. "*74 guns:\n*Lower gundeck: 28 \u00D7 36-pounder long guns\n*Upper gundeck: 30 \u00D7 24-pounder long guns\n*Forecastle and Quarter deck:\n**16 \u00D7 8-pounder long guns\n**4 \u00D7 36-pounder carronades"@en . . . "1071533695"^^ . . . "1794-11-10"^^ . "56470.0"^^ . . . . . . . . "September 2010"@en . "56.47"^^ . . . . . . . "15.05"^^ . "V\u00E9t\u00E9ran (1803)"@fr . "December 1803"@en . "V\u00E9t\u00E9ran"@en . "The V\u00E9t\u00E9ran was a 74-gun ship of the line of the French Navy. She was a development of the T\u00E9m\u00E9raire class, joining Cassard in a two-ship sub-class. The pair, both built by Pierre Ozanne at Brest to the plans of Jacques-No\u00EBl San\u00E9, were enlarged to carry an upper deck battery of 24-pounder long guns instead of the 18-pounders used on the standard ships of the T\u00E9m\u00E9raire class. Ordered as Magnanime, she was renamed Quatorze Juillet on 7 May 1798, and V\u00E9t\u00E9ran on 6 December 1802. On 13 December 1805, she departed Brest under captain J\u00E9r\u00F4me Bonaparte, as part of Willaumez division, to participate in what became the Atlantic campaign of 1806. The 1806 Great Coastal hurricane scattered the division and V\u00E9t\u00E9ran found herself isolated. She cruised off Quebec, destroying merchantmen and skirmishing with Royal Navy forces. She eventually returned to France and evaded the British blockade, entering Concarneau thanks to the experience of a sailor who had been a fisherman in the region. However, she ended up trapped, unable to leave the harbour for years. At some point before 1812 she fled to Lorient. In 1812, she took part in Allemand's escape from Lorient. She then sailed to Brest under Captain Jurien de Lagravi\u00E8re. She was decommissioned in 1833, and broken up in 1842."@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "1803-07-18"^^ . . . "Le V\u00E9t\u00E9ran est un navire de guerre fran\u00E7ais, en service de 1803 \u00E0 1833. C'est un vaisseau de ligne, portant 74 canons sur deux ponts-batteries, de la classe T\u00E9m\u00E9raire."@fr . "Development of"@en . . . "French ship V\u00E9t\u00E9ran (1803)"@en . . . . "1833-10-26"^^ . . . . "1803-07-18"^^ . . . "Le V\u00E9t\u00E9ran est un navire de guerre fran\u00E7ais, en service de 1803 \u00E0 1833. C'est un vaisseau de ligne, portant 74 canons sur deux ponts-batteries, de la classe T\u00E9m\u00E9raire."@fr . . . . . . "3897"^^ . . "1794-11-10"^^ . . . . . . "23515210"^^ . . . . "Up to of sails"@en . . . . . . . . . . "*2,966 tonnes\n*5,260 tonnes fully loaded"@en . "Veteran"@en . . . "France"@en . . "Timber"@en . . . "Brest"@en . . . "The V\u00E9t\u00E9ran was a 74-gun ship of the line of the French Navy. She was a development of the T\u00E9m\u00E9raire class, joining Cassard in a two-ship sub-class. The pair, both built by Pierre Ozanne at Brest to the plans of Jacques-No\u00EBl San\u00E9, were enlarged to carry an upper deck battery of 24-pounder long guns instead of the 18-pounders used on the standard ships of the T\u00E9m\u00E9raire class. Ordered as Magnanime, she was renamed Quatorze Juillet on 7 May 1798, and V\u00E9t\u00E9ran on 6 December 1802. In 1812, she took part in Allemand's escape from Lorient. She then sailed to Brest under Captain Jurien de Lagravi\u00E8re."@en . . . . . . "page number or exact name of the entry in the dictionary"@en . . . . "V\u00E9t\u00E9ran"@en . "1833-10-26"^^ .