the lieutenants decide that something must be done about [[InsaneAdmiral the captain situation]], they want Dr Clive to declare him unfit to command. However, he's drunk as lord and unfit to do his duty as well. Captain Sawyer was distributing rum quite generously and it's implied he drinks quite a lot. Not to mention his vast supply of laudanum...
* TheAllSolvingHammer: Laudanum is his most frequent prescription on all sorts of ailments.
* AntiVillain: He's a huge hindrance to Horatio and the other lieutenants, his refusal to do anything about Sawyer puts the ship in deadly danger, and he gives Buckland the [[SarcasmMode good advice]] to drink his problems away. But he's also under the ordeal of watching a good friend lose his mind whilst being unable to do anything about it.
* CloudcuckoolandersMinder: A rather dark version. It quickly becomes clear that he's aware of Sawyer's mental problems and is trying very hard to manage them without actually removing him from his post.
* DoctorJerk: He's the ship's surgeon, and well... a jerk. He's nearly always extremely unhelpful outside of the context of actually performing medical tasks. As a ship's surgeon he's competent.
* TheDrunkenSailor: He drinks a lot. One memorable scene demonstrates it when the lieutenants try to pronounce their Captain unfit to command in a formal meeting. Clive tries to look cool for a time, but he soon loses it and shows that he's wasted.
* HeterosexualLifePartners: It's clear that he's been friends with Captain Sawyer for years, which makes his enabling behavior a little more sympathetic. (In the book he was just a ninny who didn't want to take the professional risk of ruling on Sawyer's fitness.)
* MathematiciansAnswer: When asked if Captain Sawyer "was or was not" fit for command, Clive answers "yes." This is a prelude to him backpedaling on his initial decision and accusing the lieutenants of coercing him into it.
* NoNameGiven: He's only known as Doctor Clive.
* TheMedic: He's the surgeon on the ''Renown'', and he's actually not bad at his job during and after battles.
* TechnoBabble: He tries to deflect the lieutenants' demands that he declare Sawyer's unfitness for command by rattling off a bunch of medical jargon about the injuries.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Wellard]]
!!Midshipman Wellard
!!!Actor: Terence Corrigan
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Wellard_250_Hornblower_7344.png]]
\\
A raw young officer who suffers particularly from Sawyer's vindictive paranoia.
----
* AgeLift: In the book, Wellard is closer to twelve than twenty.
* BloodFromTheMouth: He's shot by the Spaniards and dies with blood from his mouth, poor thing.
* BreakTheCutie: Captain Sawyer be damned for oppressing and tormenting this nice and cute boy!
* TheCutie: His pretty-boy-likeness and vulnerability make him sweet and attractive. Similarly to Archie, he's still a very capable midshipman.
* DeathByAdaptation: He dies beside Captain Sawyer defending ''Renown'' against Spanish boarders. In ''Lieutenant Hornblower'' he survived the voyage only to later die when his cutter is capsized in poor weather during the Peace of Amiens.
* FaceDeathWithDignity: He stands up to his bully, decided to kill him and make it look like it happened during a raid, but Alas, Poor Villain! and his strong moral grounds do not allow him to shoot the Captain. They stand together and face the enemy.
* ImpairmentShot: When Randall is beating Styles half to death, Wellard just watches because he's been dosed with laudanum, making his vision wobble and waver.
* IOweYouMyLife: Feels this way towards Horatio and Archie who helped him significantly when Captain Sawyer kept beating him for unjustly. This is why he wants to kill Sawyer during the uprising so he doesn't name either man in court.
* KillTheCutie: Ah, as if killing off one cute beloved character in "Retribution" was not enough. He's an adorable Plucky Middie, he's killed off during a raid by the Spanish prisoners and it is heart-breaking. Such a waste of young life.
* NewMeat: He demonstrates being wet behind his ears by throwing up when a sailor gets splattered on deck, and by being incapable to make lower-deck seamen shut up and break their fight. He also spends much of "Mutiny" being high on laudanum, and men don't respect him a lot. In "Retribution", he gets a chance to prove himself and he does his best.
* NoNameGiven: His first name is not mentioned in the series, but fans sometimes use Henry, which was his Christian name in the book.
* NotAfraidOfYouAnymore: He tries to stand up to Sawyer when he wants to solve the captain situation at the end of "Retribution". He tells him that he's not his whipping boy any more. It kind of works, as Sawyer admits Wellard's brave.
* PluckyMiddie: A young, fairly competent and brave midshipman. He is probably supposed to be in his late teens.
* PrettyBoy: Teen-aged, black hair, dark eyes, very fair skin and soft features.
* RavenHairIvorySkin: He has dark eyes, dark eyelashes, black hair and extremely pale complexion. All the more noticeable because they sail in the West Indies and other characters are tanned. And as is common with this trope for male examples, he's rather feminine looking.
* ATasteOfTheLash: He gets caned twice, unjustly, and it ain't pretty. The second beating renders him unconscious.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Collins]]
!!Captain Collins
!!!Actor: John Castle
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Captain_Collins_250_Hornblower_9289.png]]
\\
One of the captains judging the court-martial. The only one who's actually ''impartial'', between Pellew's determination to get Hornblower off the hook and Hammond's determination to spit him on it.
----
* DeadpanSnarker: He utters some sarcastic remarks at Horatio's expense at the Lieutenants' trial. But it's his mockery of Buckland that leads to the trial's biggest upheaval.
* NoNameGiven: As most naval figures, he's just known by his surname and rank. No fancy nickname either.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: He's the only one of the judges who seems properly impartial, praising and criticizing the lieutenants in equal measure. It's quite a contrast between Hammond's vindictiveness and Pellew's favoritism towards Horatio.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Randall]]
!!Randall
!!!Actor: Gilly Gilchrist
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jerkass_randall.png]]
\\
Goes beyond Surly Seaman of the Week. He's a brutal bully who thrives in the ship's ill discipline, disrespecting officers and doing what he likes.
----
* DangerousDeserter: Randall and several men decide to desert in "Retribution" when the situation on the ship becomes difficult. Randall clonks Hobbs unconscious, not caring whether it kills him or not, and the deserters hurt or kill several {{Red Shirt}}s on their way to sea. They are later discovered dead, killed by the slave rebel army who thought they were their former Spanish masters.
* EnemyEatsYourLunch: Takes Styles' mug off the table to antagonize him. Styles doesn't like it and immediately fights back, but it's Hobbs who makes Randall put it back.
* JerkAss: He's a really mean, nasty character with no redeeming qualities. He's disrespectful to the officers, especially young Wellard, spills drink on Lt. Buckland, beats up Styles nearly to death in an unfair fight, approves of unjust beatings...
* NoHoldsBarredBeatdown: He is very hostile to Styles and fights with him nearly all the time. Styles is no wuss, but Randall manages to get away his friends, mainly Matthews. Randall and two other sailors help him beat Styles up into one bruised and bloody pulp. Had Horatio and Matthews not figured out what was happening, they might have very well killed him.
* NoNameGiven: Just known by his surname -- Randall.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Ortega]]
!!Colonel Francisco Manuel Ortega
!!!Actor: Antonio Gil
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/colonel_ortega_250_hornblower_206.png]]
\\
Commanding officer of the Spanish forces at Santo Domingo.
----
* AffectionateGestureToTheHead: He gently caresses his wife's jaw when they exchange a [[MeaningfulLook worried look]] after they were forced to surrender unconditionally.
* DeathByAdaptation: In the novel, Ortega was last seen wounded in the leg, but alive as the prisoners were taken off in Jamaica. In the series, he's shot by Bush, and his death lends a finality to the end of the prisoners' revolt.
* FacialDialogue: When the Spanish are forced to the unconditional surrender by Hornblower's stunt, he's able to communicate to his wife that he wants her to pull the HoneyTrap on their guards. She obliges and manages to set them free.
* HappilyMarried: He and his wife appear to be happy together.
* SoreLoser: Certainly isn't happy about surrendering to the British. He and his men later get sprung from the brig and attempt to commandeer the ''Renown''.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Señora Ortega]]
!!Señora Ortega
!!!Actress: Katia Caballero
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/senor_ortega_250_hornblower_2.png]]
\\
Wife of Colonel Ortega.
----
* EverythingSoundsSexierInFrench: Senora Ortega speaks English as was demonstrated during her dinner with Mr Buckland, but when she tries to seduce an unfortunate soldier who guarded the Spanish ladies, she invokes this trope and chooses to speak Spanish, a language the English guard didn't understand.
* HappilyMarried: She and her husband appear to be a happy couple, falling perhaps close to SickeningSweethearts. They are very tactile and would hold hands and touch each other a lot.
* HeroicSeductress: Her point of view when she seduces an English guard on the ''Renown''. Her people are prisoners and she tries to help them. For our heroes and from our point of view, she's an evil FemmeFatale who killed the poor stupid guy. He should have checked her for any hidden knives or daggers first, then proceed to have sex.
* HoneyTrap: She seduces an English guard when her people are prisoners on the ''Renown'' and she tries to help them.
\\
[[/folder]]

!!Series 3
[[folder:Miss Mason]]
!!Maria Mason AKA Mrs Hornblower
!!!Actress: Creator/JuliaSawalha
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Maria_Mason_250_Hornblower_3660.png]]
\\
The daughter of Hornblower's landlady. She's deeply infatuated with him, and although he considers her to simply be a friend, he doesn't have the heart to turn aside her affections.
----
* AlliterativeName: '''M'''aria '''M'''ason.
* AllLoveIsUnrequited: She's mad about Horatio, but his feelings for her are strictly platonic and he only marries her out of pity.
* DisappearedDad: Her father died while he served as a sailor in the Navy. Maria never mentions him, but she and her mother were in a difficult situation financially and emotionally.
* OldMaid: She's visibly in her late twenties or early thirties and there is no suitor in sight. She even contemplates becoming a governess or a teacher so that she could support herself and her mother, for they are deeply in debts. (In the book, she was indeed a schoolteacher.)
* PlainJane: Maria is no great beauty and she's a dowdy woman. (Her actress Julia Sawalha is very attractive in real life, but her beauty is hidden really well.)
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Mrs Mason]]
!!Mrs Mason
!!!Actress: Barbara Flynn
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Mrs_Mason_250_Hornblower_6384.png]]
\\
Hornblower's landlady. She's suspicious of his ability to pay his rent and does not at all appreciate her daughter's interest with him, as Mr. Mason was a sailor who died at sea.
----
* TheAlcoholic: She drinks. No surprise for a poor widowed landlady who can barely support herself and her ageing daughter.
* CrankyLandlord: Mrs Mason is Hornblower's Cranky Landlady. She's nervous when he owes her rent as officers starve on half-pay and is displeased that he goes to the club to play cards, where he actually earns some money most of the time because he's a mathematical genius. When he brings his friend Mr Bush, she grunts whether he has money to pay her. Her daughter Maria is crazy about him, which she doesn't like either, because her husband was a sailor and died at service, and she might be angry at Hornblower because he's not interested in Maria romantically and considers her just a friend.
* MamaBear: Mrs Mason is hard on Horatio because he's not timely with his rent, but also because her husband died at sea and she doesn't want Maria to go through that. She probably thinks he's messing with her feelings.
* NoSenseOfPersonalSpace: She has a habit of coming too close to people. At one scene, she leaned a little too much in Mr Bush's general direction.
* ShipperOnDeck: When she finds out that her daughter loves Horatio, she shakes her hatred for him and starts to support their relationship.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Wolfe]]
!!Thomas Wolfe
!!!Actor: Lorcan Cranitch
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Wolfe_250_Hornblower_8166.png]]
\\
An Irish seaman and a troublemaker. There's more to him than simply being surly, though, and it causes no end of trouble.
----
* BeneathSuspicion: A coxswain has more responsibility than an ordinary seaman, but between his low rank and Côtard's presence nobody suspects that he's actually a high-ranking Irish rebel.
* TheBigBad: He's the main antagonist of Series Three and is behind many evils and problems, from sabotage (causing Styles to be beaten unjustly) to trying to launch a French invasion of England.
* DisappearedDad: Claims to be in Portsmouth to escape "a young lady in Leeds with a swollen belly and an angry father".
* ISurrenderSuckers: He tries to pull off this dirty trick at the end of "Duty" and tries to fight back and escape after he surrendered. It doesn't end too well for him. Mr Bush shoots him dead.
* ManipulativeBastard: Spends a lot of his time making suspicious comments about Major Côtard, who everyone is already inclined to distrust for being French. Later does his best to play on Hornblower and Bush's sense of honor, particularly when held at gunpoint.
* TheMole: He joins the crew of the ''Hotspur'' and pretends to serve a King in the British Navy, but he's in fact an Irish rebel who works for the resistance and is an ally to Napoleonic France.
* MeaningfulName: His name is almost certainly a reference to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wolfe_Tone Wolfe Tone]], the father of Irish Republicanism.[[note]]Though this is not a case of HistoricalDomainCharacter, as he died in 1798 in an English prison.[[/note]]
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Côtard]]
!!Major Andre Côtard
!!!Actor: Greg Wise
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Cotard_250_Hornblower_5472.png]]
\\
An expatriate Frenchman who is assigned to the ''Hotspur'' in order to carry out a mission against a French battery. He doesn't endear himself to anyone, but he does really hate Napoleon.
----
* AllOfTheOtherReindeer: He seems to be genuinely hurt when he realizes exactly how little people around him trust him. Even though [[TokenEnemyMinority that makes perfect sense]].
* FrenchJerk: He's always complaining, and unreasonably so, tries to order Mr Bush around, and the ''Hotspur'''s crew, including Captain Hornblower, are highly suspicious of his true loyalties. However, he's really a British ally and supports the French anti-Napoleon movement, and his fighting skills are fairly bad ass.
* MajorlyAwesome: Much less awesome than Major Edrington from Series One, but he is still a decent soldier and an ally worth having.
* RaceLift: Well, nationality shift. In the books, naval Lieutenant Côtard was from [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guernsey Guernsey]]; a British national who grew up speaking French (Hornblower borrowed him because his own French accent wouldn't be natural enough). Here, he's straight-up French, which gives him a deeper backstory as well as a lot of conflict with the British characters. (Ironically, his actor speaks French with a strong British accent...)
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:M'Man Hammond]]
!!Midshipman John 'Jack' Hammond
!!!Actor: Christian Coulson
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Jack_Hammond_250_Hornblower_7395.png]]
\\
Admiral Hammond's nephew. He joins the Navy because it's expected of him, but he proves to be unable to prove himself: inept and rather useless in action.
----
* BloodFromTheMouth: He's wounded in the fight on the beach in France in "Loyalty". Blood from the mouth is an indication that he's not gonna make it.
* CompositeCharacter: A combination of Seaman Grimes (a rather sad coward) and the generic, hapless young gentleman given to the ''Hotspur'' by the Naval Academy.
* DirtyCoward: Played for sympathy. Hornblower encourages him to find a profession that is less violent and dangerous. He insists on staying and winds up ditching Hornblower.
* DiesWideOpen: Jack dies on the beach with widened eyes. Hornblower does his duty and shuts his eyes.
* EnsignNewbie: Midshipmen are officers in training, but with full responsibilities. Jack's in charge during their mission when Captain Hornblower and co. get captured. He deals very badly, and even Matthews can tell he screwed up and let others down.
-->'''Matthews:''' Captain Hornblower never ordered you to clear that jetty.\\
'''Jack Hammond:''' You weren't there.\\
'''Matthews:''' He would never have given up that easy. Though ''you'' might.
* HeroWorshipper: He had read about Hornblower's adventures and greatly admired him. Because of this, he comes aboard expecting to treat Hornblower as a friend, and is taken aback by Bush establishing the strict chain of command prevalent in the Royal Navy.
* HonorBeforeReason: He joins the Navy because it's expected of him even though he is clearly unsuited for the job.
* NewMeat: He's enthusiastic to serve in the Navy, however, he's not suited for it. He can't learn naval signals, and he's squeamish and panicky. He freaks out when he gets sputtered with a little boy's blood. Even Matthews who's usually caring and fatherly and who originally tried to help him loses his patience with him.
* PluckyMiddie: Subverted. He is a young midshipman and very eager to serve in the Navy, especially under Hornblower, but he lacks the plucky part of the trope and is rather inadequate.
* PrettyBoy: He's very young and good-looking with soft features.
* SignificantBackgroundEvent: At several points he's shown looking hesitant and vaguely sick when it seems the ''Hotspur'' is about to engage in battle, before it's definitively proven by his reaction to the powder-boy's death.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Orrock]]
!!Midshipman Charles Orrock
!!!Actor: Jonathan Forbes
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Orrock_250_Hornblower_4652.png]]
\\
An Irish midshipman. Unlike Hammond, Orrock is smart and capable, but he does attract some suspicion because of his origins.
----
* AdaptationalBadass: Orrock here is competent from the get-go and quickly becomes a valuable assistant to Hornblower. The book's Orrock was as clueless as his classmates.
* AscendedExtra: Mr. Orrock was one of several inept officers-in-training from the Naval Academy in ''Hornblower and the Hotspur'' and had no distinguishing features. Here, he's a prominent character and his Irish name Orrock becomes significant.
* CategoryTraitor: Faces this from both ends. He reminds Matthews not to assume that all Irishman are traitors to England; Woolfe, meanwhile, considers him a traitor to Ireland for sticking with Hornblower.
* PluckyMiddie: He is a plucky midshipman, probably meant to be an older teenager. Quite a fine specimen of this trope.
* {{Foil}}: A capable midshipman to Jack Hammond's incompetent counterpart, although they seem to be friends.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Doughty]]
!!Steward James Doughty
!!!Actor: Ron Cook
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Doughty_250_Hornblower_825.png]]
\\
Admiral Pellew's most excellent steward. Pellew "gives" him to Hornblower as a wedding present, where he proves to be a most useful man. Unfortunately, this makes Styles very jealous.
----
* ChekhovsSkill: In "Duty", Doughty has a chance early on to demonstrate his skill at swimming.
* SupremeChef: He's an excellent chef and very proud of his culinary art. Sir Edward enjoyed having him around, but passes him to Hornblower with words "thy need is greater than mine". Hornblower has simpler tastes than Pellew, but appreciates having meals that are actually ''edible'' (the fact that they are palatable is just a nice bonus).
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[[/folder]]

[[folder:Prowse]]
!!Master Prowse
!!!Actor: Tony Haygarth
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Prowse_250_Hornblower_8652.png]]
\\
The elderly ship's master and most senior petty officer. He's tasked with navigating the ship, and he's skeptical of her new captain.
----
* TheEeyore: He has a habit of pointing out the worst possible outcomes of whatever action Horatio has decided on, much to Horatio's exasperation.
* OldSoldier: Prowse has thirty years of experience at sea and served for twelve as master. He's also convinced, inaccurately, that Horatio is the EnsignNewbie who will run the ship aground if left to his own devices.
* NoNameGiven: He's only ever known by his surname.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Jerome]]
!!Jerome Bonaparte
!!!Actor: David Birkin
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/jerome4.png]]
\\
A young newlywed who is definitely from the French-speaking region of Switzerland and definitely not anybody important. Then comes TheReveal...
----
* AscendedExtra: In ''Hotspur'', the narration mentions Napoleon's brother and his American wife were stuck at sea, unable to break the blockade; they aren't even named directly. Here they're minor characters in the miniseries.
* BlueBlood: He's Napoleon's younger brother.
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: Jerome was really Bonaparte's brother. Napoleon annulled the marriage when the Catholic church refused to and married him to a German princess. If you can believe it, his and Betsy's grandson ended up being Teddy Roosevelt's Secretary of the Navy and then earned the nickname of "Charlie the Crook Chaser" as his Attorney General.
* TheReveal: Much is made from the fact when Hornblower guesses correctly what B stands for...
-->'''Hornblower:''' Madam, might I see that locket? I thought I recognized this crest. A prominent family, I believe. The B does not stand for Betsy, does it? DOES IT? Who do I have the pleasure of addressing, sir? This B is for?
-->'''Jerome:''' Bonaparte. I'm Jerome Lucien Alexandre Bonaparte. I'm the brother of Napoleon.
* StarCrossedLovers: He and his wife Betsy. Even though they managed to elope, it doesn't end happily for them.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Betsey]]
!!Betsy Bonaparte
!!!Actress: Camilla Power
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Betsy_250_Hornblower_3354.png]]
\\
A young American who eloped with Jerome before running into a nasty storm, from which they're rescued by the ''Hotspur''.
----
* AscendedExtra: Is ''mentioned'' as the American wife of Napoleon's brother in ''Hornblower and the Hotspur'', but is a minor character in Series 3.
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: Though she was never adrift in a storm after her marriage; they traveled to France together (Jerome hoping to talk his brother around) but she was denied permission to enter the country despite being pregnant. She named her son Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte and went on with her life, becoming a socialite in Europe for a time and managing a wealthy estate.
* StarCrossedLovers: Jerome and Betsy have it tough. They managed to run away, but it doesn't end too well for them.
* WhatTheHellHero: When Hornblower refuses to return her to Jerome, she says she feels sorry for his wife. (His response is basically that he does too.)
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[[/folder]]

!!Other
[[folder:HMS Justinian]]
!! HMS ''Justinian''
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/justinian.png]]
\\
HMS ''Justinian'' is a ship-of-the-line stationed at Spithead. Hornblower's first assignment.
----
* InSeriesNickname: "Slough of Despond", according to Archie. "His Majesty's ship of the line ''Justinian''. Known elsewise to her intimates as the good ship Slough of Despond." She's not a fighting ship and is captained by a frail, dying older Captain. Her lieutenants are not very good authority figures. Her middies are bored with inaction and bullied by one particularly nasty midshipman. Her hands are something of an ill-disciplined rabble. And she's smelly to boot. Seriously, not a very cool ship.
* SettingAsACharacter: She's stationed at Spithead and is as idle as her crew, and slowly dying in the same way her old frail captain Keene is dying. Her midshipmen are tormented by a nasty bully. Her lieutenants are not effective. Her hands are ill-disciplined. Something is rotten aboard the ship... and Archie points out she reeks in his introductory MotorMouth monologue. "Difficult to say who smells the worst, the men or the beasts in the manger forward." It might be the ship herself that smells the worst.
\\
[[/folder]]

[[folder:HMS Indefatigable]]
!!HMS ''Indefatigable''
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/indy_0.png]]
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Captained by Sir Edward Pellew, the "Indy" is the setting for most of the first series. It's a 44 gun heavy frigate ''razéed'' from a 64-gun ship-of-the-line that is rarely out of action.
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* AffectionateNickname: She is deeply loved and has several affectionate nicknames: "Indy", "Indie" or "The Bloody Indy".
* BigDamnHeroes: The ''Indefatigable'' kicks some serious ass in Series One. She manages to appear out of the blue JustInTime and rescues for instance Horatio and his crew, Spanish castaways or the British military landing party.
* BoardingParty: She's never taken, but her men board other ships several times. What a ship!
* CoolBoat: Without a doubt the coolest ship in the show. With Papa Bear Pellew for a Captain, she has a fatherly and comfortable atmosphere.
* GunshipRescue: In "The Frogs and the Lobsters", Horblower and his marines and Major Edrington and his soldiers are trapped on a beach and about to be killed by the French... until the HMS ''Indefatigable'' opens up. An ocean vessel variant of the trope.
* {{Leitmotif}}: ''Hornblower'' has epic score in general, but "It's the bloody Indy!" theme is probably the most memorable. It sounded properly during her first appearance, and then for her heroic moments.
* MeaningfulName: ''Indefatigable'' -- it's all there in her name. Her men never give up!
* SettingAsACharacter: HMS ''Indefatigable'' is a frigate and the best loved, coolest ship in the series. Her captain is the strict but just and fatherly Sir Edward Pellew. Her sailors are extremely proud to be serving aboard her and call her affectionately "Indy" or "the bloody Indy". She never lets them down.
* WeaponsUnderstudies: A 64 gun ship-of-the-line razéed to a 44 gun heavy frigate portrayed here by the 20 gun post ship ''Grand Turk''.
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[[folder:HMS Renown]]
!!HMS ''Renown''
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/renown.png]]
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A 74-gun ship of the line captained by the tyrannical James Saywer.
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* CoolBoat: A ship of the line with gazillion of guns. Less cool than the Indy, but still a very decent ship. She has an oppressing, suffocating atmosphere at first, but it's clear that her sailors admire her, nay, they even love her.
* {{Leitmotif}}: She has her own Leitmotif. It's much more ominous than the Indy's.
* SettingAsACharacter: The atmosphere aboard ''Renown'' is very tense because she's commanded by crazy Captain Sawyer. When Sawyer's paranoia and madness peak, it's mirrored by her being aground and under gunfire from a Spanish fort. PowerTrio of lieutenants Hornblower, Bush and Kennedy take matters in their hands and manage to refloat her. The ''Renown'' is however very much loved. Even Wellard, who suffered the most in Sawyer's hands, cheers when he spots her as she's sailing to help them when they try to capture the Spanish ships.
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[[folder:HMS Hotspur]]
!!HMS ''Hotspur''
[[quoteright:250:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hotspur.png]]
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A small sloop of war that doesn't rate a post captain; this kind of vessel is instead run by a commander.
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* CoolBoat: Captain Hornblower's second command. Would you expect this ship anything less than stellar? You'd be wrong.
* SettingAsACharacter: She's Hornblower's sloop and his second command in "Loyalty" and "Duty". She's a "mere" sloop of war and not as flashy as frigates or ships of the line. However, with her awesome captain she manages to do many daring deeds and her First Lieutenant Mr Bush calls her "a fine ship".
-->'''Major Côtard:''' I was expecting a somewhat larger vessel.\\
'''Captain Hornblower:''' Don't judge a ship by the number of its guns, major, but by the skill of its crew. The ''Hotspur'' is more than equal to the task.
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[[/folder]]
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