Buonoparte was a 16-gun privateer, commissioned in Brest in 1796 with 137 to 167 men and 16 guns. captured her on 24 October 1796 South of Ireland. Buonoparte was the former packet King George, probably the one captured in 1794.
Bonaparte was a privateer commissioned in Dunkirk in December 1796 under Jean Meulenaer, with 24 men and 10 to 15 guns. After a first cruise between Decemerb 1796 and January 1797, she sortied again in February with a 110-man crew. HMS Espion and Martin captured her on 14 February 1797.
Buonaparte was a 32-tonne privateer cutter commissioned in Saint-Malo in 1797 under F. Roussel, with 32 men and 3 guns. captured her in the Caribbean circa June 1797.
Bonaparte was a lugger requisitioned at Anconna in March 1797 and commissioned in the French Navy as an aviso with six 6-pounders. She was last mentioned while at Bonifacio in April 1799. She might have been become the aviso Redoutable, commissioned at Bastia on 8 May 1800 that the British captured near Pantalleria in June 1800.
Bonaparte was a privateer commissioned in Boulogne in May 1799. She did two cruises, from May to July 1799, and from October 1799 to March 1800, under Jean-Baptist Pollet, with 46 men.
Bonaparte was a "privateer frigate" commissioned in October 1797 under a Captain Lamotte, with 250 men and 32 guns.
Bonaparte was an 8-gun schooner commissioned as a privateer and captured in 1799 in the Atlantic by USS Merrimack.
Bonaparte was a 75-tonne, 14-gun privateer brig commissioned in Bayonne in June 1797 under Louis Boulager. She did a cruise from June 1797 to March 1798 with 10 to 13 officers and 62 to 67 men.
Bonaparte was a privateer trincadour commissioned in Bayonne in 1798 or 1799 under a Captain Lazue or Lazuc. She cruised in February 1799 with a 15-man crew.
Bonaparte was a privateer from an unknown home port, operating in the Mediterranean in early 1798, with 40 men and 2 guns. captured her in February 1798.
Bonaparte was a privateer from an unknown home port, operating off Genoa in April 1799.
Bonaparte was a privateer commissioned in Guadeloupe in January 1798. captured her off Martinique in 1799.
Bonaparte was a privateer commissioned in Guadeloupe in September or October 1799 under Ensign Pierre Martin, with 30 men and twelve 4-pounder guns. She engaged British forces off Porto Rico on 14 October 1799. Two days later, captured her.<
Bonaparte was a privateer from an unknown homeport, operating in the Caribbean in early 1799, with 50 men and 6 guns. A British squadron under Admiral Parker captured her in March 1799.
Bonaparte was a 58-tonne privateer built in Honfleur by Nicolas Loquet and commissioned in Rouen in 1798 under Captain Degaule. From 4 April to 23 June 1798, she was requisitioned by the French Navy, and manned by a 3-officer and 25-man crew. She might be the 72-man, 8-gunBonaparte that and in November 1798.
Invincible General Bonaparte was a French privateer of 20 guns and 170 men that the frigate captured on 9 December 1798 and that the Royal Navy took into service as HMS Brazen.
, which the British Royal Navy captured three times and American privateers captured twice.
was the French privateer Bonaparte that captured in November 1804. Pert was wrecked in October 1807 off the coast of what is now Venezuela.
was a schooner purchased in 1805, whose crew mutinied in 1806 and turned her over to the French who sent her out as the privateer Napoleon. Within four days of the mutiny had recaptured her; she was taken back into service under her original name and broken up in 1808.
Napoleon operated in the Indian Ocean in 1805 under the command of Captain Malo le Nouvel. She was armed with 30 guns and had a crew of 180 men.
Grand Napoléon was a privateer commissioned in Boulogne in March 1806. She cruised under a captain Huret from January to February 1808, and later under a captain Fourmentin. captured her on 17 November 1809; she was armed with 18 guns and had a crew of 75 men.
Grand Napoléon was a settee, pierced for 10 guns but only four mounted, with a crew of 38 men, that captured on 2 May 1808.
was the French privateer Bonaparte, captured in 1809. She served the Royal Navy in the Leeward Islands until broken up in 1815.
Napoleon, of 10 guns, was a vessel the Royal Navy captured at Malaga on 29 May 1812.