French frigate Clorinde (1808)

[1] On 15 December 1809, Clorinde ran aground, and freed herself by dropping guns and ammunition overboard.

Captain Jacques Saint-Cricq was found guilty of failing to properly support his commodore.

Saint-Cricq was demoted of rank, expelled from the Legion of Honour, and sentenced to three years in prison.

On 6 December 1813, Clorinde captured the British merchant vessel Lusitania in the Atlantic Ocean (44°30′N 10°30′W / 44.500°N 10.500°W / 44.500; -10.500).

The other four were: Clorinde abandoned Blenden Hall at sea, where the Falmouth packet Eliza, homeward bound from Malta, found her floating.

A naval engagement at night, an action between HMS Junon and the French frigates Renommée and Clorinde , 13 December 1809