Ville de Berlin was a 74-gun built for the French Navy during the first decade of the 19th century. Completed in 1808, she played a minor role in the Napoleonic Wars.
Ville de Berlin was one of the of the Téméraire class that was specially intended for construction in some of the shipyards in countries occupied by the French, where there was less depth of water than in the main French shipyards. The ships had a length of , a beam of and a depth of hold of . The ships displaced 2,781 tonneaux and had a mean draught of . They had a tonnage of 1,381 port tonneaux. Their crew numbered 705 officers and ratings during wartime. They were fitted with three masts and ship rigged.
The muzzle-loading, smoothbore armament of the Téméraire class consisted of twenty-eight 36-pounder long guns on the lower gun deck and thirty 18-pounder long guns on the upper gun deck. The ships ordered in 1803âÂÂ1804 were intended to mount sixteen 8-pounder long guns on their forecastle and quarterdeck, plus four 36-pounder obusiers on the poop deck (). Later ships were intended to have fourteen 8-pounders and ten 36-pounder carronades without any obusiers, but the numbers of 8-pounders and carronades actually varied between a total of 20 to 26 weapons. Ville de Berlin had a dozen 8-pounders and 14 carronades.
Ville de Berlin was ordered on 24 April 1804, laid down in March 1805 in Antwerp and named Thésée in 1806. The ship was launched on 6 September 1807 and commissioned on 21 September 1807. Ville de Berlin was completed in March 1808 She became a part of the Escaut squadron under Vice-Amiral Missiessy. In 1814, she took part in the defence of Antwerp. At the Bourbon Restoration, she was renamed Atlas and sailed to Brest. Renamed Ville de Berlin during the Hundred Days, she took her name of Atlas back after Napoléon's second abdication. Struck from the navy list on 23 February 1819, she became a storage hulk in Brest.