Aurore was ordered on 31 March 1766 as
Envieuse, and renamed to
Aurore in February 1767, while still under construction.
Aurore took part in the 1772 edition of the
Escadre d'évolution under Captain
de La Tullaye. On 16 July 1778, she departed Toulon under Captain
Bompar for a mission in the Mediterranean, as part of a squadron under
Louis de Fabry de Fabrègues. On 20 January 1779,
Aurore recaptured the storeship
Heureux Jérôme, that the British had taken as prize, and brought her to Toulon. In October 1779,
Aurore departed Marseille under
Joseph de Flotte, escorting a 26-ship convoy bound for Martinique, ferrying supplies for the French colonies of the Caribbeans and for the division under
Chef d'Escadre Lamotte-Picquet. Arriving in Saint Lucia channel, the body of water between the islands of Saint Lucia and Martinique, the convoy met a 13-ship British squadron under Admiral
Hyde Parker. The British gave chase, and Lamotte scrambled to cover the escape of the convoy, leading to the
Battle of Martinique. In 1780, she sailed from the Caribbean to Cadiz to take part in the
Great Siege of Gibraltar. In 1793, she was surrendered to the British by Royalist insurgents that had seized control of the city and harbour of Toulon. The British removed her when they evacuated Toulon and the ship was renamed
Aurora. She was hulked as a prison ship in 1799 at Gibraltar and was broken up there in 1803. ==Citations==