Проект:Адмиралтейство/Страницы разрешения неоднозначностей:Суда/5
A number of ships of the French Navy have born the name Conquérant (Conqueror). Amongst them:
- French ship Conquérant (1747) (en:Conquérant) (1747), a Citoyen class 74-gun ship of the line
- French ship Conquérant (1801) (en:Conquérant) (1801), a 74-gun ship of the line
- French ship Conquérant (1812) (en:Conquérant) (1812), a Bucentaure-class 80-gun ship of the line
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Conquerant, French Ship}}
Nine ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Conqueror, whilst another was planned:
- HMS Conqueror (1745) (en:HMS Conqueror) was an 8-gun fireship captured from the French by HMS Lowestoffe in 1745 and sold in 1748. (not exists)
- HMS Conqueror (1758) (en:HMS Conqueror) was a 68-gun third-rate launched in 1758 and wrecked in 1760.
- HMS Conqueror (1773) (en:HMS Conqueror) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1773 and broken up in 1794.
- HMS Conqueror (1801) (en:HMS Conqueror) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1801 and broken up in 1822.
- HMS Conqueror (1855) (en:HMS Conqueror) was a screw-propelled 101-gun first-rate, launched in 1855 and wrecked in 1861.
- HMS Waterloo (1833) (en:HMS Conqueror) was a 120-gun Caledonia class first rate launched in 1833 as HMS Waterloo. She was rearmed to 89 guns and converted to steam propulsion in 1859, and was renamed Conqueror in 1862. In 1877 she was renamed Warspite and served as a training ship at for the Marine Society. She was burnt in 1918.
- HMS Conqueror (1881) HMS Conqueror (en:HMS Conqueror was a Conqueror class battleship launched in 1881 and sold in 1907.)
- HMS Conqueror (1911) (en:HMS Conqueror) was am Orion class battleship launched in 1911 and sold in 1922.
- HMS Conqueror was to have been a Lion class battleship. She was laid down in 1939 but construction was suspended later that year, and she was cancelled entirely in 1945.
- HMS Conqueror (1969) HMS Conqueror (S48) — атомная подводная лодка ВМС Великобритании, второй корабль типа «Черчилль». (en:HMS Conqueror was a Churchill class nuclear submarine launched in 1969. The only nuclear submarine ever to sink an enemy warship, she was paid off and laid up in 1990.)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Conqueror, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Conqueror]]
[[en:HMS Conqueror]]
[[fi:HMS Conqueror]]
[[sl:HMS Conqueror]]
USS Conquest is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Conquest (1812) (en:USS Conquest (1812)), a merchant ship Genesee Packet, was purchased 8 October 1812.
- USS Conquest (AMc-71) (en:USS Conquest (AMc-71)), a coastal minesweeper placed in service 9 March 1942.
- USS Conquest (AM-488) (en:USS Conquest (AM-488)), a minesweeper launched 20 May 1954.
- References
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Conquest}}
[[en:USS Conquest]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Conquest:
- HMS Conquest (1794) (en:HMS Conquest) was a 12-gun gunvessel launched in 1794 and sold in 1817. (not exists)
- HMS Conquest (1878) (en:HMS Conquest) was a screw corvette launched in 1878 and sold in 1899. (not exists)
- HMS Conquest (1915) (en:HMS Conquest) was a C class light cruiser launched in 1915 and sold in 1930.
- See also
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Conquest, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Conquest]]
[[fi:HMS Conquest]]
Two ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Conquestador, named after the Conquistadors, the term for Spanish troops involved in the conquest of the Americas:
- Spanish ship Conquestador (1755) (en:HMS Conquestador) was a 60-gun fourth rate ship of the line captured from the Spanish in 1762. She was placed on harbour service from 1775 and was broken up in 1782.
- HMS Conquestador (1810) (en:HMS Conquestador) was a 74-gun third rate ship of the line launched in 1810. She was converted to a fourth rate in 1831, used as a powder hulk from 1860 and was sold in 1897.
- See also
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Conquestador, Hms}}
Six ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Constance, whilst another was planned:
- HMS Constance (1797) (en:HMS Constance (1797)) was a 22-gun sixth rate captured from the French in 1797, but recaptured by them in 1806. (not exists)
- HMS Constance was to have been a 36-gun fifth rate. She was ordered in 1833 but cancelled in 1844.
- HMS Constance (1838) (en:HMS Constance (1838)) was a 3-gun schooner launched in 1838 and sold in 1877. (not exists)
- HMS Constance (1846) (en:HMS Constance (1846)) was a 50-gun fourth rate launched in 1846. She was converted to steam propulsion in 1862 and was sold in 1875. (not exists)
- HMS Constance (1880) (en:HMS Constance (1880)) was a screw corvette launched in 1880 and sold in 1899. (not exists)
- HMS Constance (1915) (en:HMS Constance (1915)) was a C class light cruiser launched in 1915 and sold in 1936.
- HMS Constance (R71) (en:HMS Constance (R71)) was a C class destroyer launched in 1944 and broken up in 1956. (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Constance, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Constance]]
[[fi:HMS Constance]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Constant:
- The USS Constant (AM-86) (en:USS Constant (AM-86)), was launched on 9 May 1942 by Commercial Iron Works, Portland, Oregon.
- The USS Constant (AM-427) (en:USS Constant (AM-427)), was launched on 14 February 1953 by Fulton Shipyard, Antioch, California.
- References
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Constant}}
[[en:USS Constant]]
[[uk:USS Констент]]
Four ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS Constellation, in honor, according to the US Congress, of the "new constellation of stars" on the flag of the United States.
- The USS Constellation (1797) (en:USS Constellation (1797)), was a 38 gun frigate and the second ship to be commissioned in the United States Navy. It was the first US Navy vessel to put to sea and the first US Navy vessel to engage, defeat, and capture an enemy vessel.
- The USS Constellation (1854) (en:USS Constellation (1854)), was a sloop-of-war that served from 1855 to 1933, and is preserved as a National Historic Landmark in Baltimore, Maryland.
- The Lexington class battlecruiser (en:USS Constellation (CC-2)), a battlecruiser, was laid down in 1920 but construction was canceled in 1923.
- Констеллейшн (авианосец) Констеллейшн (англ. USS Constellation (CV-64)) — американский авианосец, второй построенный в классе Китти-Хок. (The en:USS Constellation (CV-64), was a Kitty Hawk-class steam turbine propelled aircraft carrier which served from 1961 to 2003.)
- See also
- Художественная литература Художественная литература — вид искусства, использующий в качестве единственного материала слова и конструкции естественного языка. (A en:fictional starship called USS Constellation (NCC-1017) was in the Star Trek episode "The Doomsday Machine".)
- Also in Star Trek, a Constellation class of starships existed, of which Captain Jean-Luc Picard's former ship, USS Stargazer, was a member.
- Source
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Constellation}}
[[de:USS Constellation]]
[[en:USS Constellation]]
[[es:USS Constellation]]
[[it:USS Constellation]]
[[nl:USS Constellation]]
[[sl:USS Constellation]]
[[sv:USS Constellation]]
[[zh:星座號]]
{{Wiktionary|constitution|constitutional}}
Constitution or constitutional may refer to:
- Конституция Конституция (от лат. constitutio — «устройство») в формальном смысле — основной закон страны, нормативно-правовой акт высшей юридической силы государства или государственно-территориального образования в федеративном государстве, закрепляющий основы политической, правовой и экономической систем данного государства или образования, основы правового статуса личности. (en:Constitution (political), the highest laws of a sovereign state, a federated state, a country or other polity)
- Устав Устав — свод правил, регулирующих организацию и порядок деятельности в какой-либо определённой сфере отношений или какого-либо государственного органа, предприятия, учреждения. (en:Constitution (corporate), the regulations governing the affairs of a legal person)
- Specific national constitutions
- Australia Constitution of Australia
- Canada Constitution of Canada
- Fiji Constitution of Fiji
- France Constitution of France
- Germany Basic Law for the Federal Republic of Germany
- India Constitution of India
- Ireland Constitution of Ireland
- Japan Constitution of Japan
- Philippines Constitution of the Philippines
- United Kingdom Constitution of the United Kingdom
- United States United States Constitution
- Ships and vehicles
- SS Constitution (en:SS Constitution), a passenger ship, commissioned in 1951
- USS Constitution USS Constitution (Конститьюшн), Old Ironsides (Железнобокий старина) — второй (после английского линейного корабля «Виктория», переоборудованного в музей) из самых старых парусных кораблей в мире. (en:USS Constitution, the oldest commissioned warship afloat in the world)
- Lexington class battlecruiser (en:USS Constitution (CC-5)), a battlecruiser canceled when partially complete in 1923
- Constitution class starship (en:Constitution class starship (Star Trek)), a class of starship in the fictional Star Trek series
- Энтерпрайз (шаттл) «Энтерпрайз» (англ. Enterprise — Предприятие (В смысле: Задуманное, предпринятое кем-либо дело, начинание)) — атмосферный прототип многоразового транспортного космического корабля НАСА. (en:Space Shuttle Enterprise was originally to be named Constitution)
- Lockheed R6V Constitution (en:R6V Constitution), a US Navy aircraft built by Lockheed
- Other uses
- British Constitution (solitaire) (en:British Constitution), a card game
- Здоровье Здоровье — (en:Health, the well being of an organism)
- Ходьба человека Ходьба человека — наиболее естественная локомоция человека. (en:Walking, to maintain or improve health)
- Апостольская конституция Апостольская конституция (лат. constitutio apostolica) — законодательный акт, провозглашённый папой римским и содержащий предписания общего и постоянного характера для всей Католической церкви или её части. (en:Apostolic constitution, the highest level Pope's decree)
- Правила святых апостолов Правила святых апостолов (Правила святых апостол) — важнейший памятник законодательства вселенской Церкви; хотя авторство не принадлежит апостолам, православная, римско-католическая церкви и ряд протестантских церквей признают за ними апостольский авторитет. (en:Apostolic constitutions, the collection of Early Christian canon laws)
- Constitution Island (en:Constitution Island), part of the West Point Military Academy
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{{disambig}}
[[cs:Konstituce]]
[[de:Konstitution (Begriffsklärung)]]
[[en:Constitution (disambiguation)]]
[[fr:Constitution (homonymie)]]
[[ja:コンスティチューション]]
[[pl:Konstytucja (ujednoznacznienie)]]
[[pt:Constituição (desambiguação)]]
[[sk:Konštitúcia]]
[[Конституция (значения)]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Content:
- HMS Content (1695) (en:HMS Content) was a 70-gun third rate captured from the French in 1695 and hulked in 1703. (not exists)
- HMS Content (1708) (en:HMS Content) was a storeship purchased in 1708 and sold in 1715. (not exists)
- HMS Content (1797) (en:HMS Content) was a 12-gun gunvessel launched in 1797 and wrecked in 1799 (although there is some doubt about this vessel, which may have been a hired brig). (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Content, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Content]]
Ten ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Contest:
- HMS Contest (1797) (en:HMS Contest) or Gunboat No. 16 was a 14-gun gunvessel launched in 1797 and broken up in 1799. (not exists)
- HMS Contest (1799 gun-brig) (en:HMS Contest) was a 5-gun gun-brig, previously the Dutch Hell-hound. She was captured in 1799 and broken up in 1803. (not exists)
- HMS Contest (1799 schooner) (en:HMS Contest) was a 14-gun schooner purchased in 1799 and broken up that year. (not exists)
- HMS Contest (1804) (en:HMS Contest) was a 12-gun gun-brig launched in 1804 which foundered in 1809. (not exists)
- HMS Contest (1812) (en:HMS Contest) was a 12-gun gun-brig launched in 1812 and wrecked in 1828. (not exists)
- HMS Contest (1846) (en:HMS Contest) was a 12-gun brig launched in 1846 and broken up in 1868. (not exists)
- HMS Contest (1874) (en:HMS Contest) was a composite screw gunboat launched in 1874 and scrapped in 1889. (not exists)
- HMS Contest (1894) (en:HMS Contest) was a Banshee class destroyer launched in 1894 and sold in 1911.
- HMS Contest (1913) (en:HMS Contest) was an Acasta class destroyer launched in 1913 and sunk in 1917. (not exists)
- HMS Contest (R12) (en:HMS Contest) was a C class destroyer launched in 1944 and sold in 1960. (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Contest, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Contest]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Converse after George Albert Converse, who was noted for his contributions to naval engineering.
- USS Converse (DD-291) (en:USS Converse (DD-291)), a Clemson class destroyer commissioned in 1920 and decommissioned in 1930.
- USS Converse (DD-509) (en:USS Converse (DD-509)), a Fletcher-class destroyer commissioned in 1942 and decommissioned in 1946; later transferred to Spain as Almirante Valdés (D23); scrapped, 1988
- Source
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Converse}}
[[en:USS Converse]]
[[es:USS Converse]]
[[sl:USS Converse]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Conway, after William Conway, who refused to haul down his country's flag during the surrender of the Pensacola Navy Yard.
- USS Craven (DD-70) (en:USS Conway (DD-70)), a new name for Caldwell class destroyer USS Craven (DD-70), launched in 1918 and renamed in 1939. She was transferred to the Royal Navy as HMS Lewes, in 1940. She was scrapped in 1945.
- USS Conway (DD-507) (en:USS Conway (DD-507)), a Fletcher-class destroyer, launched in 1942 and struck in 1969.
- Source
USS Conway Website http://www.ussconway.com
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Conway}}
[[en:USS Conway]]
Two ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Conway Castle after Conwy Castle in Wales.
- HMS Conway Castle (1804) (en:Conway Castle, acquired c. 1804), was a 54-ton Irish Gun Vessel hired to fight in the Napoleonic Wars. (not exists)
- HMS Conway Castle (FY509) (en:Conway Castle (FY509)), launched in 1916, was a 274-ton naval trawler. She was commissioned by the Royal Navy in August 1939 and served as a minesweeper during World War II. (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Conway Castle, Hms}}
Four ships and a shore establishment of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Conway after the town of Conwy in Wales, formerly known by its English name of Conway. Two were launched as Conway, while another two were renamed:
- HMS Conway (1814) (en:HMS Conway) was a 20-gun sixth rate launched in 1814 and sold in 1825. (not exists)
- HMS Conway (1832) (en:HMS Conway) was a 26-gun sixth rate launched in 1832. She became a training ship in 1859, was renamed Winchester in 1861 and was broken up in 1871. (not exists)
- HMS Conway (1830) (en:HMS Conway) was a training establishment set up in 1859 aboard the second HMS Conway. This vessel was replaced by two others:
- HMS Winchester (1822) (en:HMS Winchester) was HMS Conway from 1861 until 1876, when she was renamed HMS Mount Edgecombe. (not exists)
- HMS Nile (1839) (en:HMS Nile) was HMS Conway from 1876 until 1953 when she ran aground and broke her back. The wreck burned to the waterline in 1956. The school continued as a stone frigate until 1974.
- See also
- Two ships of the Royal Navy named HMS Conway Castle.
- Two ships of the United States Navy named USS Conway.
- External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Conway, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Conway]]
[[sl:HMS Conway]]
USS Conyngham may refer to one of these United States Navy ships named in honor of Gustavus Conyngham:
- USS Conyngham (DD-58) (en:USS Conyngham (DD-58)), a Tucker-class destroyer, commissioned in 1915, served in World War I, decommissioned in 1922, transferred to the United States Coast Guard as CG-3, returned to the Navy and scrapped in 1934
- USS Conyngham (DD-371) DD 371 Conyngham (Корабль соединённых штатов Канингхэм) — американский эсминец типа «Мэхэн». (en:USS Conyngham (DD-371), a Mahan-class destroyer, commissioned in 1936, served in World War II and decommissioned in 1946)
- USS Conyngham (DDG-17) (en:USS Conyngham (DDG-17)), a Charles F. Adams-class guided missile destroyer, commissioned in 1963 and decommissioned in 1990
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Conyngham}}
[[en:USS Conyngham]]
[[sl:USS Conyngham]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Cook, after two brothers: Andrew F. Cook, Jr. and Dallas H. Cook. Both served in the Marine Corps, and both were awarded the Navy Cross, posthumously.
- The USS Cook (APD-130) (en:USS Cook (APD-130)), was launched on 26 August 1944.
- The USS Cook (FF-1083) (en:USS Cook (FF-1083)), was launched on 23 January 1971.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cook}}
[[de:USS Cook]]
[[en:USS Cook]]
Cook Inlet may refer to:
- Geography
- Залив Кука Залив Кука (англ. Cook Inlet), Кенайский залив — залив Тихого океана, у южных берегов Аляски. (en:Cook Inlet, an inlet in Alaska)
- Animals
- The Cook Inlet beluga whale, a type of Beluga (whale)
- Companies
- Cook Inlet Region, Inc. (en:Cook Inlet Region, Inc.), an Alaska Native regional corporation
- Ships
- USS Cook Inlet (AVP-36) (en:USS Cook Inlet (AVP-36)), a United States Navy seaplane tender in commission from 1944 to 1946
- USCGC Cook Inlet (WAVP-384) (en:USCGC Cook Inlet (WAVP-384)), later WHEC-384, a United States Coast Guard cutter in commission from 1949 to 1971
- The Knik Arm ferry (en:Knik Arm ferry), or "Cook Inlet ferry", a proposed year-round passenger and auto ferry across Knik Arm between Anchorage and Point MacKenzie in Alaska
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{{geodis}}
{{disambig}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cook Inlet}}
[[en:Cook Inlet (disambiguation)]]
Coos Bay may refer to:
- Geography
- Coos Bay (en:Coos Bay), a bay on the coast of Oregon in the United States
- Coos Bay, Oregon (en:Coos Bay, Oregon), a city in Oregon
- Ships
- USS Coos Bay (AVP-25) (en:USS Coos Bay (AVP-25)), a United States Navy seaplane tender in commission from 1943 to 1946
- USCGC Coos Bay (WAVP-376) (en:USCGC Coos Bay (WAVP-376)), later WHEC-376, a United States Coast Guard cutter in commission from 1949 to 1966
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{geodis}}
{{disambig}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Coos Bay}}
[[en:Coos Bay (disambiguation)]]
[[it:Coos Bay]]
Six ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Coquette. A seventh was ordered but never completed:
- HMS Coquette (1783) (en:HMS Coquette) was a 28-gun sixth rate captured from the French in 1783 and in service in 1785. (not exists)
- HMS Coquette (1807) (en:HMS Coquette) was a 20-gun sixth rate launched in 1807 and sold in 1817. (not exists)
- HMS Coquette was to have been an 18-gun corvette. She was ordered in 1835 and cancelled in 1851.
- HMS Coquette (1855) (en:HMS Coquette) was a wooden screw gunvessel launched in 1855 and broken up in 1868. (not exists)
- HMS Coquette (1871) (en:HMS Coquette) was a composite screw gunboat launched in 1871 and sold in 1889. (not exists)
- HMS Coquette (1897) (en:HMS Coquette) was a D class destroyer launched in 1897 and sunk in 1916. (not exists)
- HMS Coquette (J305) (en:HMS Coquette) was an Algerine class minesweeper launched in 1943 and scrapped in 1958. (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Coquette, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Coquette]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Coral Sea, commemorating the Battle of the Coral Sea during World War II.
- The USS Anzio (CVE-57) (en:USS Coral Sea (CVE-57)), was an escort aircraft carrier named Alikula Bay during construction, renamed Coral Sea just before launching in 1943 and then renamed to Anzio a year later. Finally decommissioned in 1946.
- The USS Coral Sea (CV-43) (en:USS Coral Sea (CV-43)), was an aircraft carrier in service from 1946 to 1990, including nearly a decade of action in the Vietnam War.
- Source
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Coral Sea|Coral Sea}}
[[de:USS Coral Sea]]
[[en:USS Coral Sea]]
[[sl:USS Coral Sea]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cordelia, named after the legendary Queen of the Britons:
- HMS Cordelia (1808) (en:HMS Cordelia) was a 10-gun Cherokee-class brig-sloop launched in 1808. She was sold in 1833. (not exists)
- HMS Cordelia (1856) (en:HMS Cordelia) was a 11-gun Racer-class wooden screw sloop launched in 1856. She was sold in 1870.
- HMS Cordelia (1881) (en:HMS Cordelia) was a Comus-class screw corvette launched in 1881. She was sold in 1904.
- HMS Cordelia (1914) (en:HMS Cordelia) was a C-class light cruiser launched in 1914. She was sold in 1921.
- References
- {{Colledge}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Cordelia, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cordelia]]
[[fi:HMS Cordelia]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Cormorant, after the Cormorant, a genus of web-footed sea birds.
- The USS Cormorant (AM-40) (en:USS Cormorant (AM-40)), was launched on 5 February 1919 by Todd Shipbuilding Corporation in New York City.
- The USS Cormorant (AMS-122) (en:USS Cormorant (AMS-122)), was launched on 8 June 1953 by Mare Island Naval Shipyard.
- The USS Cormorant (MHC-57) (en:USS Cormorant (MHC-57)), is the seventh ship of Osprey class coastal mine hunters.
- References
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Cormorant}}
[[de:USS Cormorant]]
[[en:USS Cormorant]]
[[nl:USS Cormorant]]
Eleven ships and a shore establishment of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cormorant, after the seabird, the cormorant:
- HMS Cormorant (1757) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a 16-gun fireship, previously the French Marchault. She was captured in 1757 and sold in 1762. (not exists)
- HMS Cormorant (1776) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a 14-gun sloop launched in 1776 and captured by the French in 1781. (not exists)
- HMS Cormorant (1781) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a 12-gun brig-sloop, previously the American Rattlesnake. She was captured in 1781, renamed HMS Rattlesnake in 1783, and sold in 1786. (not exists)
- HMS Cormorant (1794) (en:HMS Cormorant) was an 18-gun Cormorant-class ship-sloop launched in 1794 and destroyed by an accidental explosion in 1796.
- HMS Cormorant (1796) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a 20-gun sixth rate, previously the French Etna. She was captured in 1796 and wrecked in 1800 (not exists)
- HMS Cormorant (1804) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a 16-gun sloop, formerly the civilian Blenheim. She was purchased in 1804 and sold in 1817. (not exists)
- HMS Cormorant (1842) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a paddlewheel sloop launched in 1842 and broken up in 1853. (not exists)
- HMS Cormorant (1856) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a screw gunvessel launched in 1856 and sunk in 1859. (not exists)
- HMS Cormorant (1860) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a screw sloop launched in 1860 and sold in 1870. (not exists)
- HMS Cormorant (1877) (en:HMS Cormorant) was an Osprey-class composite screw sloop launched in 1877, reduced to harbour service in 1889, renamed HMS Rooke in 1946, and broken up in 1949.
- HMS Cormorant (P256) (en:HMS Cormorant) was a patrol boat launched in 1975 as HMAFV Sunderland for the Royal Air Force. She was transferred to the Royal Navy in 1985 and was sold in 1991. (not exists)
- Shore establishment
- HMS Cormorant II (shore establishment) (en:HMS Cormorant II) was the Royal Naval Air Station at Gibraltar between 1943 and 1944. (not exists)
- Other ships
- Cormorant II was a trawler hired between 1915 and 1919.
- Cormorant III was a drifter hired between 1915 and 1919.
- Cormorant IV was a trawler hired between 1916 and 1919.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Cormorant, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cormorant]]
Cornish City was the name of five ships operated by Sir W R Smith & Sons Ltd (Reardon Smith Line).
- SS Cornish City (1906) (en:SS Cornish City (1906)), captured and scuttled during the First World War (not exists)
- SS Cornish City (1919) (en:SS Cornish City (1919)), sold in 1929, seized in 1940 and placed under the management of Reardon Smith as Fort Binger until returned to owners in 1944 (not exists)
- SS Cornish City (1937) (en:SS Cornish City (1937)), torpedoed and sunk by U-177 on 29 July 1943 (not exists)
- MV Empire Cheer (en:MV Cornish City (1943)), ex Empire Cheer, managed during the Second World War and purchased in 1946, scrapped 1963
- MV Cornish City (1969) (en:MV Cornish City (1969)), sold in 1977 (not exists)
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[[en:Cornish City]]
Seven ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Cornwall after the Duchy of Cornwall. Cornwall's motto is unus et omnes (one and all).
- HMS Cornwall (1692) (en:HMS Cornwall) was an 80-gun third-rate ship of the line launched in 1692 and broken up in 1761.
- HMS Cornwall (1761) (en:HMS Cornwall) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1761. She was damaged in action in 1780, and subsequently burnt as unserviceable.
- HMS Cornwall was the name initially chosen for HMS Heir Apparent, a 74-gun third rate captured from the Danish in 1807, but the name was not used.
- HMS Cornwall (1812) (en:HMS Cornwall) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1812. She was reduced to 50 guns in 1831, was renamed HMS Wellesley in 1869 and served as a school ship until broken up in 1874.
- HMS Wellesley (1815) (en:HMS Cornwall) was a 74-gun third rate launched in 1815 as HMS Wellesley. She was renamed HMS Cornwall in 1868 when she became a school ship, and was sunk in 1940.
- HMS Cornwall (1902) (en:HMS Cornwall) was a Monmouth-class armoured cruiser launched in 1902 and sold in 1920.
- Корнуолл (крейсер) «Корнуолл» (англ. HMS Cornwall (56)) — британский тяжёлый крейсер. (en:HMS Cornwall was a County-class heavy cruiser launched in 1926 and sunk by Japanese air attack during the Indian Ocean raid in 1942.)
- HMS Cornwall (F99) (en:HMS Cornwall) is a Type 22 Batch 3 frigate launched in 1985 and currently in service.
- Battle honours
- Сражение при Барфлёр Сражение при Барфлёр — сражение во время Войны Аугсбургской лиги между французским флотом Турвиля и численно превосходящим объединенным англо-голландским флотом под общим командованием Эдварда Рассела. (en:Barfleur 1692)
- Фолклендский бой Балтийское море (en:Falkland Islands 1914)
- Naval operations in the Dardanelles Campaign (en:Dardanelles) 1915
- References
- {{Colledge}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Cornwall, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Cornwall]]
[[en:HMS Cornwall]]
[[fi:HMS Cornwall]]
[[sl:HMS Cornwall]]
Five ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Cornwallis, after Admiral Sir William Cornwallis.
- HMS Cornwallis (1777) (en:HMS Cornwallis) was a 5-gun galley purchased in North America in 1777 and sold in 1782. (not exists)
- HMS Cornwallis (1781) (en:HMS Cornwallis) was a 14-gun storeship purchased in 1781, that foundered in 1782 in the Atlantic. (not exists)
- HMS Cornwallis (1801) (en:HMS Cornwallis) was a 54-gun fourth rate ship of the line, formerly the East Indiaman Marquis Cornwallis, purchased in 1801. She was renamed HMS Akbar in 1806 and used as a troopship. In 1824 she was used for harbour service, and was finally sold in 1862.
- HMS Cornwallis (1813) (en:HMS Cornwallis) was a 74-gun third rate launched in 1813. She was converted to a screw propelled ship in 1855 and rearmed to 60 guns. She became a jetty in 1865, was renamed HMS Wildfire in 1916 and was broken up in 1957.
- HMS Cornwallis (1901) (en:HMS Cornwallis) was a Duncan-class battleship launched in 1901 and sunk in 1917 by a German U-Boat.
- See also
HMS Lychnis was an Anchusa class sloop renamed HMIS Cornwallis on her transferral to the Royal Indian Marine in 1921.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Cornwallis, Hms}}
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Coromandel , after the Coromandel Coast of India:
- HMS Coromandel (1795) (en:HMS Coromandel) was a 56-gun fourth rate, previously the ex-Indiaman Winterton. She was purchased on the stocks in 1795, used as a storeship from 1800, was hulked in 1807 and sold in 1813. (not exists)
- HMS Malabar (1804) (en:HMS Coromandel) was the East Indiaman Cuvera, which the Admiralty bought in 1804 and converted to the 56-gun fourth rate HMS Malabar. She was rebuilt as a 20-gun storeship in 1806 and renamed HMS Coromandel in 1815. She transported convicts to Australia in 1819. From 1828 to 1853, when she was broken up, she served as a prison hulk in Bermuda.
- HMS Coromandel (1855) (en:HMS Coromandel) was a wooden paddle despatch vessel, previously the civilian Tartar, purchased in 1855. She was sold in 1866 to the Japanese, entering service with them as the Naruto. She was broken up in 1876.
- HMS Coromandel (1856) (en:HMS Coromandel) was a 4-gun wooden screw frigate launched in 1856 and in service until at least 1870. (not exists)
- Notes and references
- {{Colledge}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Coromandel, HMS}}
USS Coronado may refer to:
- USS Coronado (PF-38) (en:USS Coronado (PF-38)), a patrol frigate, served in World War II as a convoy escort.
- USS Coronado (AGF-11) (en:USS Coronado (AGF-11)), an auxiliary command ship, hosted the Navy's Sea Based Battle Lab (SBBL).
- USS Coronado (LCS-4) (en:USS Coronado (LCS-4)), the fourth littoral combat ship named on 12 March 2009
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Coronado}}
[[de:USS Coronado]]
[[en:USS Coronado]]
[[sl:USS Coronado]]
Several ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Corpus Christi for the city of Corpus Christi, Texas or related areas.
- The USS Corpus Christi (PF-44) (en:USS Corpus Christi (PF-44)), was a Tacoma-class patrol frigate that served in World War II.
- The USS City of Corpus Christi (SSN-705) (en:USS City of Corpus Christi (SSN-705)), is a Los Angeles-class submarine {{Ship in active service}}
.
- The United States Naval Ship (en:USNS) Corpus Christi Bay (T-ARVH-1), formerly USS Albemarle (AV-5), was a helicopter repair ship, from 1965 until 1974.
- References
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Corpus Christi}}
[[de:USS Corpus Christi]]
[[en:USS Corpus Christi]]
Three ships of United States Navy were named USS Corry for William Merrill Corry, Jr.
- The USS Corry (DD-334) (en:USS Corry (DD-334)), a Clemson-class destroyer, was commissioned in 1921 and decommissioned in 1930.
- The USS Corry (DD-463) (en:USS Corry (DD-463)), a Gleaves-class destroyer, served from 1941 until she was sunk on D-Day, 6 June 1944.
- The USS Corry (DD-817) (en:USS Corry (DD-817)), a Gearing-class destroyer, was launched in 1945. In 1981, the ship was transferred to Greece and renamed Kriezis.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Corry}}
[[en:USS Corry]]
[[sl:USS Corry]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Corsair, for the California rockfish, or a pirate or privateer, especially Turkish or Saracen.
- The USS Oceanographer (AGS-3) (en:USS Corsair (SP-159)) was built as the private yacht Corsair II in 1899, and was acquired and commissioned by the Navy on 15 May 1917. Cross referencing DANFS also finds the names, USC&GS Oceanographer (OSS-26), USS Natchez (PG-85) and USS Oceanographer (AGS-3). as being held by this same ship.
- The USS Corsair (SS-435) (en:USS Corsair (SS-435)), was a Tench-class submarine that served during the early years of the Cold War.
- See also
- A fictitious submarine named USS Corsair was the setting for the 1943 movie "Crash Dive." No USS Corsair was in commission during the time period of the movie (the Second Battle of the Atlantic).
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Corsair}}
[[en:USS Corsair]]
[[es:USS Corsair]]
SS Corsicana may refer to one of two Type T2 tankers built for the United States Maritime Commission:
- USS Kennebec (AO-36) (en:SS Corsicana (1941)) (MC hull number 142, Type T2), built by Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard; acquired by the United States Navy and converted to Kennebec-class oiler USS Kennebec (AO-36); placed in National Defense Reserve Fleet in 1970; scrapped in 1982
- USS Pecos (AO-65) (en:SS Corsicana (1942)) (MC hull number 321, Type T2-SE-A1), built by Sun Shipbuilding; laid down as Oriskany, but launched as Corsicana, August 1942; acquired by the United States Navy and converted to Suamico-class oiler USS Pecos (AO-65); placed in National Defense Reserve Fleet in 1974; scrapped in 1975
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Corsicana}}
[[en:SS Corsicana]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Corwin after Secretary of the Treasury Thomas Corwin.
- The USS Corwin (1849) (en:USS Corwin (1849)), was a side wheel gunboat, wooden steamer built at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1849.
- The USRC Thomas Corwin (1876) (en:USS Corwin (1876)) was a revenue cutter built at Portland, Oregon, by the Oregon Iron Works in 1876.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Corwin}}
[[en:USS Corwin]]
USS Cossack has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- Stone Fleet (en:USS Cossack (1861)), part of the Stone Fleet during the American Civil War.
- USS Cossack (SP-695) (en:USS Cossack (SP-695)), a patrol boat in commission from 1917 to 1919
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cossack}}
[[en:USS Cossack]]
Six ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cossack, after the Cossack people of Eastern Europe, whilst another was begun but was cancelled while building:
- HMS Cossack (1806) (en:HMS Cossack) was a 22-gun sixth-rate post-ship, begun under the name Pandour in 1805, but renamed before being launched in 1806. She was broken up in 1816.
- HMS Cossack was to have been a steam gunvessel, laid down at Portsmouth Dockyard in 1846, but cancelled in May 1849.
- HMS Cossack (1854) (en:HMS Cossack) was ordered as the Russian ship Witjas, a wood screw corvette building on the Thames at Northfleet which was seized by Britain while under construction in 1854 and sold in 1875.
- HMS Cossack (1886) (en:HMS Cossack) was an Archer-class torpedo cruiser launched in 1886 and sold in 1905. (not exists)
- HMS Cossack (1907) (en:HMS Cossack) was a Tribal-class destroyer launched in 1907 and sold in 1919.
- HMS Cossack (F03) (en:HMS Cossack) was a Tribal-class destroyer launched in 1937 and sunk four days after being torpedoed by the German submarine U-563 in 1941, when attempts to tow her to safety failed.
- HMS Cossack (R57) (en:HMS Cossack) was a C-class destroyer launched in 1944 and broken up in 1961. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:HMS Cossack}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cossack, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Cossack]]
[[en:HMS Cossack]]
[[fi:HMS Cossack]]
[[hu:HMS Cossack (egyértelműsítő lap)]]
HMS Cotillion has been the name of several Royal Navy vessels of the 20th Century:
- HMS Cotillion (1917) (en:HMS Cotillion (1917)), a Dance class minesweeper of World War I (not exists)
- HMS Cotillion (T104) (en:HMS Cotillion (T104)), a Dance class ASW trawler of World War II (not exists)
- See also
- Котильон Котильон (фр. cotillon) — бальный танец французского происхождения. (en:Cotillion, a French square dance)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cotillion, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cotillion]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Cotinga, after the Cotinga, a passerine bird of South and Central America.
- The USS Cotinga (AMc-43) (en:USS Cotinga (AMc-43)), was launched 25 March 1941.
- The USS Cotinga (AMCU-22) (en:USS Cotinga (AMCU-22)), the former LCI(L)-776; renamed and reclassified AMCU-22 on 7 March 1952. (not exists)
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cotinga}}
[[en:USS Cotinga]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Cottesmore after the Cottesmore hunt:
- The first HMS Cottesmore (1917) (en:Cottesmore, launched in 1917), was a Hunt-class minesweeper. She served in World War I and was paid off and sold in 1919. (not exists)
- The second HMS Cottesmore (L78) (en:Cottesmore (L78)), launched in 1940, was a Hunt-class destroyer. She served in World War II, was sold to the Egyptian Navy in 1950 being renamed Port Said, and served into the 1980s as a training ship. (not exists)
- The third HMS Cottesmore (M32) (en:Cottesmore (M32)), launched in 1982 and decommissioned in 2005, was a mine countermeasure vessel of another Hunt class. Prince Andrew, Duke of York commanded HMS Cottesmore from April 1993 until November 1994.
- External links
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cottesmore, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cottesmore]]
[[fi:HMS Cottesmore]]
[[sl:HMS Cottesmore]]
HMS Courageous or Courageux (the French spelling) may refer to one of several ships of the Royal Navy:
- HMS Courageux (1761) (en:HMS Courageux (1761)), a 74-gun ship of the line captured from the French on 13 Aug 1761, and wrecked on the coast of Morocco 19 Dec 1796. (not exists)
- HMS Courageux (1799) (en:HMS Courageux (1799)), or Courageuse, was a 32-gun sailing frigate captured from the French in June 1799. She was renamed 'Lutine' in Nov 1799 and used as a prison ship at Gibraltar. Sold in April 1802. (not exists)
- HMS Courageux (1800) (en:HMS Courageux (1800)), a 74-gun 3rd rate launched in 1800, laid up in 1814, and later in use as a lazaretto. Broken up 1832.
- HMS Courageous (1916) HMS Courageous (ЕВК «Корейджес» — с англ. ' «Отважный») — британский линейный крейсер, позднее перестроенный в авианосец, как и его систершип «Глориес». (en:HMS Courageous (50), originally a 1st class cruiser, converted to an aircraft carrier in 1924; sunk by U-29 in Sept. 1939.)
- HMS Courageous (S50) (en:HMS Courageous (S50)), a submarine in service from 1971 to 1993, and presently on display at Plymouth.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Courageous, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Courageous]]
[[fi:HMS Courageous]]
[[fr:HMS Courageux]]
[[ja:カレイジャス]]
[[pl:HMS Courageous]]
[[sl:HMS Courageous]]
Three ships of the French Navy have been named Courbet in honour of Amédée Courbet:
- French ironclad Courbet (en:Courbet) (1882-1909), an ironclad battleship
- French battleship Courbet (1911) (en:Courbet) (1913-1944), lead dreadnough battleship of the Courbet class
- French frigate Courbet (F 712) (en:Courbet (F 712)), in active service, a La Fayette class multi-mission frigate
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Courbet, French Ship}}
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Courier, after a Courier, a messenger or traveling attendant.
- USS Courier (1861) (en:USS Courier (1861)), a storeship purchased 7 September 1861.
- USS Courier (1912) (en:USS Courier (1912)), a ferry launch, formerly named Hope, which served as commandant's barge and general service ship at Charleston Navy Yard from 1912-18. (not exists)
- USS Courier (AMc-72) (en:USS Courier (AMc-72)), a coastal minesweeper which served in "in service" status in the 1st Naval District from 1941 to 1947.
- USNS Courier (T-AK-5019) (en:USNS Courier (T-AK-5019)), A cargo ship launched in 1962 and scrapped in 2008
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Courier}}
[[en:USS Courier]]
USS Courlan is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Courlan (AMc-44) (en:USS Courlan (AMc-44)), a coastal minesweeper which served in an "in service" status from 1941 to 1947.
- YMS-114 was reclassified and named USS Courlan (AMS-44) on 1 September 1947.
- References
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Courlan}}
[[en:USS Courlan]]
{{dablink|For the commune in western France, see La Couronne, Charente.}}
{{French Navy}}
Thirteen ships of the French Navy of the Ancien régime have borne the name Couronne ("crown"):
- Couronne (линейный корабль, 1636) Couronne (русск. «Корона») — первый парусный линейный корабль французского флота. (en:La Couronne (1636), the first man of war built in France)
- French ship La Couronne (1664) (en:La Couronne), a galley (1664-1675) (not exists)
- French ship La Couronne (1669) (en:La Couronne), a 80-gun ship of the line (1669-1712) (not exists)
- French ship La Couronne (1674) (en:La Couronne), a 6-gun fire ship (1674-1677) (not exists)
- French ship La Couronne (1677) (en:La Couronne), a galley (1677-1686) (not exists)
- French ship La Couronne (1686) (en:La Couronne), a galley (1686-1696) (not exists)
- French ship La Couronne (1697) (en:La Couronne), a galley (1697-1716) (not exists)
- French ship La Couronne (1749) (en:La Couronne), a 74-gun ship of the line (1749-1795)
- French ship La Couronne (1768) (en:La Couronne), a 80-gun ship of the line (1768-1781)
- French ship Ça Ira (1781) (en:La Couronne) a 80-gun ship. Renamed Ça Ira in 1793, captured by Britain 1795. She was destroyed in an accidental fire in 1796.
- French ship Couronne (1824) (en:La Couronne), a Téméraire class ship of the line (1824)
- French ship Minerve (1807) (en:La Couronne), a 32-gun frigate also named Minerve (1697-1716) (not exists)
- French ship La Couronne (1813) (en:La Couronne), a 74-gun ship of the line, lead ship of her class (1813) (not exists)
- French ship La Couronne (1824) (en:La Couronne), a 80-gun ship of the line (1824-1869) (not exists)
- French ironclad Couronne (en:La Couronne) (1861), a Gloire type ironclad with a modified bow
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Couronne, French Ship}}
[[en:French ship La Couronne]]
[[fr:La Couronne]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Courser for one who moves from one point to another, or pursues a quarry.
- The USS Courser (AMS-6) (en:USS Courser (AMS-6)), was laid down 28 August 1942 as YMS-201 by the Hiltebrant Dry Dock Company, in Kingston, New York.
- References
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Courser}}
[[en:USS Courser]]
USS Courtney has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Courtney (SP-375) (en:USS Courtney (SP-375)), a patrol vessel, originally named William J. Courtney, in commission from 1917 to 1919
- USS Courtney (DE-1021) (en:USS Courtney (DE-1021)), a destroyer escort in commission from 1956 to 1973
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Courtney}}
[[en:USS Courtney]]
Six ships of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Coventry, after the city of Coventry in the West Midlands.
- The first HMS Coventry (1658) (en:Coventry) was the Spanish 28-gun ship San Miguel, captured in 1658, but in turn taken by the French in 1666.
- The second HMS Coventry (1695) (en:Coventry) was a 48-gun fourth-rate launched in 1695, captured by the French in 1704 but soon recaptured, and broken up in 1709.
- The third HMS Coventry (1757) (en:Coventry) was a 28-gun sixth-rate launched in 1757 and captured by the French in 1783.
- The fourth HMS Coventry (D43) (en:Coventry) was light cruiser launched in 1916 and sunk in an air attack in 1942.
- The fifth HMS Coventry (D118) (en:Coventry (D118)) was a destroyer launched in 1974 and lost in the Falklands War.
- The sixth HMS Coventry (F98) (en:Coventry (F98)) was a frigate launched in 1986 and sold to Romania in 2003.
HMS Penelope (F127) (launched 1962) was to be named Coventry but this was changed before commissioning.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Coventry, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Coventry]]
[[fi:HMS Coventry]]
[[it:HMS Coventry]]
[[sl:HMS Coventry]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Covington, mostly for the city of Covington, Kentucky.
- USS Covington (1863) (en:USS Covington (1863)), a side wheel steamer, purchased by the Union during the American Civil War.
- USS Covington (ID-1409) (en:USS Covington (ID-1409)), a troop transport ship sunk by German U-86 in 1918.
- USS Covington (PF-56) (en:USS Covington (PF-56)), a Tacoma class frigate built during World War II.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Covington}}
[[en:USS Covington]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Cowell, after John G. Cowell.
- The USS Ward (DD-139) (en:USS Cowell (DD-139)), was renamed the Ward prior to launching.
- The USS Cowell (DD-167) (en:USS Cowell (DD-167)), a Wickes-class destroyer, launched in 1918 and decommissioned in 1940.
- The USS Cowell (DD-547) (en:USS Cowell (DD-547)), a Fletcher-class destroyer, launched in 1943 and stricken in 1971.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cowell}}
[[en:USS Cowell]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Cowpens, after the Battle of Cowpens during the American Revolutionary War.
- The USS Cowpens (CVL-25) (en:USS Cowpens (CVL-25)), was a light aircraft carrier active in World War II and decommissioned in 1946.
- The USS Cowpens (CG-63) (en:USS Cowpens (CG-63)), is a guided missile cruiser commissioned in 1991 and currently on active service.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cowpens}}
[[de:USS Cowpens]]
[[en:USS Cowpens]]
[[sl:USS Cowpens]]
At least seven vessels of the Royal Navy have born the name HMS Crane.
- HMS Crane (1590) (en:HMS Crane (1590)) was a 24-gun ship sold in 1629. (not exists)
- HMS Crane (1777) (en:HMS Crane (1777)) was a galley purchased in North America and sold in 1783. (not exists)
- HMS Crane (1806) (en:HMS Crane (1806)) was a 4-gun Cuckoo class schooner that was wrecked in 1808.
- HMS Crane (1809) (en:HMS Crane (1809)) was a Cruizer class brig-sloop launched in 1809 that foundered with the loss of her entire crew in 1814.
- HMS Crane (1839) (en:HMS Crane (1839)) was a packet brig of 6 guns that was sold in 1862. (not exists)
- HMS Crane (1896) (en:HMS Crane (1896)) was a Star-class destroyer launched in 1896 and broken up in 1919 after the end of World War I.
- HMS Crane (1942) (en:HMS Crane (1942)) was a sloop that was broken up in 1965. (not exists)
- References
- {{colledge}}
- {{cite book |first=Rif|last=Winfield|title=British Warships in the Age of Sail 1793–1817: Design, Construction, Careers and Fates|publisher=Seaforth|year=2008|isbn=1861762461}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crane, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Crane]]
HMS Crash
The Royal Navy has had at least two vessels with the name, HMS Crash
- HMS Crash (1797) (en:HMS Crash) was a 12-gun Acute class gun-brig launched in 1797 and broken up in 1802.
- The second HMS Crash was the HMS Scourge (1794), which was renamed HMS Crash in 1797 and broken up in 1803.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crash, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Crash]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Craven after Tunis Craven, a Navy Commander who died at the Battle of Mobile Bay.
- USS Craven (TB-10) (en:USS Craven (TB-10)), a torpedo boat, commissioned in 1900 and decommissioned in 1913.
- USS Craven (DD-70) (en:USS Craven (DD-70)), a destroyer, commissioned in 1918, served in the Royal Navy as Lewes until being scrapped in 1945.
- USS Craven (DD-382) DD 382 Craven (Корабль соединённых штатов Крэвэн) — американский эсминец типа Гридли. (en:USS Craven (DD-382), a destroyer, commissioned in 1937 and decommissioned in 1945.)
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Craven}}
[[en:USS Craven]]
[[sl:USS Craven]]
A number of ships of the French navy have bourn the name Créole in honour of Creole peoples. Among them:
- French brig Créole (1809) (en:Créole) (1809), a 10-gun brig-sloop
- French corvette Créole (1829) (en:Créole) (1829), a 24-gun corvette
- French submarine Créole (Q193) (en:Créole) (Q193), an Aurore class submarine that saw action in the Suez Crisis
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Creole, French Ship}}
Eleven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Crescent:
- HMS Crescent (1643) (en:HMS Crescent) was a 14-gun ship purchased in 1643. She was captured in 1648 by the Royalists and wrecked in 1649. (not exists)
- HMS Crescent (1692) (en:HMS Crescent) was a 6-gun fireship, formerly of the French navy. She was captured in 1692 by HMS Dover and sold in 1698. (not exists)
- HMS Crescent (1758) (en:HMS Crescent) was a 32-gun fifth rate. She was formerly the French privateer Rostan, before being captured in 1758 by HMS Torbay. She was sold in 1777. (not exists)
- HMS Crescent (1779) (en:HMS Crescent) was a 28-gun sixth rate launched in 1779, and captured by the French off Cadiz in 1781. (not exists)
- HMS Crescent (1784) (en:HMS Crescent) was a 36-gun fifth rate launched in 1784 and wrecked off Jutland in 1808. (not exists)
- HMS Crescent (1810) (en:HMS Crescent) was a 38-gun fifth rate launched in 1810, reassigned to harbour service in 1840 and sold in 1854. (not exists)
- HMS Crescent (1854) (en:HMS Crescent) was a wood paddle tender purchased in 1854, and sold in 1855. (not exists)
- HMS Crescent (1892) (en:HMS Crescent) was an Edgar class first class cruiser launched in 1892. She was sold in 1921.
- HMS Crescent was previously the Canopus class battleship HMS Glory, renamed Crescent when she became a depot ship in 1920, before being sold in 1922.
- HMS Crescent (1931) (en:HMS Crescent) was a C-class destroyer launched in 1931, but transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1937 and renamed HMCS Fraser. She was sunk in 1940 in a collision with HMS Calcutta.
- HMCS Crescent (R16) (en:HMS Crescent) was a C-class destroyer launched in 1944 and transferred on loan to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1945. She was bought outright by the Canadians in 1951 and converted into a frigate in 1956. She was paid off in 1970 and broken up in 1971.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crescent, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Crescent]]
[[fi:HMS Crescent]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cressy, after the Battle of Crécy.
- HMS Cressy (1810) (en:HMS Cressy) was a 74-gun third rate launched in 1810 and broken up in 1832.
- HMS Cressy (1853) (en:HMS Cressy) was an 80-gun screw propelled third rate launched in 1853 and sold in 1867. (not exists)
- HMS Cressy (1899) (en:HMS Cressy) was a Cressy-class armoured cruiser launched in 1899 and sunk by a U-boat in 1914.
- HMS Unicorn (1824) (en:HMS Cressy) was the name given to the 46-gun fifth rate HMS Unicorn between 1941 and 1959 while she was serving as a drill ship for the Royal Naval Reserve. She was handed over for preservation in 1968.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cressy, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cressy]]
[[es:HMS Cressy]]
[[fr:HMS Cressy]]
Two ships and a shore establishment of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cricket, after the cricket, an insect native to Britain:
- HMS Cricket (1906) (en:HMS Cricket) was a Cricket class coastal destroyer, launched in 1906. She was re-rated as a torpedo boat that year and renamed TB 1. She was sold in 1920. (not exists)
- HMS Cricket (1915) (en:HMS Cricket) was an Insect class gunboat, launched in 1915. She was used as a minesweeper from 1939 and gunboat from 1940, before being scrapped in 1942.
- HMS Cricket (shore establishment) (en:HMS Cricket) was a shore establishment in Hampshire, commissioned in 1943 and paid off in 1946.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cricket, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cricket]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Croatan, after the Croatan Sound of the North Carolina coast.
- The HMS Fencer (D64) (en:USS Croatan (CVE-14)), was an escort aircraft carrier loaned to the United Kingdom and operated as the HMS Fencer from February 1943 to 1946.
- The USS Croatan (CVE-25) (en:USS Croatan (CVE-25)), was also an escort aircraft carrier, commissioned August 1943 and placed out of service in 1946, but operated by a civilian crew for some years thereafter.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Croatan}}
[[de:USS Croatan]]
[[en:USS Croatan]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Crockett, presumably after counties in Tennessee and Texas.
- The USS Crockett (APA-148) (en:USS Crockett (APA-148)), was launched 28 November 1944.
- The USS Crockett (PG-88) (en:USS Crockett (PG-88)) was stricken from the Naval Register on 15 December 1976.
- Source
- {{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/c15/crockett.htm}}
- {{NVR|http://www.nvr.navy.mil/nvrships/details/PG88.htm}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crockett}}
[[en:USS Crockett]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Crocodile, after the large aquatic reptile, the crocodile:
- HMS Crocodile (1781) (en:HMS Crocodile) was a 24-gun sixth rate launched in 1781 and lost in 1784. (not exists)
- HMS Crocodile (1806) (en:HMS Crocodile) was a 22-gun sixth rate launched in 1806 and broken up in 1816. (not exists)
- HMS Crocodile (1825) (en:HMS Crocodile) was a 28-gun sixth rate launched in 1825. She was on harbour service from 1850 and was sold in 1861. (not exists)
- HMS Crocodile (1867) (en:HMS Crocodile) was an iron screw troopship launched in 1867 and sold for breaking up in 1894.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crocodile, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Crocodile]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Crocus after the spring flower of the iris family.
- The USS Crocus (1862) (en:USS Crocus (1862)), was a screw steamer, was built in 1862.
- The USS Crocus (WAGL-210) (en:USS Crocus (WAGL-210)) was a lighthouse tender transferred to the Navy at the beginning of World War I. (not exists)
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crocus}}
[[en:USS Crocus]]
HMS Cromer, after the Norfolk town of Cromer can refer to any of three Royal Navy ships:
- HMS Cromer (1867) (en:Cromer), a Britomart-class wooden screw gunboat launched in 1867 and sold in 1886 for breaking up. (not exists)
- HMS Cromer (J128) (en:Cromer (J128)), a Bangor class minesweeper lost in 1942
- HMS Cromer (M103) (en:Cromer (M103)), a Sandown-class minehunter launched in 1990 and decommissioned in 2001. Converted to a static harbour training ship in Dartmouth, Hindostan.
See also HMS Cromer Castle.
- References
- {{colledge}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cromer, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cromer]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Cronin after Cornelius Cronin, a Medal of Honor recipient.
- French frigate Oise (en:USS Cronin (DE-107)), a Cannon-class destroyer escort, launched in 1943.
- USS Cronin (DE-704) (en:USS Cronin (DE-704)), a Buckley-class destroyer escort launched in 1944.
- References
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cronin}}
[[en:USS Cronin]]
HMS Croome refers to one of two Royal Navy ships named after the Croome fox-hunt. Croome is a hamlet in East Riding, Yorkshire.
- HMS Croome (1917) (en:HMS Croome) was a Hunt class minesweeper launched in 1917 and sold in 1922. (not exists)
- HMS Croome (L62) (en:HMS Croome) was a Hunt class destroyer launched in 1941 and scrapped in 1957.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Croome, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Croome]]
[[en:HMS Croome]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Crossbill, after the crossbill, a finch whose curved mandibles cross each other.
- The USS Crossbill (AMc-9) (en:USS Crossbill (AMc-9)), acquired by the Navy on 31 October 1940.
- The USS Crossbill (AMS-45) (en:USS Crossbill (AMS-45)), laid down, 23 August 1941.
- References
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crossbill}}
[[en:USS Crossbill]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Crow.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crow}}
[[en:USS Crow]]
Five ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Crown. Another was planned but never completed:
- HMS Crown (1654) (en:HMS Crown) was a 48-gun ship launched as Taunton in 1654. She was renamed HMS Crown in 1660, was rebuilt in 1704 and wrecked in 1719.
- HMS Crown (1747) (en:HMS Crown) was a 44-gun fifth rate launched in 1747, used as a storeship from 1757, and sold in 1770. (not exists)
- HMS Crown (1782) (en:HMS Crown) was a 64-gun third rate launched in 1782. She was used as a prison ship from 1798, a powder hulk from 1802 and was broken up in 1816.
- HMS Crown (1794) (en:HMS Crown) was a gunvessel purchased in 1794 and sold in 1800. (not exists)
- HMS Crown was to have been a Britomart-class wooden screw gunboat. She was laid down in 1861 and cancelled in 1863.
- HMS Crown (R46) (en:HMS Crown) was a C-class destroyer launched in 1945 and sold to the Royal Norwegian Navy in 1946 as Oslo. (not exists)
- See also
- HMS Crown Malago (en:HMS Crown Malago) (not exists)
- HMS Crown Prize (en:HMS Crown Prize) (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crown, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Crown]]
- HMS Cruiser redirects here
Eleven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cruizer or HMS Cruiser:
- HMS Cruizer (1705) (en:HMS Cruizer) was a 24-gun sixth rate, previously the French ship De Meric. She was captured in 1705 by HMS Tryton and was wrecked in 1708. (not exists)
- HMS Cruizer (1709) (en:HMS Cruizer) was a 14-gun sloop. She was previously named Unity, before being purchased in 1709. She was sold in 1712. (not exists)
- HMS Cruizer (1721) (en:HMS Cruizer) was an 8-gun sloop captured in 1721 and foundered in 1724. (not exists)
- HMS Cruizer (1721 sloop) (en:HMS Cruizer) was an 8-gun sloop launched in 1721 and broken up in 1731. (not exists)
- HMS Cruizer (1732) (en:HMS Cruizer) was a 14-gun sloop launched in 1732 and broken up in 1744. (not exists)
- HMS Cruizer (1752) (en:HMS Cruizer) was an 8-gun sloop launched in 1752 and burnt in 1776. (not exists)
- HMS Cruizer (1780) (en:HMS Cruizer) was a 14-gun cutter purchased in 1780 and lost in 1792. (not exists)
- HMS Cruizer (1797) (en:HMS Cruizer) was the prototype of the 18-gun Cruizer-class brig sloops, to which design 110 vessels were ordered; the prototype was launched in 1797 and sold in 1819.
- HMS Cruiser (1828) (en:HMS Cruiser) was a Snake-class ship sloop launched in 1828, converted to a brig in 1831, back to a ship in 1840 and sold at Bombay in 1849. (not exists)
- HMS Cruizer (1852) (en:HMS Cruizer) was a wood screw sloop launched in 1852. She was renamed HMS Cruiser in 1857, and then converted into a training ship and renamed HMS Lark in 1893. She was sold in 1912.
- HMS Cruizer was an Osprey-class sloop, previously named HMS Kingfisher. She had been launched in 1879, renamed HMS Lark in 1892 and HMS Cruizer in 1893. She was sold in 1919.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cruizer, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cruizer]]
Two ships in the United States Navy have been named USS Crusader.
- USS Crusader (1858) (en:USS Crusader (1858)) was a steamship during the American Civil War.
- USS Osprey (AM-29) (en:USS Crusader (ARS-2)) was originally Osprey and was renamed in 1941.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crusader}}
[[en:USS Crusader]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Crusader, after the participants in the Medieval Crusades:
- HMS Crusader (1909) (en:HMS Crusader (1909)) was a Tribal class destroyer launched in 1909 and sold in 1920.
- HMCS Ottawa (H60) (en:HMS Crusader (H60)) was a C class destroyer launched in 1931. She was transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1938 and renamed HMCS Ottawa. She was sunk in 1942.
- HMS Crusader (R20) (en:HMS Crusader (R20)) was a destroyer of another C class. She was launched in 1944, transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1945 and sold in 1964. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Crusader, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Crusader]]
[[fi:HMS Crusader]]
ARM Cuauhtémoc may refer to one of the following ships of the Mexican Navy:
- USS Harrison (DD-573) (en:ARM Cuauhtémoc (E01)), the former American Fletcher-class destroyer USS Harrison (DD-573), launched in May 1942; acquired by the Mexican Navy in August 1970; taken out of service in 1982 and dismantled
- ARM Cuauhtémoc (BE01) (en:ARM Cuauhtémoc (BE01)), a sail training vessel of the Mexican Navy; built at Bilbao, Spain, and launched in January 1982; {{ship in active service}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cuauhtemoc}}
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cuckoo, after the cuckoo, a family of birds:
- HMS Cuckoo (1806) (en:HMS Cuckoo) was a 4-gun schooner launched in 1806 and wrecked in 1810.
- HMS Cuckoo (1837) (en:HMS Cuckoo) was a wooden paddle packet launched in 1822 as the GPO vessel Cinderella. She was transferred to the navy in 1837, was used as a tug from 1861 and was sold in 1864. (not exists)
- HMS Cuckoo (1873) (en:HMS Cuckoo) was an Ant-class iron screw gunboat launched in 1873. She became a base ship in 1912 and was renamed HMS Vivid. She was renamed HMS Vivid (Old) in 1920 and YC37 in 1923. She was sold in 1958. (not exists)
- HMS Hawk (1869) (en:HMS Cuckoo) was a coastguard vessel launched in 1869 as HMS Hawk. She was renamed HMS Amelia in 1888 as a coastguard gunboat. She was renamed HMS Colleen in 1905, HMS Colleen Old in 1916, and HMS Emerald and then HMS Cuckoo in 1918. She was sold in 1922. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cuckoo, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cuckoo]]
Five Royal Navy ships have had the name of HMS Culloden, after the battle of Culloden which took place in Scotland in 1746 and saw the defeat of the Jacobite Rising.
- HMS Culloden was renamed before her launch in 1747 to HMS Prince Henry.
- HMS Culloden (1747) (en:HMS Culloden) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1747 and sold in 1770.
- HMS Culloden (1749) (en:HMS Culloden) was a 2-gun storeship hoy launched in 1749 and sold in 1765.
- HMS Culloden (1776) (en:HMS Culloden) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1776 and wrecked in 1781 during the American Revolutionary War near Long Island.
- HMS Culloden (1783) (en:HMS Culloden) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1783. She participated in the Battle of the Nile, where she ran aground. She was broken up in 1813.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
- References
- {{colledge}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Culloden, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Culloden]]
[[en:HMS Culloden]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Cumberland, after the Cumberland River.
- The USS Cumberland (1842) (en:USS Cumberland (1842)), a 50-gun sailing frigate launched in 1842.
- The USS Cumberland (IX-8) (en:USS Cumberland (IX-8)), a steel-hulled sailing bark, was launched 17 August 1904.
- The USNS Cumberland (T-AO-153) (en:USS Cumberland (AO-153)), a fleet oiler.
- See also
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cumberland}}
[[en:USS Cumberland]]
[[it:USS Cumberland]]
[[sl:USS Cumberland]]
Eleven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cumberland, after the traditional English county of Cumberland, England:
- HMS Cumberland (1695) (en:HMS Cumberland) was an 80-gun third rate ship of the line <ref name="p.104, Boniface">p.104, Boniface</ref> launched in 1695. She was captured by the French in the Battle at the Lizard in 1707. In 1715 she was sold to Genoa, in 1717 to Spain and renamed Principe de Asturias. Then captured back by Britain at the Battle of Cape Passaro in 1718 and sold to Austria in 1720, and renamed San Carlos.
- HMS Cumberland (1710) (en:HMS Cumberland) was an 80-gun third rate launched in 1710. She was rebuilt in 1739 to carry 66 guns and foundered at anchor in 1760.<ref name="p.104, Boniface"/>
- HMS Cumberland (1739) (en:HMS Cumberland) was an 8-gun fire ship, previously the civilian Alex Roberts. She was purchased in 1739 and was broken up by 1742.<ref name="p.105, Boniface">p.105, Boniface</ref>
- HMS Cumberland (1745) (en:HMS Cumberland) was an 8-gun fire ship in service in 1745.<ref name="p.105, Boniface"/> (not exists)
- HMS Cumberland (1774) (en:HMS Cumberland) was a 74-gun third rate launched in 1774 and broken up in 1805.<ref name="p.105, Boniface"/>
- HMS Cumberland (1803) (en:HMS Cumberland) was a schooner purchased in 1803. She was captured by the French in 1804.<ref name="p.105, Boniface"/>
- HMS Cumberland (1807) (en:HMS Cumberland) was a 74-gun third rate launched in 1807. She was converted to a convict ship in 1830 and was renamed HMS Fortitude in 1833. She was put on the sale list in 1870 and was subsequently sold.<ref name="p.105, Boniface"/>
- HMS Cumberland (1842) (en:HMS Cumberland) was a 70-gun third rate launched in 1842. She was used as a training ship from 1870, and was burnt in 1889. The wreck was broken up later that year.<ref name="p.105, Boniface"/>
- HMS Cumberland (1902) (en:HMS Cumberland) was a Monmouth-class armoured cruiser launched in 1902. She was sold in 1921 and was broken up in 1923.<ref name="p.105, Boniface"/>
- HMS Cumberland (57) (en:HMS Cumberland (57)) was a County-class heavy cruiser launched in 1926 and broken up in 1959.<ref name="p.106, Boniface">p.106, Boniface</ref>
- HMS Cumberland (F85) (en:HMS Cumberland (F85)) is a Type 22 frigate launched in 1986 and currently in service.<ref name="p.106, Boniface"/>
- Battle honours
- Battle of Cuddalore (1758) (en:Sadras) 1758
- Battle of Negapatam (1758) (en:Negapatam) 1758
- Battle of Pondicherry (en:Porto Novo) 1759
- Битва при лунном свете Битва у мыса Сент-Винсент (англ. Battle of Cape St. Vincent) или Битва у мыса Санта-Мария — морское сражение 16 января 1780 года во время Войны за независимость США, в ходе которого флот Великобритании под командованием адмирала сэра Джорджа Родни одержал победу над испанской эскадрой под командованием дона Хуана де Лангара. (en:Cape St. Vincent 1780)
- Крымская война Крымская война 1853—1856, также Восточная война — война между Российской империей и коалицией в составе Британской, Французской, Османской империй и Сардинского королевства. (en:Baltic 1854)
- West Africa Campaign (World War I) (en:Cameroons) 1914
- Североафриканская кампания Британская Империя53 000 убитых, раненых и пленных (en:North Africa 1942)
- Арктические конвои Арктические конвои Второй мировой войны проходили из Великобритании и США в северные порты СССР — Архангельск и Мурманск. (en:Arctic 1942-1943)
- Operation Crimson (en:Sabang) 1944 (not exists)
- Бирманская кампания Бирманская кампания — боевые действия (с января 1942 по июль 1945 года) в ходе Второй мировой войны на территории Бирмы, между британскими войсками (в том числе индийскими и бирманскими частями, а также китайскими войсками и американскими наёмниками) и японскими войсками (включая бирманские и индийские части). (en:Burma 1945)
- Notes
{{reflist}}
- References
{{refbegin}}
- {{cite web |url= http://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/server/show/nav.1615 |title= History: HMS Cumberland |accessdate=2009-02-21 |work= |publisher= Ministry of Defence, UK |date= }}
- {{cite book |title= HMS Cumberland: A Classic British Cruiser in War and Peace |last= Boniface |first= Patrick |authorlink= |coauthors= |year= 2006 |publisher= Periscope Publishing Ltd |location= Cornwall|isbn= 1904381375 |page= |pages= |url= }}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{refend}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cumberland, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Cumberland]]
[[en:HMS Cumberland]]
[[fi:HMS Cumberland]]
[[sl:HMS Cumberland]]
USS Cummings has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Cummings (DD-44) (en:USS Cummings (DD-44)), a Cassin-class destroyer in commission from 1913 to 1934
- USS Cummings (DD-365) DD 365 Cummings (Корабль соединённых штатов Каммингс) — американский эсминец типа «Мэхэн». (en:USS Cummings (DD-365), a Mahan-class destroyer in commission from 1935 to 1947)
- See also
- USS Damon Cummings (DE-756) (en:USS Damon Cummings (DE-756)), a Cannon-class destroyer escort cancelled in 1943
- USS Damon M. Cummings (DE-643) (en:USS Damon M. Cummings (DE-643)), a Buckley-class destroyer escort in commission from 1944 to 1947
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cummings}}
[[en:USS Cummings]]
[[sl:USS Cummings]]
USS Damon Cummings may refer to more than one United States Navy ship:
- USS Damon Cummings (DE-756) (en:USS Damon Cummings (DE-756)), a destroyer escort cancelled in 1943
- USS Damon M. Cummings (DE-643) (en:USS Damon M. Cummings (DE-643)), a destroyer escort in commission from 1944 to 1947
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cummings}}
Four ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Curacoa, after the island in the Caribbean Sea more usually spelled Curaçao:
- HMS Curacoa (1809) (en:HMS Curacoa (1809)), a 36-gun fifth rate launched in 1809. She was reduced to 24 guns in 1831 and broken up in 1849. (not exists)
- HMS Curacoa (1854) (en:HMS Curacoa (1854)), a wood screw frigate launched in 1854. She was flagship of the Australia Station during the New Zealand Land Wars and was broken up in 1869.
- HMS Curacoa (1878) (en:HMS Curacoa (1878)), a screw corvette launched in 1878 and sold in 1904.
- HMS Curacoa (D41) (en:HMS Curacoa (D41)), a C-class light cruiser launched in 1917 and accidentally sunk by RMS Queen Mary in 1942.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Curacoa, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Curacoa]]
[[en:HMS Curacoa]]
[[fi:HMS Curacoa]]
Two submarines of the French Navy have borne the name Curie in honour of Pierre and Marie Curie.
- SM U-14 (Austria-Hungary) (en:French submarine Curie (Q87)), a submarine of the Brumaire-class; laid down on 18 July 1912; served in the First World War. She was scrapped in 1923.
- French submarine Curie (P67) (en:French submarine Curie (P67)), the former HMS Vox, a U-class submarine of the Royal Navy transferred to the Free French Navy in World War II in 1943; returned to the British in 1946; scrapped in 1949
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Curie, French Submarine}}
USS Curlew may refer to one of four ships of the United States Navy named for the Curlew:
- Curlew (steamboat) (en:Curlew (steamboat)), Merchant propeller steamer, Union Navy Gunboat and USQMD Transport, referred to as USS Curlew in some dispatches.
- USS Curlew (1862) (en:USS Curlew (1862)), a Union Navy stern-wheel steamer, that was built in 1862 at Pittsburgh.
- USS Curlew (AM-8) (en:USS Curlew (AM-8)), a Lapwing-class minesweeper.
- USS Curlew (AM-69) (en:USS Curlew (AM-69)), a Catbird-class minesweeper.
- USS Curlew (AMS-8) (en:USS Curlew (AMS-8)), formerly YMS-218, a motor minesweeper.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Curlew}}
[[en:USS Curlew]]
Nine ships and a base of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Curlew after the bird, the curlew:
- HMS Curlew (1795) (en:HMS Curlew) was a 16-gun brig sloop launched in 1795 and foundered in 1796. (not exists)
- HMS Curlew (1803) (en:HMS Curlew) was a 16-gun sloop, previously named Leander, purchased in 1803 and sold in 1810. (not exists)
- HMS Curlew (1812) (en:HMS Curlew) was a 18-gun brig sloop of the Cruizer class launched in 1812 and sold in 1822, being renamed Jenica.
- HMS Curlew (1830) (en:HMS Curlew) was a 10-gun brig sloop of the Cherokee class launched in 1830 and broken up in 1840. (not exists)
- HMS Curlew (1854) (en:HMS Curlew) was a screw sloop launched in 1854 and sold in 1865. (not exists)
- HMS Curlew (1868) (en:HMS Curlew) was a wood screw gunvessel launched in 1868 and sold in 1882. (not exists)
- HMS Curlew (1885) (en:HMS Curlew) was a torpedo sloop launched in 1885 and sold in 1906. (not exists)
- HMS Curlew (D42) (en:HMS Curlew) was a C class cruiser launched in 1917 and sunk in 1940.
- HMAS Curlew (en:HMAS Curlew) was a Ton class minesweeper, launched in 1953 as HMS Montrose, renamed HMS Chediston in 1958 and then HMAS Curlew on her transfer to the Royal Australian Navy in 1962. She was paid off in 1990, and sold in 1997. She was taken to Hobart in 1998 where there are plans as of 2003 to preserve her as a museum ship.
- HMS Curlew was a Naval Air Station near St Merryn, Cornwall, previously named HMS Vulture. She was HMS Vulture from her commissioning in 1940 until 1952, when she was renamed HMS Curlew. She was closed in 1956 and sold in 1959.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Curlew, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Curlew]]
[[fi:HMS Curlew]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Currituck after Currituck Sound along the coasts of North Carolina and Virginia.
- The USS Currituck (1861) (en:USS Currituck (1861)), a Civil War screw steamer originally named Seneca.
- The USS Currituck (AV-7) (en:USS Currituck (AV-7)), the lead ship of the World War II era Currituck-class seaplane tenders.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Currituck}}
[[en:USS Currituck]]
USS Cushing' may rfer to one of several United States Navy ships named in honor of William B. Cushing:
- The USS Cushing (TB-1) (en:USS Cushing (TB-1)), was a torpedo boat commissioned in 1890, and served until her decommissioning in 1898
- The USS Cushing (DD-55) (en:USS Cushing (DD-55)), an O'Brien-class destroyer commissioned 1915 and decommissioned in 1920
- USS Cushing (DD-376) DD 376 Cushing (Корабль соединённых штатов Кашинг) — американский эсминец типа «Мэхэн». (The en:USS Cushing (DD-376), a Mahan-class destroyer, commissioned in 1936, sunk during the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal in November 1942)
- The USS Cushing (DD-797) (en:USS Cushing (DD-797)), a Fletcher-class destroyer, commissioned in 1944, and decommissioned in 1960
- USS Cushing (DD-985) USS Cushing (DD-985) — 23-й эскадренный миноносец типа «Спрюэнс». (The en:USS Cushing (DD-985), a Spruance-class destroyer, commissioned in 1978 and deactivated in 2005)
- References
- {{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/c16-list.htm}}
- {{NVR|http://www.nvr.navy.mil/nvrships/details/DD985.htm}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cushing}}
[[en:USS Cushing]]
[[sl:USS Cushing]]
Two submarines of the United States Navy have been named Cuttlefish for the cuttlefish, a ten-armed marine mollusk similar to the squid.
- The USS B-2 (SS-11) (en:USS Cuttlefish (SS-11)), was a B-class submarine that was renamed B-2.
- The USS Cuttlefish (SS-171) (en:USS Cuttlefish (SS-171)), was a Cachalot-class submarine that served in the opening days of World War II.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cuttlefish}}
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Cyane, after the Greek nymph.
- The HMS Cyane (1806) (en:USS Cyane (1815)), was originally HMS Cyane captured in 1815 and taken into the US Navy, where she served until 1836.
- The USS Cyane (1837) (en:USS Cyane (1837)), was a 22-gun sloop-of-war, launched in 1837 and decommissioned in 1871.
- The USS Gwin (TB-16) (en:USS Cyane (YFB-4)), was formerly the Gwin, renamed Cyane on 11 April 1918.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cyane}}
[[en:USS Cyane]]
[[sl:USS Cyane]]
Several ships of the Royal Navy have born the name, HMS Cyane.
- HMS Cyane (1796) (en:HMS Cyane) was an 18-gun sloop built in 1796, recaptured from the French in 1806 (when she was renamed HMS Cerf), and sold in 1809. (not exists)
- HMS Cyane (1806) (en:HMS Cyane) was a Banterer Class Sixth Rate Post-ship built in 1806 and captured by the USS Constitution in 1815; she served in the US Navy thereafter as the USS Cyane, and was broken up in 1836.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cyane, HMS}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
[[en:HMS Cyane]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cyclops after the one-eyed Cyclops of Greek mythology.
- HMS Cyclops (1779) (en:HMS Cyclops) was a 28-gun sixth rate launched in 1779. She was used as a troopship from 1800 and was sold in 1814. (not exists)
- HMS Cyclops (1839) (en:HMS Cyclops) was steam paddle wheel frigate launched in 1839 and sold in 1864. (not exists)
- HMS Cyclops (1871) (en:HMS Cyclops) was a turret ship launched in 1871 and sold in 1903.
- HMS Cyclops (F31) (en:HMS Cyclops) was repair ship, launched in 1905 as the merchant ship Indrabarah. She was used a fleet storage ship, and then submarine depot ship. She was scrapped in 1947. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cyclops, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cyclops]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have borne the name Cyclops, for the Cyclopes of Greek mythology, a race of giants with only one eye.
- The USS Kickapoo (1864) (en:USS Cyclops (1864)), was an ironclad steamer. Originally the Kickapoo, she was rechristened Cyclops from 15 June to 10 August 1869, and then to Kewaydin.
- The USS Cyclops (AC-4) (en:USS Cyclops (AC-4)), was a collier launched in 1910. She served in World War I and disappeared at sea in March 1918.
- Source
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cyclops, Uss}}
[[en:USS Cyclops]]
[[sl:USS Cyclops]]
Five ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Cynthia. A sixth was planned but never completed:
- HMS Cynthia (1796) (en:HMS Cynthia) was an 18-gun sloop launched in 1796 and broken up in 1809.
- HMS Cynthia (1810) (en:HMS Cynthia) was a 16-gun sloop listed between 1810 and 1815. (not exists)
- HMS Cynthia (1826) (en:HMS Cynthia) was a 6-gun packet brig purchased in 1826 and wrecked off Barbados on 6 June 1827. (not exists)
- HMS Cynthia was to have been a Rosario-class wooden screw sloop. She was laid down in 1861 but cancelled in 1863.
- HMS Cynthia (1898) (en:HMS Cynthia) was a destroyer launched in 1898, classified as a D-class destroyer in 1913 and sold in 1920. (not exists)
- HMS Cynthia (J345) (en:HMS Cynthia) was a Catherine-class minesweeper launched in 1943 and transferred to the Royal Navy under lend-lease. She was returned to the US Navy in 1947. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cynthia, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Cynthia]]
USS Cythera may refer to:
- USS Cythera (PY-26) (en:USS Cythera (PY-26)), was launched 20 September 1906 and sunk by enemy torpedoes on 2 May 1942.
- USS Cythera (PY-31) (en:USS Cythera (PY-31)), was purchased by the Navy on 14 July 1942 and placed out of service on 14 March 1946. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cythera}}
[[en:USS Cythera]]
D class cruiser can refer to either of the following:
- Лёгкие крейсера типа «Даная» Лёгкие крейсера типа «Даная» — тип лёгких крейсеров Королевского военно-морского флота Великобритании времён Первой мировой войны. (en:Danae class cruiser, a series of British light cruisers that served during World War II)
- D class cruiser (Germany) (en:D class cruiser (Germany)), a pair of planned large cruisers designed as part of Plan Z
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
DD-15 may refer to:
- USS Hilary P. Jones (DD-427) USS Hilary P. Jones (DD-427) (Корабль Соединённых Штатов Хилари Джонс) — американский эсминец типа Benson. (en:ROCS Han Yang (DD-15) (Benson class), the former American Benson-class destroyer USS Hilary P. Jones (DD-427) launched in December 1939; acquired by the Republic of China Navy in February 1954; struck in 1975 and scrapped )
- USS Herbert J. Thomas (DD-833) (en:ROCS Han Yang (DD-15) (Gearing class)), the former American Gearing-class destroyer USS Herbert J. Thomas (DD-833) launched in March 1945; acquired by the Republic of China Navy in June 1974; later reclassified as DD-978; decommissioned in 1999 and sunk as artificial reef
- USS Whipple (DD-15) (en:USS Whipple (DD-15)), a United States Navy Truxton-class destroyer commissioned in 1903 and decommissioned in 1919
{{disambig}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
[[en:DD-15]]
ARM DM-04 may refer to one of the following Mexican Navy ships:
- USS Facility (AM-233) (en:ARM DM-04 (1962)), the former American Admirable-class minesweeper USS Facility (AM-233); acquired by the Mexican Navy on 2 October 1962 and renamed ARM DM-04; fate unreported, but likely out of service by 1973
- USS Specter (AM-306) (en:ARM DM-04 (1973)), the former American Admirable-class minesweeper USS Specter (AM-306); acquired by the Mexican Navy on 11 April 1973 and renamed ARM DM-04; renamed ARM General Manuel E. Rincón (C52), 1994; stricken from service, 16 July 2001; ultimate fate unknown
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:DM-04}}
[[en:ARM DM-04]]
USS Dace has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Dace (SS-247) (en:USS Dace (SS-247)), a submarine in commission from 1943 to 1947, from 1951 to 1954, and from 1954 to 1955
- USS Dace (SSN-607) (en:USS Dace (SSN-607)), a submarine in commission from 1964 to 1988
{{Shipindex|Dace, USS}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dace, USS}}
[[en:USS Dace]]
[[ja:デイス]]
[[sl:USS Dace]]
Five ships and a number of shore establishments of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Daedalus, after the mythical Daedalus:
- HMS Daedalus (1780) (en:HMS Daedalus) was a 32-gun fifth rate frigate launched in 1780. She was lent to Trinity House between 1803 and 1806 as a hulk, and was broken up in 1811.
- French frigate Corona (1807) (en:HMS Daedalus) was a 38-gun fifth rate, previously the Venetian frigate Corona. She was captured from the French in 1811 and was wrecked in 1813.
- HMS Daedalus (1826) (en:HMS Daedalus) was a 46-gun fifth rate launched in 1826. She was reduced to 20 guns in 1843 and became a Royal Naval Reserve drill ship in 1862. She was sold in 1911.
- HMS Thunderbolt (1856) (en:HMS Daedalus) was an iron screw floating battery launched in 1856 as HMS Thunderbolt. Converted to a floating pierhead in 1873, she bore the name HMS Daedalus between 1916 and 1919 whilst serving as the nominal depot ship of the Royal Naval Air Service. The vessel was sunk in 1948 when a tug collided with her, and raised the following year to be broken up. (not exists)
- HMS Daedalus was to have been a Danae class light cruiser. She was ordered in 1918, but cancelled later that year.
- RNAS Lee-on-Solent (HMS Daedalus) (en:HMS Daedalus) was a naval air station, also known as RNAS Lee-on-Solent. The base was opened in 1917 and transferred to the RAF in 1918. It was returned to the successor of the Royal Naval Air Service, the Fleet Air Arm in 1939. It and various out-stations bore the name HMS Daedalus between 1957 and 1996.
- References
- {{Colledge}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Daedalus, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Daedalus]]
Two ships of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Dagger after the weapon:
- HMS Oceanway (F143) (en:HMS Dagger), a Casa Grande class dock landing ship built under Lend-Lease in the United States and renamed HMS Oceanway in August 1943 before completion. The vessel served in the Royal Navy until 1947 when it was lent to the Greek Navy. Returned to the United States in 1952, it was loaned to France and later purchased by the French Government. It was expended as a target in 1970.
- HMS Dagger (G23) (en:HMS Dagger), a Weapon class destroyer laid down in March 1945 but cancelled before completion. (not exists)
- References
- {{Colledge}}
- {{cite web | url = http://www.navsource.org/archives/10/12/1212.htm | work = NavSource Online | title = HMS Oceanway (F-143) | accessdate = 2009-04-14 }}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dagger, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Dagger]]
Three ships in the United States Navy have been named USS Dahlgren for John A. Dahlgren.
- The USS Dahlgren (TB-9) (en:USS Dahlgren (TB-9)), was a torpedo boat, commissioned in 1900 and decommissioned in 1919.
- The USS Dahlgren (DD-187) (en:USS Dahlgren (DD-187)), was a Clemson-class destroyer commissioned in 1920, served in World War II and decommissioned in 1945.
- The USS Dahlgren (DDG-43) (en:USS Dahlgren (DDG-43)), was a Coontz-class guided missile destroyer, commissioned in 1961 and decommissioned in 1992.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dahlgren}}
[[de:USS Dahlgren]]
[[en:USS Dahlgren]]
[[sl:USS Dahlgren]]
SS Dainichi Maru was the name of a number of ships.
- SS Dainichi Maru, a Japanese hell ship in the Second World War.
- SS Savoia (en:SS Dainichi Maru), a refrigerated cargo ship used as a shellfish cannery from 1962-68.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dainichi Maru}}
Dainichi Maru is the name of several ships:
- SS Dainichi Maru, a Japanese hell ship in the Second World War
- SS Savoia (en:SS Dainichi Maru), a refrigerated cargo ship used as a shellfish cannery from 1962-68
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
[[en:Dainichi Maru]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Dainty:
- HMS Dainty (1589) (en:HMS Dainty (1589)), previously named Repentance but renamed in 1589, was a discovery ship. She was captured by the Spanish in 1594. (not exists)
- HMS Dainty (1654) (en:HMS Dainty (1654)) was a four-gun pink in service in 1645. (not exists)
- HMS Dainty (H53) (en:HMS Dainty (H53)) was a D class destroyer launched in 1932 and sunk in 1941.
- HMS Dainty (D108) (en:HMS Dainty (D108)) was a Daring class destroyer launched in 1950 and broken up in 1971.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dainty, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Dainty]]
[[fi:HMS Dainty]]
USS Daisy may refer to one of the following United States Navy ships:
- USS Daisy (1850) (en:USS Daisy (1850)), a steam tug built in 1850 and acquired by the War Department for use in the Mississippi River and its tributaries early in the Civil War
- USS Clover (1863) (en:USS Daisy (1863)), renamed Clover on 20 November 1863.
- USS Daisy (ID-22) (en:USS Daisy (ID-22)), a ferry launch that served the Norfolk Navy Yard from 1885 to 1919 (not exists)
- USS Daisy (1895) (en:USS Daisy (1895)) was a lighthouse tender, transferred to the Navy 11 April 1917 and served at Newport, Rhode Island, until returned to the Lighthouse Service on 1 July 1919 (not exists)
- USS Daisy (ID-1186) (en:USS Daisy (ID-1186)), a yawl that served in a noncommissioned status in the 7th Naval District during World War I (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Daisy}}
[[en:USS Daisy]]
Five ships of the United States Navy have been named Dale, in honor of Captain Richard Dale.
- The USS Dale (1839) (en:USS Dale (1839)), was a sloop-of-war, launched in 1839 and transferred to the Maryland Naval Militia in 1895.
- The USS Dale (DD-4) (en:USS Dale (DD-4)), was a Bainbridge-class destroyer, launched in 1900 and struck in 1919.
- The USS Dale (DD-290) (en:USS Dale (DD-290)), was a Clemson-class destroyer, launched in 1919 and struck in 1930.
- USS Dale (DD-353) DD 353 Dale (Корабль соединённых штатов Дэйл) — американский эсминец типа Farragut. (The en:USS Dale (DD-353), was a Farragut-class destroyer, launched in 1935 and struck in 1945.)
- The USS Dale (DLG-19) (en:USS Dale (DLG-19)), was a Leahy-class guided-missile frigate, launched in 1962. Was reclassified as a guided-missile cruiser (CG-19) in 1975 and struck in 1994.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dale}}
[[de:USS Dale]]
[[en:USS Dale]]
[[ja:デイル]]
[[nl:USS Dale]]
[[sl:USS Dale]]
Two commissioned ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Dallas. The first ship was named after Alexander J. Dallas and the second after Dallas, Texas. Two other ships to honor the city were planned, but never completed.
- The USS Dallas (DD-199) (en:USS Dallas (DD-199)), was a destroyer commissioned in 1920, in service during World War II, and scrapped 1946.
- Тяжёлый крейсер Тяжёлый крейсер — подкласс артиллерийских крейсеров, строительство которых велось с 1916Первые представители класса тяжёлых крейсеров — крейсера типа «Хокинс», при закладке классифицировались как лёгкие крейсера, а после заключения Вашингтонского договора 1922 года стали классифицироваться как тяжёлые крейсера: (A en:heavy cruiser to be named Dallas (CA-140) was cancelled during construction in 1946.)
- Another heavy cruiser, USS Dallas (CA-150), was cancelled before start of construction in 1945.
- The USS Dallas (SSN-700) (en:USS Dallas (SSN-700)), is a Los Angeles-class nuclear attack submarine commissioned in 1981 and currently in active service.
- See also
For the US Coast Guard cutter, see USCGC Dallas (WHEC-716).
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dallas}}
[[de:USS Dallas]]
[[en:USS Dallas]]
[[sl:USS Dallas]]
Dallas has been the name of more than one ship of the United States Revenue Cutter Service and United States Coast Guard, and may refer to:
- USRC Dallas (1816) (en:USRC Dallas (1816)), a cutter in commission in the Revenue Cutter Service from 1816 to 1821 (not exists)
- USRC Vigilant (1824) (en:USRC Vigilant (1824)), a cutter in commission in the Revenue Cutter Service from 1824 to 1836 that was renamed Dallas by 1830 (not exists)
- USRC Dallas (1846) (en:USRC Dallas (1846)), a cutter in commission in the Revenue Cutter Service from 1846 to 1848 (not exists)
- USRC Dallas (1874) (en:USRC Dallas (1874)), a cutter in commission in the Revenue Cutter Service from 1874 to 1907
- USCGC Dallas (1925) (en:USCGC Dallas (1925)), a patrol boat in commission in the Coast Guard from 1925 to 1936 (not exists)
- USCGC Dallas (WHEC-716) (en:USCGC Dallas (WHEC-716)), a high endurance cutter in commission in the Coast Guard since 1967
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dallas}}
[[en:USCGC Dallas]]
USS Dana is a name used more than once by the United States Navy:
- The USS Dana was a Coast Survey schooner taken over for the Navy by Commander James H. Ward of the Potomac Flotilla on 10 June 1861. Under the command of Acting Master's Mate R. B. Ely, she was used as a guard and convoy ship and a coal depot in the Potomac River until July 1862 when she was sent to Philadelphia for disposal.
- The USS Dana, a steam lighter, served in a noncommissioned status in the 3d Naval District during World War I.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dana}}
[[en:USS Dana]]
Seven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Danae, after the Greek hero Danaë.
- HMS Danae (1759) (en:HMS Danae (1759)) was a 38-gun fifth rate captured from the French in 1759 by HMS Southampton and HMS Melampe. She was broken up by 1771. (not exists)
- HMS Danae (1779) (en:HMS Danae (1779)) was a 32-gun fifth rate captured from the French in 1779. She was sold in 1797. (not exists)
- HMS Danae (1798) (en:HMS Danae (1798)) was a 20-gun Sixth Rate Post ship, formerly the French frigate, Vaillante. HMS Indefatigable captured her in 1798 off the Île de Ré. In March 1800 members of her crew mutinied, took control and handed her over to the French.
- HMS Danae (1867) (en:HMS Danae (1867)) was an Eclipse-class wooden screw corvette launched in 1867. She was lent to the War Department in 1886 as a hulk and was sold in 1906.
- HMS Danae (D44) (en:HMS Danae (D44)) was a Danae class light cruiser launched in 1918. She was lent to the Polish Navy between 1944 and 1946 as ORP Conrad and was sold for scrapping in 1948.
- HMS Danae was to have been a Battle class destroyer named HMS Vimiera. She was later reordered as a Daring class destroyer, but was cancelled in 1946.
- HMS Danae (F47) (en:HMS Danae (F47)) was a Leander class frigate launched in 1965. She was sold to Ecuador in 1991 and renamed Moran Valverde.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Danae, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Danae]]
[[en:HMS Danae]]
[[fi:HMS Danae]]
One ship of the Royal Navy and one planned one have borne the name HMS Danube, after the Danube, a river in central and eastern Europe:
- HMS Danube (1854) (en:HMS Danube) was a wooden paddle vessel purchased in 1854 and sold in 1856. (not exists)
- HMS Danube was to have been a Britomart-class gunboat. She was ordered in 1861 and cancelled in 1863.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Danube, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Danube]]
Seven vessels of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Daring.
- HMS Daring (1804) (en:HMS Daring), a 12-gun brig launched in 1804 and destroyed after running aground in 1813.
- HMS Daring (1844) (en:HMS Daring), a 12-gun brig launched in 1844 and broken up in 1864.
- HMS Daring (1874) (en:HMS Daring), a Fantome-class 4-gun composite sloop launched in 1874 and broken up in 1889.
- HMS Daring (1893) (en:HMS Daring), a Daring-class destroyer launched in 1893 and broken up in 1912.
- HMS Daring was to have been an L-class destroyer, but was renamed Lance in 1913, a year before launch.
- HMS Daring (H16) (en:HMS Daring), a D-class destroyer launched in 1932 and sunk in 1940.
- HMS Daring (D05) (en:HMS Daring), a Daring-class destroyer launched in 1949 and broken up in 1971.
- HMS Daring (D32) (en:HMS Daring), a Type 45 destroyer launched on 1 February 2006.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Daring, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Daring]]
[[en:HMS Daring]]
[[fi:HMS Daring]]
[[sl:HMS Daring]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Dart.
- The USS Dart (1861) (en:USS Dart), was a small schooner captured by the screw steamer South Carolina off Galveston, Texas, on 4 July 1861.
- The USS Dart (YFB-308) (en:USS Dart (YFB-308)), was a ferry launch attached to the Mare Island Navy Yard from 1900 to 1930.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dart}}
[[en:USS Dart]]
USS Darter has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Darter (SS-227) (en:USS Darter (SS-227)), a submarine commissioned in 1943 and wrecked in 1944
- USS Darter (SS-576) (en:USS Darter (SS-576)), a submarine in commission from 1956 to 1989
{{Shipindex|Darter, USS}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Darter, USS}}
[[en:USS Darter]]
[[ja:ダーター]]
Six ships and one Shore Establishment of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Dartmouth, after the port of Dartmouth, whilst another two were planned:
- HMS Dartmouth (1655) (en:HMS Dartmouth) was a 22-gun ship launched in 1655. She was converted to a fireship in 1688, and rebuilt as a fifth rate in 1689. She was wrecked in the Sound of Mull in 1690.
- HMS Dartmouth (1672) (en:HMS Dartmouth) was an 4-gun fireship captured in 1672 and sold in 1674. (not exists)
- HMS Dartmouth (1693) (en:HMS Dartmouth) was a 48-gun fourth rate launched in 1693. She was captured by France in 1695, recaptured in 1702, and renamed HMS Vigo. She was wrecked in 1703.
- HMS Dartmouth (1698) (en:HMS Dartmouth) was a 50-gun fourth rate launched in 1698. She was rebuilt in 1741 and sunk in action with the Spanish ship Glorioso in 1747.
- HMS Dartmouth was to have been a 50-gun fourth rate. She was ordered in 1746, but was cancelled in 1748.
- HMS Dartmouth (1813) (en:HMS Dartmouth) was a 36-gun fifth rate launched in 1813. She was used for harbour service from 1831 and was broken up in 1854. (not exists)
- HMS Dartmouth was to have been a wood screw frigate. She was laid down in 1860 but was cancelled in 1864.
- HMS Dartmouth (1911) (en:HMS Dartmouth) was a Town-class light cruiser of the Weymouth subgroup launched in 1911. She served in the First World War and was sold for scrap in 1930.
- HMS Dartmouth is the current name of the Naval Shore Establishment at Britannia Royal Naval College.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dartmouth, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Dartmouth]]
[[fi:HMS Dartmouth]]
USS Dash is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy in naming its ships:
- USS Dash (AM-88) (en:USS Dash (AM-88)), was launched 20 June 1942 by Commercial Iron Works, Portland, Oregon.
- USS Dash (AM-428) (en:USS Dash (AM-428)), was launched 20 September 1952 by Astoria Marine Construction Co., Astoria, Oregon.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dash}}
[[en:USS Dash]]
Five ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Dasher:
- HMS Dasher (1797) (en:HMS Dasher) was an 18-gun sloop launched in 1797. She became a convict hulk in 1832 and was broken up in 1838. (not exists)
- HMS Dasher (1837) (en:HMS Dasher) was a wooden paddle packet launched in 1837 and sold in 1885. (not exists)
- HMS Dasher (1895) (en:HMS Dasher) was a Charger class torpedo-boat destroyer launched in 1895 and sold in 1912.
- HMS Dasher (D37) (en:HMS Dasher) was an Avenger class escort carrier launched in 1941. She was transferred to the Royal Navy under lend-lease in 1942 and was sunk in 1943.
- HMS Dasher (P280) (en:HMS Dasher) is an Archer class patrol boat launched in 1986 and currently in service.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dasher, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Dasher]]
[[fi:HMS Dasher]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Dauntless.
- USS Mignonette (1861) (en:USS Dauntless), was a side-wheel steamer renamed Mignonette after her transfer to the Navy 30 September 1862.
- USS Dauntless (ID-1002) (en:USS Dauntless (ID-1002)), was a motor patrol boat used during World War I.
- SS Delphine (en:USS Dauntless (PG-61)), was a Yacht originally called Delphine, built by Horace Dodge, cofounder of Dodge Brothers for his personal use and later used by the Navy during World War II.
It has also been the name of a fictional ship in the Star Trek universe.
- Hope and Fear (en:USS Dauntless (NX-01-A)), a fictional star ship
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dauntless}}
[[en:USS Dauntless]]
Five ships and one Shore Establishment of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Dauntless:
- HMS Dauntless (1804) (en:HMS Dauntless) was an 18-gun sloop launched at Hull, England in November 1804. In 1807 she ran aground during a battle in the Vistula River and was forced to surrender to the French.
- HMS Dauntless (1808) (en:HMS Dauntless) was a 26-gun sloop launched in 1808 and sold for breaking in 1825.
- HMS Dauntless (1847) (en:HMS Dauntless) was a 24-gun (from 1854, 33-gun) frigate launched in 1847 and sold for breaking in 1885.
- HMS Dauntless (D45) (en:HMS Dauntless) was a Danae-class light cruiser launched in 1918. She was used as a training vessel from 1943 before being sold for breaking in 1946.
- HMS Dauntless was the WRNS Training Establishment at Burghfield, near Reading, Berkshire, from 1947 until 1981.
- HMS Dauntless (D33) (en:HMS Dauntless) is a Type 45 destroyer launched on 23 January 2007 at the BAE Systems Govan shipyard in Glasgow, and commissioned in June 2010.
In popular culture:
- In the 2003 film Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl, the fictional HMS Dauntless appears as the flagship and pride of the Royal Navy.
- References
- {{Colledge}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dauntless, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Dauntless]]
[[es:HMS Dauntless]]
[[fi:HMS Dauntless]]
[[sl:HMS Dauntless]]
[[sv:HMS Dauntless]]
Four ships of the French Navy have borne the name Dauphin Royal in honour of the Dauphin of France:
- French ship Dauphin Royal (1668) (en:Dauphin Royal), a 110-gun ship of the line
- French ship Dauphin Royal (1735) (en:Dauphin Royal), a 74-gun ship of the line
- French ship Orient (1791) (en:Dauphin Royal), a 118-gun ship of the line (launched 1791 at Toulon), renamed Sans Culotte in September 1792 and then Orient in May 1795 - flagship of the French fleet at the Battle of the Nile
- French ship Dauphin Royal (1824) (en:Dauphin Royal), a 100-gun ship of the line, successively renamed Briarée and Fleurus (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dauphin Royal, French Ship}}
[[en:French ship Dauphin Royal]]
USC&GS Davidson was the name of two ships of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, and may refer to:
- USC&GS Davidson (1925) (en:USC&GS Davidson (1925)), a launch in service from 1933 to 1935
- USC&GS Davidson (1966), a survey ship in service with the Coast and Geodetic Survey from 1967 to 1970 and, as NOAAS Davidson (S 331), with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration from 1970 to 1989
{{shipindex|Davidson}}
Four ships of the United States Navy have borne the name Davis. The first three were named in honor of the Admiral Charles H. Davis. The fourth, DD-937, was named for Commander George F. Davis.
- USS Davis (TB-12) (en:USS Davis (TB-12)), was a torpedo boat, launched in 1898 and sold for scrap in 1920.
- USS Davis (DD-65) (en:USS Davis (DD-65)), was a Sampson-class destroyer, launched in 1916 and sold in 1934.
- USS Davis (DD-395) (en:USS Davis (DD-395)), was a Somers-class destroyer, launched in 1938 and sold in 1947.
- USS Davis (DD-937) (en:USS Davis (DD-937)), was a Forrest Sherman-class destroyer, launched in 1956 and decommissioned in 1982.
- See also
- USS Frederick C. Davis (DE-136) (en:USS Frederick C. Davis (DE-136))
- USS George E. Davis (DE-357) (en:USS George E. Davis (DE-357))
- USS James L. Davis (1861) (en:USS James L. Davis (1861))
- USS M. M. Davis (SP-314) (en:USS M. M. Davis (SP-314))
- USS Rodney M. Davis (FFG-60) (en:USS Rodney M. Davis (FFG-60))
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Davis}}
[[en:USS Davis]]
[[sl:USS Davis]]
USS Dawn is a name used more than once by the United States Navy, and may refer to:
- USS Dawn (1857) (en:USS Dawn), a steamer in commission from 1861 to 1865 that saw service during the American Civil War
- USS Dawn (SP-26) (en:USS Dawn (SP-26)), a repair boat in commission from 1917 to 1918
- USS Dawn (SP-37) (en:USS Dawn (SP-37)), the proposed naval designation for a private yawl ordered delivered to the Navy in 1917 but never commissioned into Navy service
- USS Dawn (IX-186) (en:USS Dawn (IX-186)), a tanker in commission from 1944 to 1946
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dawn}}
[[en:USS Dawn]]
USS Dayton has been the name of two ships in the United States Navy, named after the city of Dayton, Ohio.
- USS Monterey (CVL-26) (en:USS Dayton (CL-78)), was renamed and reclassified Monterey (CVL-26) on 31 March 1942, prior to launching.
- USS Dayton (CL-105) (en:USS Dayton (CL-105)), a Cleveland-class light cruiser, served from 1944 until 1949.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dayton}}
[[de:USS Dayton]]
[[en:USS Dayton]]
[[sl:USS Dayton]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named De Grasse, in honor of Admiral Comte de Grasse of France.
- USS De Grasse (ID-1217) (en:USS De Grasse (ID-1217)), was a steam-powered yacht selected for service as a patrol vessel in 1917, but which never saw service with the Navy and was returned to her owner on 7 November 1918
- USS De Grasse (AK-223) (en:USS De Grasse (AK-223)), was the Liberty ship Nathaniel J. Wyeth, in commission as cargo ship USS De Grasse from 1943 to 1946
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:De Grasse}}
[[en:USS De Grasse]]
Three ships of the French Navy have born the name De Grasse in honour of François Joseph Paul de Grasse:
- French ship De Grasse (1939) (en:De Grasse), a requisitioned steamer (not exists)
- Де Грасс (крейсер) «Де Грасс» (фр. De Grasse — в честь Франсуа де Грасса) — французский крейсер ПВО. (en:De Grasse (C 610), an anti-aircraft cruiser (1946 - 1974))
- French frigate De Grasse (D 612) (en:De Grasse) (D 612), a Tourville class frigate, presently in service
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:De Grasse, French Ship}}
Two ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS De Haven, in honor of Edwin J. De Haven, an American naval officer and explorer.
- The USS De Haven (DD-469) (en:USS De Haven (DD-469)), was a Fletcher-class destroyer, launched in 1942 and sunk in 1943.
- The USS De Haven (DD-727) (en:USS De Haven (DD-727)), was a Allen M. Sumner-class destroyer, launched in 1944 and struck in 1973, when she was transferred to South Korea and renamed Incheon. She was stricken and scrapped in 1993.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:De Haven}}
[[de:USS De Haven]]
[[en:USS De Haven]]
[[sl:USS De Haven]]
HNLMS De Ruyter may refer to one of seven ships of the Royal Netherlands Navy named after Admiral Michiel Adriaenszoon de Ruyter (1607–1676):
- HNLMS De Ruyter (1880) (en:HNLMS De Ruyter (1880)), was an Atjeh-class unprotected cruiser. (not exists)
- Ван Гент (1928) Hr. Ms. Van Ghent, бортовая литера GT (Его величества Ван Гент) — эсминец флота Нидерландов типа Ван Гент, головной в серии. (en:HNLMS De Ruyter (1926), was an Admiralen-class destroyer. She was renamed Van Ghent to make way for the 1935 De Ruyter. She served in World War II and was wrecked on Bamidjo reef on 15 February 1942.)
- Лёгкий крейсер «Де Рёйтер» (1936) Лёгкий крейсер «Де Рёйтер» (De Ruyter) — лёгкий крейсер голландского флота времён Второй мировой войны. (en:HNLMS De Ruyter (1935), was the lead ship of her class of light cruisers. She served in World War II and was sunk in the battle of the Java Sea on 28 February 1942.)
- HNLMS De Ruyter (C801) (en:HNLMS De Ruyter (C801)), launched in 1944, was a De Zeven Provinciën-class cruiser (laid down as De Zeven Provinciën, renamed after the sinking of the 1935 De Ruyter). She was sold to Peru in 1973 and renamed Almirante Grau. (not exists)
- HNLMS De Ruyter (1974) (en:HNLMS De Ruyter (1974)), was a Tromp-class guided missile frigate. (not exists)
- HNLMS De Ruyter (F804) (en:HNLMS De Ruyter (F804)), launched in 2002, is a De Zeven Provinciën-class frigate.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:De Ruyter, Hnlms}}
[[de:De Ruyter (Schiff)]]
[[en:HNLMS De Ruyter]]
[[nl:Hr. Ms. De Ruyter]]
[[no:Hr. Ms. «De Ruyter»]]
[[pl:De Ruyter]]
USS De Soto is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS De Soto (1859) (en:USS De Soto (1859)) was a Navy steamer that served during the American Civil War and in the West Indies.
- USS General Lyon (1860) (en:USS De Soto (1860)) was a riverboat that was renamed General Lyon on 24 October 1862.
- See also
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{{DEFAULTSORT:De Soto}}
[[en:USS De Soto]]
Eight ships of the Royal Netherlands Navy have been named HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën or similar, after the original seven provinces of the Netherlands forming the Union of Utrecht:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.marine.nl/schepen/eskader/fregatten/lcf/dezevenprovincien/geschiedenis/%7Ctitle=Koninklijke Marine — "Geschiedenis Hr.Ms. De Zeven Provinciën"|language=Dutch|accessdate=2006-07-09}}
</ref>
- Zeven Provinciën (1643-1659) (en:Zeven Provinciën (1643–1659)), ship of the line of the Amsterdam Admiralty; (not exists)
- Verenigde Provinciën (1665-1667) (en:Verenigde Provinciën (1665–1667)), ship of the line of the Amsterdam Admiralty; (not exists)
- De Zeven Provinciën (1665) De Zeven Provinciën (1665) — 80-пушечный парусный линейный корабль, построенный на верфи Адмиралтейства Роттердама. (en:De Zeven Provinciën ship of the line (1665–1694), of the Maze Admiralty;)
- Zeven Provincien (1694-1706) (en:Zeven Provincien (1694–1706)), ship of the line of the Maze Admiralty; (not exists)
- Zeven Provinciën (1782-1794) (en:Zeven Provinciën (1782–1794)), ship of the line of the Noorderkwartier Admiralty; (not exists)
- Hr. Ms. De Zeven Provinciën (1910) «Де Зевен Провинсиен» (нидерл. De Zeven Provinciën — «семь провинций») — броненосец береговой обороны Нидерландов, последний корабль этого класса в составе ВМС Нидерландов. (en:HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën - a costal defence ship in service from 1910 to 1942)
- HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën (C802) (en:HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën (C802)) (1950–1976), De Zeven Provinciën-class cruiser;
- HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën (F802) (en:HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën (F802)) (2002— ), the lead ship of the De Zeven Provinciën frigate class.
- References
{{reflist}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:De Zeven Provincien}}
[[de:De Zeven Provinciën]]
[[en:HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën]]
[[ja:デ・ゼーヴェン・プロヴィンシェン]]
[[nl:Hr. Ms. De Zeven Provinciën]]
[[no:«De Zeven Provinciën»]]
[[pl:De Zeven Provinciën]]
[[tr:De Zeven Provinciën]]
USS Dean may refer to:
- USS Deane (1778) (en:USS Deane (1778)), a Continental Navy frigate in commission from 1778 to 1783, renamed USS Hague in 1782
- USS Dean II (SP-98) (en:USS Dean II (SP-98)), a United States Navy patrol boat in commission from 1917 to 1918
{{Shipindex|name=Dean, USS}}
[[en:USS Dean]]
USS Deane has been the name of more than one ship in the United States Navy.
- USS Deane (1778) (en:USS Deane) was a Continental Navy frigate commissioned in 1778.
- USS Deane (DE-86), a Buckley-class destroyer escort, was never commissioned in the United States Navy. Instead it was commissioned in the Royal Navy as HMS Deane (K551) in 1943.{{Citation needed|date=January 2008}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Deane}}
[[en:USS Deane]]
Five ships of the United States Navy have been named Decatur, in honor of Commodore Stephen Decatur.
- The USS Decatur (1839) (en:USS Decatur), was a sloop-of-war built in 1839 and in service from 1840 to 1859.
- USS Decatur (DD-5) (en:USS Decatur (DD-5)), was a Bainbridge-class destroyer which served mainly in or near the Philippines from 1902 to 1919.
- USS Decatur (DD-341) (en:USS Decatur (DD-341)), was a Clemson-class destroyer which served from 1922 to 1945.
- USS Decatur (DD-936) (en:USS Decatur (DDG-31)), was a "Forrest Sherman"-class destroyer in service from 1956 to 1983, later converted to the Self Defense Test Ship.
- USS Decatur (DDG-73) USS Decatur (DDG-73) — эсминец УРО типа «Арли Бёрк». Построен на верфи Bath Iron Works, приписан к морской станции Сан-Диего, штат Калифорния. (en:USS Decatur (DDG-73), is an Arleigh Burke class destroyer commissioned in 1998 and currently in active service. )
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Decatur}}
[[de:USS Decatur]]
[[en:USS Decatur]]
[[sl:USS Decatur]]
[[zh:迪凯特号驱逐舰]]
At least four vessels of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Decoy.
- HMS Decoy (1871) (en:Decoy), a gunboat launched in 1871 and sold in 1885. (not exists)
- HMS Decoy (1894) (en:Decoy), a torpedo boat destroyer launched in 1894 and sunk in a collision in 1904.
- HMS Decoy (H75) (en:Decoy), a D class destroyer launched in 1932 and transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1943 as HMCS Kootenay, then broken up in 1946.
- BAP Ferré (DM-74) (en:Decoy (D106)), a destroyer launched in 1949 and sold to the Peruvian Navy in 1970 as BAP Ferré (DM-74), decommissioned in 2007. She was originally to have been named Dragon.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Decoy, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Decoy]]
[[en:HMS Decoy]]
[[fi:HMS Decoy]]
[[sl:HMS Decoy]]
Dédalo (Spanish for Daedalus) was the name of two ships of the Spanish Navy:
- Spanish seaplane carrier Dédalo (en:The first Dédalo) was a seaplane and balloon carrier converted from German merchant vessel Neuenfelds in 1922
- Spanish aircraft carrier Dédalo (en:The second Dédalo) was an aircraft carrier, commissioned as the USS Cabot in 1943, acquired and renamed by the Spanish Navy in 1967, decommissioned in 1989
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dedalo}}
[[en:Dédalo]]
Several ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Defence:
- HMS Defence (1763) (en:Defence), launched in 1763, fought in many battles in the American Revolutionary War, the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars.
- HMS Defence (1815) (en:Defence) was a 74 gun ship of the line, built in 1815 and broken up in 1857.
- HMS Defence (1861) (en:Defence), launched in 1861, was an ironclad scrapped in 1935.
- HMS Defence (1907) Его величества корабль «Дифенс» (англ. HMS Defence) — последний(третий корабль типа «Минотавр») английский броненосный крейсер. (en:Defence, launched in 1907, was an armoured cruiser sunk at the battle of Jutland.)
- Light cruiser Defence was launched in 1945 but work on her was suspended until 1954. In 1957 she was renamed Lion.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Defence, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Defence]]
[[en:HMS Defence]]
[[sl:HMS Defence]]
[[sv:HMS Defence]]
Seven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Defender, and another is currently being built:
- HMS Defender (1797) (en:HMS Defender (1797)) was a 12-gun gunboat launched in 1797 and on the Navy List until 1802.
- HMS Defender (1804) (en:HMS Defender (1804)) was a 14-gun gunbrig launched in 1804 and wrecked in 1809.
- HMS Defender (1809) (en:HMS Defender (1809)) was an 8-gun lugger, previously the French privateer Bonne Marseille. She was captured in 1809 by HMS Royalist and sold in 1814.
- HMS Defender (1883) (en:HMS Defender (1883)) was an early Torpedo Boat, the remains of which can be seen at the Torpedo Boat Museum, Magazine Bay, Lyttelton, New Zealand.
- HMS Defender (1911) (en:HMS Defender (1911)) was an Acheron-class Torpedo boat destroyer, launched in 1911, present at the Battle of Jutland and sold in 1921.
- HMS Defender (H07) (en:HMS Defender (H07)), a D-class destroyer launched in 1932 and sunk in 1941.
- HMS Defender (D114) (en:HMS Defender (D114)), a Daring-class destroyer launched in 1950 and broken up in 1972.
- HMS Defender (D36) (en:HMS Defender (D36)), a Type 45 destroyer launched on 21st October 2009.
The name was also used between 1941(?) and 1945 for a small shore establishment just outside Liverpool.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Defender, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Defender]]
[[fi:HMS Defender]]
USS Defiance has been the name of three ships in the United States Navy.
- USS Defiance (ID-3327) (en:USS Defiance (ID-3327)), a cargo vessel from 1918–1919.
- USS Defiance (AMc-73) (en:USS Defiance (AMc-73)), a coastal minesweeper that served during World War II.
- USS Defiance (PG-95) (en:USS Defiance (PG-95)), a patrol gunboat that served from 1969 until 1973 when it was transferred to Turkey.
- See also
- USS Point Defiance (LSD-31) (en:USS Point Defiance (LSD-31))
- HMS Defiance (en:HMS Defiance)
- USS Defiant (en:USS Defiant) a ship in the Star Trek universe
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Defiance}}
[[en:USS Defiance]]
Twelve ships and two shore establishments of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Defiance. Others have borne the name whilst serving as depot ships and tenders to the establishments:
- HMS Defiance (1588) (en:HMS Defiance) was an 8-gun pinnace that took part in the action against the Spanish Armada in 1588. (not exists)
- HMS Defiance (1590) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 46-gun galleon built in 1590. She was rebuilt and reduced to 34 guns in 1614 and was sold in 1650.
- HMS Defiance (1652) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 10-gun ship captured from the Parliamentarians by the Royalists in 1652 during the English Civil War. She foundered later in 1652. (not exists)
- HMS Defiance (1666) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 66-gun third-rate ship of the line launched in 1666 and burned by accident in 1668.
- HMS Defiance (1671) (en:HMS Defiance) was a sloop in service between 1671 and 1678. (not exists)
- HMS Defiance (1675) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 64-gun third-rate launched in 1675. She was rebuilt in 1695, reduced to a fourth rate in 1716, hulked in 1743 and broken up in 1749.
- HMS Defiance (1744) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 69-gun fourth-rate launched in 1744 and sold in 1766.
- HMS Defiance (1766) (en:HMS Defiance) was a sloop launched in 1766. (not exists)
- HMS Defiance (1772) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 64-gun third-rate launched in 1772 and wrecked in 1780 off the Savannah River.
- HMS Defiance (1783) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 74-gun third-rate of launched in 1783. She was used as a prison ship from 1813 and was broken up in 1817.
- HMS Defiance (1794) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 4-gun gunboat purchased in 1794 and sold in 1797. (not exists)
- HMS Defiance (1861) (en:HMS Defiance) was a 91-gun screw propelled second rate launched in 1861. She became the Navy's torpedo school ship in 1884 and was sold in 1931.
- HMS Defiance (shore establishment 1884) (en:HMS Defiance) was the Royal Navy's torpedo school, established in 1884 in the second rate HMS Defiance, and in subsequent ships that were renamed HMS Defiance. These included: (not exists)
- HMS Defiance (1861) (en:HMS Defiance) was the original school ship from 1884 until 1931.
- HMS Perseus (1861) (en:HMS Perseus) was HMS Defiance II from 1904 until 1931. (not exists)
- HMS Spartan (1891) (en:HMS Spartan) was HMS Defiance II from 1921 until 1931.
- HMS Cleopatra (1878) (en:HMS Cleopatra) was HMS Defiance III from 1922 until 1931. (not exists)
- HMS Inconstant (1868) (en:HMS Inconstant) was HMS Defiance IV from 1922 until 1930 and HMS Defiance II from 1930 until 1956.
- HMS Andromeda (1897) (en:HMS Andromeda) was HMS Defiance from 1931 until 1956.
- HMS Vulcan (1889) (en:HMS Vulcan) was HMS Defiance III from 1931 until 1955.
The school moved ashore at Portsmouth in 1955, becoming a stone frigate. It was paid off in 1959.
- HMS Defiance (shore establishment 1970) (en:HMS Defiance) was the Fleet Maintenance Base at HMNB Devonport between 1972 and 1979, and again between 1981 and 1994 when it was absorbed into the main base. One ship was renamed HMS Defiance whilst serving as the establishment's depot ship. (not exists)
- HMS Forth (A187) (en:HMS Forth) was HMS Defiance from 1972 until 1978.
- See also
- H.M.S. Defiant (en:H.M.S. Defiant) – 1962 movie
- Patrol Boat (TV series) (en:HMAS Defiance) – fictional Australian patrol boat from Patrol Boat
- USS Defiance (en:USS Defiance) – the name of 3 US Navy ships
- USS Defiant (en:USS Defiant) – fictional starship(s)
- References
- {{Colledge}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Defiance, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Defiance]]
Two ships of the French Navy have borne the name Dégo:
- French ship Dégo (1797) (en:French ship Dégo (1797)), a gunboat taken from the Venitian navy (not exists)
- French ship Dégo (1798) (en:French ship Dégo (1798)), a 64-gun ship of the line taken from the Maltese Navy
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dego, French Ship}}
Deike Rickmers may refer to several ships:
- Deike Rickmers (barque) (en:Deike Rickmers (barque)), built 1872, sold 1873 and renamed C R Bischop (not exists)
- Deike Rickmers (ship) (en:Deike Rickmers (ship)), built 1874, ran aground off Harwich in 1884 (not exists)
- SS Deike Rickmers (1896) (en:SS Deike Rickmers (1896)), sold in 1899 and renamed Holsatia (not exists)
- SS Deike Rickmers (1908) (en:SS Deike Rickmers (1908)), seized in 1917 by China, renamed Hwah Ting (not exists)
- SS Deike Rickmers (1910) (en:SS Deike Rickmers (1910)), ex Cartagena, purchased 1926, sold to Japan in 1927 and renamed Tami Maru (not exists)
- SS Deike Rickmers (1912) (en:SS Deike Rickmers (1912)), ex Aker, purchased in 1929, sold in 1938 and renamed Helga Moller (not exists)
- SS Azov (1944) (en:SS Deike Rickmers (1944)), seized in 1945 and renamed Empire Concord
- MV Deike Rickmers (1996) (en:MV Deike Rickmers (1996)), in service (not exists)
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Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Deimos, after Deimos, a moon of Mars.
- The USS Deimos (AK-78) (en:USS Deimos (AK-78)), was launched 28 December 1942 and scuttled 23 June 1943.
- The USS Deimos (AKL-40), was the former Army FS-SOO, acquired by the Navy 12 December 1951, and loaned to the Republic of Korea under the Mutual Defense Assistance Program the same day.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Deimos}}
[[en:USS Deimos]]
SS Delargentino may refer to one of two Type C3-P&C ships built for the United States Maritime Commission by Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard and intended for the Mississippi Shipping Company:
- USAT J. W. McAndrew (en:SS Delargentino (1940)) (MC hull number 50), designated for transfer to the United States Navy as transport USS J. W. McAndrew (AP-47), but instead went to United States Army as USAT J. W. McAndrew; collided with French aircraft carrier Béarn in 1945; sold for commercial use in 1947; scrapped 1972
- USS Monrovia (APA-31) (en:SS Delargentino (1942)) (MC hull number 152), transferred to the United States Navy as transport USS Monrovia (AP-64); later converted to an attack transport and redesignated APA-31; scrapped 1968
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Delargentino}}
USS Delaware<ref>[1]</ref> may refer to one of the six United States Navy ships named for the U.S. state of Delaware (the first state in the Union):
- USS Delaware (1776) (en:USS Delaware (1776)), was a 24-gun frigate built in 1776 and captured by the British in 1777.
- USS Delaware (1798) (en:USS Delaware (1798)), was a 20-gun ship purchased in 1798.
- USS Delaware (1820) (en:USS Delaware (1820)), was a 74-gun ship of the line, launched in 1820 and burned in 1861.
- USS Delaware (1861) (en:USS Delaware (1861)), was a side-wheel steamer built in 1861 and decommissioned in 1865.
- USS Piscataqua (1866) (en:USS Delaware (1866)), was a screw steamer renamed from Piscataqua in 1869.
- USS Delaware (BB-28) (en:USS Delaware (BB-28)), was a battleship commissioned in 1910 and scrapped in 1924.
- SP-467 (later AT-5S and YT-111) served in the Navy from 1917 to 1923. Although officially known as SP-467, she was erroneously listed under her merchant name of Delaware on various occasions.
- Notes
{{reflist}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delaware}}
[[en:USS Delaware]]
[[es:USS Delaware]]
[[it:USS Delaware]]
[[sl:USS Delaware]]
Delfin class submarine may refer to one of the following classes of submarine:
- Greek Delfin class submarine (en:Greek Delfin class submarine), a French-built class of two submarines built for the Royal Hellenic Navy in 1910; active in the First Balkan War; both boats seized by France during the Greek National Schism in 1916 and used during World War I; returned to Greece after the war and both stricken in 1920 (not exists)
- Подводные лодки проекта 667БДРМ «Дельфин» Подводные лодки проекта 667БДРМ «Дельфин» — серия советских атомных подводных лодок, вооружённых баллистическими ракетами Р-29РМ (РСМ-54, SS-N-24). (en:Soviet or Russian Delfin class submarine, an alternate name for the Delta IV class of nuclear, ballistic-missile submarines employed by the Soviet and Russian Navies)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delfin Class Submarine}}
The following ships of the Indian Navy have been named INS Delhi:
- INS Delhi (1948) (en:INS Delhi (1948)) was a Leander class cruiser, acquired by the Indian Navy in 1948 from the Royal Navy, where it served in World War II as HMS Achilles
- INS Delhi (D61) (en:INS Delhi (D61)) is the lead ship of her class of guided-missile destroyers, commissioned in 1997
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delhi}}
[[en:INS Delhi]]
[[hu:INS Delhi (egyértelműsítő lap)]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Delhi, after the Indian city of Delhi:
- HMS Delhi was the name under which the battleship HMS Emperor of India was constructed, but she was renamed a month prior to her launch in November 1913.
- HMS Delhi (D47) (en:HMS Delhi) was a Danae class light cruiser launched in 1918. She served in the Second World War and was scrapped in 1948.
- INS Delhi (1948) (en:HMIS Delhi) was formerly the Leander class cruiser HMNZS Achilles, transferred to the Indian Navy in 1948, and recommissioned as INS Delhi when India became a republic. She was broken up in 1978.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delhi, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Delhi]]
[[es:HMS Delhi]]
[[fi:HMS Delhi]]
Thirteen ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Delight:
- HMS Delight (1583) (en:HMS Delight (1583)) was discovery vessel wrecked in 1583 off Sable Island. She may not have been part of the Royal Navy, and was possibly part of Sir Humphrey Gilbert's 1583 expedition to Newfoundland. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (1686) (en:HMS Delight (1686)) was a four-gun hoy purchased in 1686 and sold in 1713. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (1709) (en:HMS Delight (1709)) was a 14-gun sixth rate launched in 1709 and sold in 1712. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (1778) (en:HMS Delight (1778)) was a 14-gun sloop launched in 1778 and foundered in 1781. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (1801) (en:HMS Delight (1801)) was an 18-gun sloop, formerly the French ship Sans Pareil. She was captured in 1801 by HMS Mercury and sold in 1805. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (1806) (en:HMS Delight (1806)) was a 16-gun brig-sloop launched in 1806 and captured by the French in 1808 when she became stranded off Calabria. (not exists)
- French ship Friedland (1807) (en:Delight) (1808) was an 18-gun sloop, formerly the French ship Friedland. She was captured in 1808 by HMS Standard and sold in 1814. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (1819) (en:HMS Delight (1819)) was a 10-gun brig sloop of the Cherokee class launched in 1819 and wrecked in 1824. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (1829) (en:HMS Delight (1829)) was another 10-gun Cherokee class sloop launched in 1829 and sold in 1844. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (1856) (en:HMS Delight (1856)) was a wood screw Albacore class gunboat launched in 1856 and sold in 1867. She was later renamed M. A. Starr. (not exists)
- HMS Delight (H38) (en:HMS Delight (H38)) was a D class destroyer launched in 1932 and sunk in 1940.
- HMS Delight was to have been a destroyer, ordered in 1945, but cancelled the following year.
- HMS Delight (D119) (en:HMS Delight (D119)) was a Daring class destroyer launched in 1950. She was previously to have been named HMS Disdain, but was renamed in 1946 prior to launching. She was sold in 1970.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delight, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Delight]]
[[fi:HMS Delight]]
USS DeLong may refer to:
- USS DeLong (TB-28) (en:USS DeLong (TB-28)), a torpedo boat, launched in 1900 and sold in 1920.
- USS DeLong (DD-129) (en:USS DeLong (DD-129)), a Wickes-class destroyer, launched in 1918 and sold in 1922.
- USS DeLong (DE-684) (en:USS DeLong (DE-684)), a Rudderow-class destroyer escort, launched in 1943 and struck in 1969.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delong}}
[[en:USS DeLong]]
SS Delorleans may refer to one of two Type C3-P&C ships built for the United States Maritime Commission by Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard and intended for the Mississippi Shipping Company:
- USS Crescent City (APA-21) (en:SS Delorleans (1940)) (MC hull number 49), delivered to Mississippi Shipping in August 1940; acquired by the United States Navy as transport USS Crescent City (AP-40) in June 1941; later converted to an attack transport and redesignated APA-21; served as training ship Golden Bear for the California Maritime Academy; as Artship, laid up in San Francisco Bay {{as of|September 2008|lc=on}}
- USS Calvert (APA-32) (en:SS Delorleans (1942)) (MC hull number 151), transferred to the United States Navy as transport USS Calvert (AP-65); later converted to an attack transport and redesignated APA-32; later scrapped
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delorleans}}
[[en:SS Delorleans]]
USS Delphinus has been the name of two ships of the United States Navy, named after Delphinus, a northern constellation.
- USS Delphinus (AF-24) (en:USS Delphinus (AF-24)), a transport launched in 1915 as San Mateo; purchased by the U.S. Navy in 1942 and renamed; decommissioned, 1946.
- USS Pegasus (PHM-1) (en:USS Delphinus (PHM-1)), was renamed Pegasus, the lead ship of the Pegasus-class of patrol hydrofoils; launched, 1974; sold, 1996.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delphinus}}
[[en:USS Delphinus]]
USS Delta may refer to:
- USS Delta (1864) (en:USS Delta (1864)), a steam tug for the United States Navy during the American Civil War
- USS Delta (AR-9) (en:USS Delta (AR-9)), originally a cargo ship for the United States Navy during World War II; later converted to repair ship as lead ship of the Delta class
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delta}}
[[en:USS Delta]]
USS Denebola is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Denebola (AD-12) (en:USS Denebola (AD-12)), was built in 1919 as Edgewood by Skinner and Eddy, Seattle, Washington and commissioned 28 November 1921. She served in World War II and was decommissioned there 10 April 1946.
- USS Denebola (AF-56) (en:USS Denebola (AF-56)), was launched 10 June 1944 as Hibbing Victory by Oregon Shipbuilding Co., Portland, Oregon and commissioned in the Navy on 20 January 1954.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Denebola}}
[[en:USS Denebola]]
USS Dennis J. Buckley has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Dennis J. Buckley (DE-553) (en:USS Dennis J. Buckley (DE-553)), a destroyer escort canceled in 1944
- USS Dennis J. Buckley (DD-808) (en:USS Dennis J. Buckley (DD-808)), a destroyer in commission from 1945 to 1973
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dennis J. Buckley}}
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Denver, after the city of Denver, Colorado.
- The USS Denver (CL-16) (en:USS Denver (C-14/PG-28/CL-16)) was a cruiser commissioned in 1904 and in service until 1931.
- The USS Denver (CL-58) (en:USS Denver (CL-58)) was a light cruiser commissioned 1942 and on active service in World War II, decommissioning in 1947.
- The USS Denver (LPD-9) (en:USS Denver (LPD-9)) is an amphibious transport dock commissioned in 1968 and currently in active service.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Denver}}
[[de:USS Denver]]
[[en:USS Denver]]
[[fr:USS Denver]]
[[sl:USS Denver]]
Nine ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Deptford, named after Deptford, an area on the south bank of the River Thames in south-east London.:
- HMS Deptford (1652) (en:HMS Deptford) was a 4-gun sloop launched in 1652 and last listed in 1659. (not exists)
- HMS Deptford (1665) (en:HMS Deptford) was a 10-gun ketch launched in 1665 and wrecked in 1689. (not exists)
- HMS Deptford (1687) (en:HMS Deptford) was a 50-gun fourth rate launched in 1687, rebuilt in 1700 and 1719, and sold in 1726.
- HMS Deptford (1732) (en:HMS Deptford) was a 60-gun fourth rate launched in 1732. She was rearmed to 50 guns in 1752 and was sold in 1767.
- HMS Deptford (1735) (en:HMS Deptford) was a 24-gun storeship launched in 1735 and broken up in 1756. (not exists)
- HMS Deptford (1781) (en:HMS Deptford) was a 12-gun tender launched in 1781 and sold in 1863. (not exists)
- HMS Deptford (1784) (en:HMS Deptford) was a transport launched in 1784 and presented to the Hibernian Marine Society in 1816. (not exists)
- HMS Deptford (1788) (en:HMS Deptford) was a 12-gun transport brig purchased in 1788. She became a mooring lighter and was broken up in 1862. (not exists)
- HMS Deptford (U53) (en:HMS Deptford) was a Grimsby-class sloop launched in 1935 and sold in 1948. (not exists)
- See also
- HMS Deptford Prize (en:HMS Deptford Prize) (not exists)
- HMS Deptford Transport (en:HMS Deptford Transport) (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Deptford, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Deptford]]
One ship and one shore base of the Royal Australian Navy have been named HMAS Derwent, for the Derwent River in Tasmania.
- HMAS Derwent (naval base) (en:HMAS Derwent (naval base)), a naval base in Tasmania. (not exists)
- HMAS Derwent (DE 49) (en:HMAS Derwent (DE 49)), a River class destroyer escort which entered service in 1964, left service in 1994, and was sunk as an artificial reef
- Battle honours
One battle honour was awarded to the destroyer escort Derwent, which will be inherited by future ships of the name:<ref name=newhonours>{{cite news |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/Navy_Marks_109th_Birthday_With_Historic_Changes_To_Battle_Honours |title=Navy Marks 109th Birthday With Historic Changes To Battle Honours |date=1 March 2010 |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=14 March 2010}}
</ref><ref name=honourslist>{{cite web |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/w/images/Units_entitlement_list.pdf |title=Royal Australian Navy Ship/Unit Battle Honours |date=1 March 2010 |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=14 March 2010}}
</ref>
- Индонезийско-малайзийская конфронтация (1963—1966) Индонезийско-малайзийская конфронтация 1963-1966 годов – малоинтенсивный вооружённый конфликт между Индонезией с одной стороны и Федерацией Малайзии, Великобританией, Австралией и Новой Зеландией с другой стороны из-за создания государства Малайзия и включения в его состав британских владений на северной части острова Калимантан. (en:Malaysia 1964-66)
- See also
- HMS Derwent (en:HMS Derwent), several British warships of the same name
- References
{{reflist}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Derwent, Hmas}}
[[en:HMAS Derwent]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Derwent:
- HMS Derwent (1807) (en:HMS Derwent) was a Cruizer class brig-sloop launched in 1807 and sold in 1817. (not exists)
- HMS Derwent (1903) (en:HMS Derwent) was a River class destroyer launched in 1903 and sunk by a mine in 1917.
- HMS Derwent (L83) (en:HMS Derwent) was a Hunt class destroyer launched in 1940. She was damaged by a torpedo in 1943 and not repaired, being scrapped in 1947. (not exists)
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Derwent, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Derwent]]
[[fi:HMS Derwent]]
Two ships of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary have borne the name RFA Derwentdale:
- RFA Derwentdale (A114) (en:RFA Derwentdale) was a Dale-class oiler and landing ship, gantry launched in 1941 and sold in 1960.
- RFA Derwentdale (A221) (en:RFA Derwentdale) was a Dale-class mobile reserve tanker launched in 1964 as Halcyon Breeze. She was acquired in 1967 and returned to her owners in 1974. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Derwentdale, Rfa}}
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Des Moines, after the city of Des Moines, Iowa.
- The USS Des Moines (CL-17) (en:USS Des Moines (C-15)) was a Denver-class cruiser in service from 1904 to 1921.
- The USS Helena (CA-75) (en:USS Des Moines (CA-75)), a Baltimore-class heavy cruiser, was renamed USS Helena on 6 November 1944.
- The USS Des Moines (CA-134) (en:USS Des Moines (CA-134)), the lead ship of her class, was a heavy cruiser in service from 1948 to 1961 and scrapped between 2006 and 2007.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Des Moines, USS}}
[[de:USS Des Moines]]
[[en:USS Des Moines]]
[[sl:USS Des Moines]]
USS Despatch may refer to:
- USS Despatch (1814) (en:USS Despatch (1814)), a schooner in commission from 1814 to 1820
- USS Pocahontas (1852) (en:USS Despatch (1852)), a sloop-of-war in commission from 1856 to 1859, which was recommissioned as USS Pocahontas in 1860, served in the American Civil War, and was decommissioned a final time in 1865
- USS Despatch (1873) (en:USS Despatch (1873)), a screw steamer in commission from 1873 to 1891, which served as the first Presidential yacht from 1880 until 1891
- USS Despatch (1902) (en:USS Despatch (1902)), a ferry launch in commission as USS Steam Cutter No. 423 1902-1908, as USS Despatch 1908-1918, and as USS Hustle 1918-1921, being designated YFB-6 in 1921
- USS Despatch (SP-68) (en:USS Despatch (SP-68)), redesignated PY-8 in 1920, a tender with the Atlantic Fleet in commission as USS Vixen (SP-68) briefly in 1917, then as USS Despatch (SP-68) from 1917 to 1919 and again in 1920, and as USS Despatch (PY-8) from 1920 to 1921
- USS Boston (1884) (en:USS Despatch (IX-2)), a receiving ship in service under the name from 1940 to 1946, which previously had been the protected cruiser Boston and which was renamed Despatch in 1940 to free the name Boston for the new heavy cruiser USS Boston (CA-69).
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Despatch}}
[[en:USS Despatch]]
[[nl:USS Despatch]]
USS Detector is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Detector (AMc-75) (en:USS Detector (AMc-75)), was a coastal minesweeper launched 29 May 1941.
- USS Detector (AM-429) (en:USS Detector (AM-429)), was a minesweeper launched 5 December 1952.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Detector}}
[[en:USS Detector]]
Six ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Detroit, after the city of Detroit, Michigan.
- USS Detroit (1813) (en:USS Detroit), a 12-gun ship, was built by the British at Malden, Canada, in 1813 and captured by the Americans during the Battle of Lake Erie 10 September 1813.
- Detroit, a screw steamer, was laid down at the New York Navy Yard in 1865 but canceled in 1866 and broken up on the stocks.
- USS Canandaigua (1862) (en:USS Detroit), was a sloop-of-war named so from 15 May to 10 August in 1869. Before and after she was known as the first Canandaigua.
- USS Detroit (C-10) (en:USS Detroit (C-10)), was a cruiser in use from 1893 to 1904.
- USS Detroit (CL-8) (en:USS Detroit (CL-8)), was a light cruiser in service from 1923 to 1946.
- USS Detroit (AOE-4) (en:USS Detroit (AOE-4)), was a fast combat support ship commissioned in 1970 and decommissioned in 2005.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Detroit}}
[[de:USS Detroit]]
[[en:USS Detroit]]
[[sl:USS Detroit]]
Two ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Detroit, after Fort Detroit. Both served on Lake Erie during the War of 1812:
- HMS Detroit (1812) (en:HMS Detroit) was a 6-gun brig, previously the American army vessel Adams. She was captured in 1812, but was retaken and burnt later that year.
- HMS Detroit (1813) (en:HMS Detroit) was a 20-gun sloop launched in 1813 and captured by the Americans later that year, becoming USS Detroit.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Detroit, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Detroit]]
[[mk:ХМС Детроит]]
SMS Deutschland may refer to one of the following ships in the German Empire's Kaiserliche Marine:
- SMS Deutschland (1874) (en:SMS Deutschland (1875)), an armored frigate commissioned in 1875
- SMS Deutschland (1904) (en:SMS Deutschland (1904)), a battleship launched in 1904
- SMS Deutschland (1914) (en:SMS Deutschland (1914)), an auxiliary mine layer commissioned in 1914
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Deutschland, Sms}}
[[de:SMS Deutschland]]
[[en:SMS Deutschland]]
SS Deutschland may refer to:
- SS Deutschland (1866) (en:SS Deutschland (1866)), a steamship wrecked in 1875 and commemorated in the Gerard Manley Hopkins poem "The Wreck of the Deutschland"
- SS Deutschland «Дойчланд» (нем. Deutschland) — трансатлантический лайнер времен Первой Мировой войны, принадлежащий немецкой судоходной компании «Hamburg-Amerikanische Packetfahrt-Actien-Gesellschaft» (или HAPAG). (en:SS Deutschland (1900), a transatlantic ocean liner of 1900)
- SS Deutschland (1923) (en:SS Deutschland (1923)), ocean liner launched 1923 and sunk 1945
- MS Deutschland (en:MS Deutschland (1998)), a cruise ship christened in 1998
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Deutschland, Ss}}
A number of warships of the French Navy have been named La Dévastation:
- La Dévastation (1855), an ironclad 'floating battery' used in the Crimean War. She was towed to the Black Sea in 1855, and participated in the bombardment of the Russian forts at Kinburn on 17 October 1855, and was scrapped in 1871.
- French ironclad Dévastation (en:La Dévastation (1879)), an ironclad battleship of the French Navy launched in August 1879 and scrapped in 1923.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Devastation}}
Four ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Devastation.
- HMS Devastation (1804) (en:HMS Devastation) was an 8-gun bomb vessel purchased in 1804 and sold in 1816.
- HMS Devastation was to have been a 14-gun bomb vessel. She was laid down in 1820, but was cancelled in 1831.
- HMS Devastation (1841) (en:HMS Devastation) was a paddle sloop launched in 1841 and broken up in 1866. (not exists)
- HMS Devastation (1871) (en:HMS Devastation) was a Devastation class turret ship launched in 1871 and sold in 1908.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Devastation, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Devastation]]
[[sl:HMS Devastation]]
USS Devastator may refer to:
- USS Devastator (AM-318) (en:Devastator (AM-318)) was a ship that served during the World War II and Korean War eras.
- USS Devastator (MCM-6) (en:Devastator (MCM-6)) is an Avenger class minesweeper commissioned by the US Navy on 6 October 1990.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Devastator}}
[[en:USS Devastator]]
[[nl:USS Devastator]]
Eight ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Devonshire, originally in honour of William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Devonshire, and later after the county of Devonshire (now called Devon).
- HMS Devonshire (1692) (en:HMS Devonshire) was an 80-gun third-rate launched in 1692 and blown up in action with the French in 1707 at the Battle at the Lizard.
- HMS Devonshire (1710) (en:HMS Devonshire) was an 80-gun third-rate, launched in 1710, hulked in 1740, and sold in 1760.
- HMS Devonshire (1745) (en:HMS Devonshire) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1745 and broken up in 1772.
- HMS Devonshire (1804) (en:HMS Devonshire) was a fire ship purchased in 1804 and expended on 3 October of that year at Boulogne-sur-Mer. (not exists)
- HMS Devonshire (1812) (en:HMS Devonshire) was a 74-gun third-rate launched in 1812, on harbour service from 1849, and broken up in 1869.
- HMS Devonshire (1904) (en:HMS Devonshire) was a Devonshire-class armoured cruiser launched in 1904 and sold in 1921.
- HMS Devonshire (39) (en:HMS Devonshire) was a County-class heavy cruiser launched in 1927, converted to a training ship in 1947, and sold in 1954.
- HMS Devonshire (D02) (en:HMS Devonshire) was a County-class guided missile destroyer launched in 1960 and sunk as a target in 1984.
- Fictional ships
- Джеймс Бонд Роль Джеймса Бонда сыграли: (The en:James Bond film Tomorrow Never Dies features a fictional Type 23 frigate named HMS Devonshire)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Devonshire, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Devonshire]]
[[fi:HMS Devonshire]]
[[it:HMS Devonshire]]
[[sl:HMS Devonshire]]
Two ships of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary have borne the name RFA Dewdale:
- RFA Dewdale (A151) (en:RFA Dewdale) was a Dale-class oiler and landing ship, gantry launched in 1941 and sold in 1959.
- RFA Dewdale (A129) (en:RFA Dewdale) was a Dale-class mobile reserve tanker launched in 1965 as Edenfield. She was acquired in 1967 and returned to her owners in 1977. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dewdale, Rfa}}
[[en:RFA Dewdale]]
USS Dewey may refer to one of these ships of the United States Navy named in honor of Admiral George Dewey, best known for his victory at the Battle of Manila Bay during the Spanish-American War:
- USS Dewey (YFD-1) (en:USS Dewey (YFD-1)), a floating drydock at U.S. Naval Base Subic Bay in the Philippines until being scuttled in 1942
- USS Dewey (DD-349) DD 349 Dewey (Корабль Соединённых Штатов Дьюи) — американский эсминец типа Farragut. (en:USS Dewey (DD-349), a 1934 Farragut-class destroyer, launched in 1934 and struck in 1945)
- USS Luce (DDG-38) (en:USS Dewey (DLG-7)), renamed Luce on 12 February 1957
- USS Dewey (DDG-45) (en:USS Dewey (DDG-45)), a 1958 Farragut-class guided missile destroyer, launched in 1958 and struck in 1992
- USS Dewey (DDG-105) USS Dewey (DDG-105) — 55-й эскадренный миноносец из серии запланированных к 13 сентября 2002 г. 62 эсминцев УРО типа «Арли Бёрк», строительство которых было одобрено Конгрессом США. (en:USS Dewey (DDG-105), an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, commissioned in 2010)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dewey}}
[[de:USS Dewey]]
[[en:USS Dewey]]
[[nl:USS Dewey]]
[[sl:USS Dewey]]
Dexter has been the name of more than one ship of the United States Revenue Cutter Service and United States Coast Guard, and may refer to:
- USRC Dexter (1830) (en:USRC Dexter (1830)), a cutter in commission in the Revenue Cutter Service from 1830 to 1841
- USRC Dexter (1874) (en:USRC Dexter (1874)), a cutter in commission in the Revenue Cutter Service from 1874 to 1908
- USCGC Dexter (1925) (en:USCGC Dexter (1925)), a cutter in commission in the Coast Guard from 1925 to 1936
- USCGC Dexter (WAVP-385) (en:USCGC Dexter (WAVP-385)), previously WAGC-18, later WHEC-385, a cutter in commission in the Coast Guard from 1946 to 1952 and from 1958 to 1968
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dexter}}
[[en:USCGC Dexter]]
USRC Dexter was the name of more than one ship of the United States Revenue Cutter Service, and may refer to:
- USRC Dexter (1830) (en:USRC Dexter (1830)), a cutter in commission from 1830 to 1841
- USRC Dexter (1874) (en:USRC Dexter (1874)), a cutter in commission from 1874 to 1908
- For ships of the United States Coast Guard named Dexter, see
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dexter, Usrc}}
[[en:USRC Dexter]]
USS Dextrous has been the name of two ships of the United States Navy.
- USS Dextrous (AM-341) (en:USS Dextrous (AM-341)), an Auk-class minesweeper built in 1943.
- USS Dextrous (MCM-13) (en:USS Dextrous (MCM-13)), an Avenger-class mine countermeasures ship, commissioned in 1993 and currently in service.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dextrous}}
[[en:USS Dextrous]]
Five ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Diadem, after the diadem, a type of crown:
- HMS Diadem (1782) (en:HMS Diadem) was a 64-gun third rate ship of the line launched in 1782. She became a troopship in 1798 and was broken up in 1832.
- HMS Diadem (1801) (en:HMS Diadem) was a 14-gun sloop purchased in 1801. She was renamed HMS Falcon in 1802 and was sold in 1816. (not exists)
- HMS Diadem (1856) (en:HMS Diadem) was a wooden screw frigate launched in 1856 and sold in 1875. (not exists)
- HMS Diadem (1896) (en:HMS Diadem) was a Diadem class protected cruiser, launched in 1896 and sold in 1921.
- HMS Diadem (84) (en:HMS Diadem) was a Dido-class light cruiser launched in 1942. She was sold to the Pakistani Navy in 1956, and renamed Babur in 1957 and Jahangir in 1982. She was removed from service in 1985.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Diadem, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Diadem]]
[[en:HMS Diadem]]
[[fi:HMS Diadem]]
{{Other uses|Diamantina (disambiguation)}}
Two ships of the Royal Australian Navy have been named HMAS Diamantina, for the Diamantina River in Queensland.
- HMAS Diamantina (K377) (en:HMAS Diamantina (K377)), a River class frigate commissioned in 1945, decommissioned in 1980, and preserved as a museum ship
- HMAS Diamantina (M 86) (en:HMAS Diamantina (M 86)), a Huon class minehunter, commissioned in 2001 and active as of 2010
- Battle honours
A single battle honour was earned by the frigate HMAS Diamantina, and is inherited by all subsequent ships of the name:<ref name=newhonours>{{cite news |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/Navy_Marks_109th_Birthday_With_Historic_Changes_To_Battle_Honours |title=Navy Marks 109th Birthday With Historic Changes To Battle Honours |date=1 March 2010 |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=14 March 2010}}
</ref><ref name=honourslist>{{cite web |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/w/images/Units_entitlement_list.pdf |title=Royal Australian Navy Ship/Unit Battle Honours |date=1 March 2010 |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=14 March 2010}}
</ref>
- References
{{reflist}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Diamantina, Hmas}}
[[en:HMAS Diamantina]]
[[pl:HMAS Diamantina]]
Several ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Diamond.
- HMS Diamond (1652) (en:HMS Diamond), a 50-gun ship launched at Deptford in 1652 and captured by France in 1693.
- HMS Diamond (1708) (en:HMS Diamond), a fifth-rate 50 gun ship launched at Blackwall Yard in 1708 and rebuilt at Deptford Dockyard in 1722, sold in 1744. (not exists)
- HMS Diamond (1741) (en:HMS Diamond), a fifth-rate launched at Limehouse in 1741 and sold in 1756. (not exists)
- HMS Diamond (1774) (en:HMS Diamond), a fifth-rate launched at Hull in 1774 and sold in 1784.
- HMS Diamond (1794) (en:HMS Diamond), a fifth-rate launched at Deptford in 1794 and broken up in 1812.<ref>[2]</ref> (not exists)
- HMS Diamond (1816) (en:HMS Diamond), a fifth-rate launched at Chatham in 1816 and broken up following a serious fire at Portsmouth in 1827. (not exists)
- HMS Diamond (1848) (en:HMS Diamond), a sixth-rate frigate launched in 1848. She was used as a training ship and renamed Joseph Straker between 1866 and 1868, and sold in 1885. (not exists)
- HMS Diamond (1874) (en:HMS Diamond), a 14-gun Amethyst-class screw corvette launched in 1874 and sold in 1889.
- HMS Diamond (1904) (en:HMS Diamond), a Topaze-class cruiser built by Cammell Laird, launched in 1904 and scrapped in 1921 (not exists)
- HMS Diamond (H22) (en:HMS Diamond), a D-class destroyer launched in 1931 and lost in action in 1941.
- HMS Diamond (D35) (en:HMS Diamond), a Daring-class destroyer launched in 1950 and sold in 1980.
- HMS Diamond (D34) (en:HMS Diamond), a Type 45 destroyer which began construction in 2005 and was launched on 27 November 2007.
See also Diamond Rock, a rock off Martinique commissioned as HMS Fort Diamond in 1804 and re-captured by the French in 1805.
- References
{{reflist}}
- {{colledge}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Diamond, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Diamond]]
[[en:HMS Diamond]]
[[fi:HMS Diamond]]
Many ships have held the name of Diana. They include:
- An 18th century Dutch frigate was called Diana
- In the late 18th century, a whaling ship called Diana had her home port in Hull
- Diana was a Russian navy ship from the early 19th century
- Diana (1840 ship) (en:Diana (1840 ship)), whaling ship, home port in Hull
- A ship sailing out of Dundee with the name Diana was working into the early 20th century, she was part of the Dundee Whaling Expedition to the Antarctic in 1892
- Ten ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Diana
- Diana (1997 ship) (en:Diana (1997 ship)), a Cyprus owned Bulk Carrier IMO: 9133769 (not exists)
- Diana (2007 ship) (en:Diana (2007 ship)), an Antigua and Barbuda General Cargo Ship IMO: 9370082 (not exists)
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{{dab}}
[[en:Diana (ship)]]
Ten ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Diana after the figure from Roman mythology, whilst another was planned but later cancelled:
- HMS Diana (1757) (en:HMS Diana (1757)), a 32-gun fifth-rate launched in 1757, commanded by Alexander Schomberg c.1758/59, and sold in 1793. (not exists)
- HMS Diana (1775) (en:HMS Diana (1775)), a six gun schooner purchased in 1775 in North America, abandoned and burnt out later that year.
- HMS Diana (1794) (en:HMS Diana (1794)), a 38-gun fifth rate launched in 1794 and sold in 1815 to the Dutch Navy She was accidentally destroyed while in dry-dock on the 16 January 1839.
- HMS Diana (1807) (en:HMS Diana (1807)), a 10-gun cutter purchased in 1807 and wrecked on Rodriguez Island in 1810.<ref>Gossett (1986), p.75.</ref> (not exists)
- HMS Diana (1822) (en:HMS Diana (1822)), a 46-gun fifth rate launched in 1822, converted to harbour service in 1868 and broken up in 1874. (not exists)
- HMS Diana (1823) (en:HMS Diana (1823)), an Indian wooden paddle vessel launched in 1823 and purchased in 1824. She was sold in 1826 to the Burnese government and broken up in 1836.
- HMS Diana (1836) (en:HMS Diana (1836)), an Indian wooden paddle vessel launched in 1836 and sold in 1846. (not exists)
- HMS Diana (1895) (en:HMS Diana (1895)), an Eclipse class second class cruiser, launched in 1895 and sold in 1920. (not exists)
- HMS Diana (H49) (en:HMS Diana (H49)), a D-class destroyer launched in 1932, sold to the Royal Canadian Navy and renamed HMCS Margaree in 1940, lost that year after a collision.
- HMS Diana, a planned Daring class destroyer, ordered in 1945 and cancelled in 1946.
- HMS Diana (D126) (en:HMS Diana (D126)), a Daring class destroyer, laid down as HMS Druid, but renamed in 1946 after the previously planned Diana was cancelled. She was launched in 1952, sold in 1969 to the Peruvian Navy and renamed Palacios. She was struck from their lists in 1993.
- References
- {{colledge}}
- Gossett, William Patrick (1986) The lost ships of the Royal Navy, 1793-1900. (London: Mansell). ISBN 0-7201-1816-6
{{Refend}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Diana, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Diana]]
[[fi:HMS Diana]]
Seven ships of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Dido, after Dido, the legendary founder and queen of Carthage.
- HMS Dido (1784) (en:HMS Dido) was a 28-gun sixth-rate launched in 1784 and sold in 1817.
- HMS Dido (1836) (en:HMS Dido) was an 18-gun corvette launched in 1836, used as a coal hulk after 1860, and sold in 1903. (not exists)
- HMS Dido was to have been a wooden screw-propelled corvette. Laid down on 14 January 1861, construction was cancelled on 12 December 1863.
- HMS Dido (1869) (en:HMS Dido) was a wooden Eclipse-class screw corvette launched in 1869, hulked in 1886, renamed HMS Actaeon in 1906 and sold in 1922.
- HMS Dido (1896) (en:HMS Dido) was an Eclipse-class second class cruiser launched in 1896, used as a depot ship after 1913 and sold in 1926. (not exists)
- HMS Dido (37) (en:HMS Dido) was a Dido class light cruiser, launched on 18 July 1939 and broken up in 1958.
- HMS Dido (F104) (en:HMS Dido) was a Leander-class frigate launched in 1961. She was sold to the Royal New Zealand Navy in 1983 and was renamed HMNZS Southland. She was decommissioned in 1995 and sunk to form an artificial reef.
- See also
- HMS Didon (1805) (en:HMS Didon) was a 38-gun fifth rate frigate captured from the French in 1805 and broken up in 1811.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dido, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Dido]]
[[en:HMS Dido]]
[[fi:HMS Dido]]
[[sl:HMS Dido]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Diomede. A fifth was planned but never completed:
- HMS Diomede (1781) (en:HMS Diomede) was a 44-gun Fourth Rate two-decker launched in 1781 and wrecked in 1795.
- HMS Diomede (1798) (en:HMS Diomede) was a 50-gun fourth-rate built as HMS Firm but renamed in 1794 and launched in 1798. She was sold in 1815. (not exists)
- HMS Diomede was to have been a wooden screw sloop, projected in 1866 but cancelled in 1867.
- HMS Diomede (D92) (en:HMS Diomede) was a Danae class light cruiser launched in 1919 and sold in 1946.
- HMS Diomede (F16) (en:HMS Diomede) was a Leander class frigate launched in 1969. She was sold to Pakistan and handed over in 1988, as the Shamsher. She served until 2003.
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Diomede, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Diomede]]
[[fi:HMS Diomede]]
USS Direct was a name used more than once by the United States Navy in naming its ships:
- USS Direct (AM-90) (en:USS Direct (AM-90)), launched 25 April 1942 by Dravo Corporation, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
- USS Direct (AM-430) (en:USS Direct (AM-430)), launched 27 May 1953 by Hiltebrant Dry Dock Co., Kingston, New York.
- References
{{DANFS}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Direct}}
[[en:USS Direct]]
USC&GS Discoverer was the name of two ships of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, and may refer to:
- USC&GS Discoverer (1918) (en:USC&GS Discoverer (1918)), a survey ship in service from 1922 to 1941
- USC&GS Discoverer, an oceanographic research ship in service in the Coast and Geodetic Survey from 1967 to 1970 and in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminsitration as NOAAS Discoverer (R 102) from 1970 to 1996
{{shipindex|Discoverer, USC&GS}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Discoverer, USC&GS}}
Eleven ships of the Royal Navy and a reserve shore establishment of the Canadian Navy have borne the name HMS/HMCS Discovery, while ships of other branches have also used the name:
- HMS Discovery (1600) (en:HMS Discovery) was a discovery vessel in service between 1600 and 1620. (not exists)
- HMS Discovery (1651) (en:HMS Discovery) was a 20-gun ship purchased in 1651 and burnt in 1655. (not exists)
- HMS Discovery (1692) (en:HMS Discovery) was a 6-gun ketch launched in 1692 and broken up in 1705. (not exists)
- HMS Discovery (1719) (en:HMS Discovery) was a discovery sloop lost in the Arctic in 1719. (not exists)
- HMS Discovery (1741) (en:HMS Discovery) was a 6-gun storeship purchased in 1741 and sold in 1750. (not exists)
- HMS Discovery (1774) (en:HMS Discovery) was an 8-gun discovery vessel launched in 1774 as the civilian collier Diligence. She was acquired in 1775, and accompanied HMS Resolution on Captain James Cook's third voyage of exploration from 1776 to 1780. She became a dockyard transport in 1781 and was broken up in 1797.
- HMS Discovery (1789) (en:HMS Discovery) was a 10-gun sloop launched and purchased in 1789. She was commanded by Captain George Vancouver on his voyage of exploration from 1791 to 1795. She was converted to a bomb vessel in 1799, a convict ship in 1818 and was broken up in 1834.
- HMS Discovery (1800) (en:HMS Discovery) was a survey vessel in service in 1800 and sold in 1828. (not exists)
- HMS Discovery was to have been a wood screw gunvessel. She was ordered in 1861 but was cancelled in 1863.
- HMS Discovery (1874) (en:HMS Discovery) was a wood screw storeship, formerly the civilian Bloodhound, purchased in 1874. She was commanded by Captain George Nares during the British Arctic Expedition between 1875 and 1876. She was sold in 1902.
- RRS Discovery (en:HMS Discovery) was a purpose-built survey ship launched in 1901. She was commanded by Captain Robert Falcon Scott during the Discovery Expedition to the Antarctic in 1901, and was sold in 1905. She was re-designated RRS (Royal Research Ship) Discovery in 1923, repurchased in 1929 as a training ship, and was handed over for preserving as a museum ship in 1979.
- HMCS Discovery (en:HMCS Discovery), the Vancouver stone frigate of the Canadian Forces Maritime Command reserve, established as a volunteer half-company of the Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer Reserve in 1924 and commissioned as Discovery in 1941.
- Battle Honours
- Battle of Portland (en:Portland 1653)
- Копенгагенское сражение Копенгагенское сражение (англ. Battle of Copenhagen, дат. Slaget på Reden) — сражение между английским и датским флотами, состоявшееся 2 апреля 1801 года. (en:Copenhagen 1801<ref>http://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/dhh-dhp/his/ol-lo/vol-tom-2/par1/discover-eng.asp</ref>)
- References
{{reflist}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Discovery, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Discovery]]
[[en:HMS Discovery]]
[[fr:HMS Discovery]]
[[sl:HMS Discovery]]
A number of ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Diligence.
- HMS Diligence (1795) (en:HMS Diligence) was a 18-gun brig sloop. She was renamed HMS Diligence before being launched in 1795. (not exists)
- HMS Diligence (1861) (en:HMS Diligence) was a 17-gun Camelion class sloop laid down in 1861 but cancelled on 12 December 1863. (not exists)
- HMS Diligence (1915) (en:HMS Diligence) was a destroyer depot ship, formerly the civilian Tabaristan, purchased in October 1915. She was scrapped in 1926. (not exists)
- HMS Diligence (F-174) (en:HMS Diligence) was a repair ship, formerly USS Diligence (BAR-18) was transferred under terms of the Lend-lease Act to the Royal Navy and returned to the US Navy in 1946. (not exists)
- HMS Diligence (shore establishment) (en:HMS Diligence) was a base at Hythe, Hampshire for the minesweepers and motor torpedo boats of the reserve fleet, which opened in 1953. (not exists)
- RFA Diligence (A132) (en:RFA Diligence) fleet repair ship of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary, formerly the civilian MV Stena Inspector, purchased in October 1983.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Discovery, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Diligence]]
Seventeen ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Dispatch, or the variant HMS Despatch:
- HMS Despatch (1691) (en:HMS Despatch) was a 2-gun brigantine launched in 1691 and sold in 1712. (not exists)
- HMS Despatch (1745) (en:HMS Despatch) was a 14-gun sloop launched in 1745 and sold in 1763. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1772) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a 14-gun sloop that foundered in a hurricane in 1772. She may have been salved and sold in 1773. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1776) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a 6-gun sloop captured in 1776 by the American privateer Tyrannicide. She may have been a hired ship. (not exists)
- HMS Cherokee (1774) (en:HMS Despatch) was a transport purchased in 1774 as the 6-gun armed ship HMS Cherokee. She was renamed HMS Despatch in 1777 and sold in 1783. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1777) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a 16-gun sloop launched in 1777. She capsized in 1778. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1780) (en:HMS Dispatch) was an 8-gun schooner purchased in 1780 and sold in 1795. (not exists)
- HMS Zephyr (1779) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a 14-gun sloop launched in 1779 as HMS Zephyr. She was renamed HMS Navy Transport in 1782, HMS Dispatch in 1783 and was sold in 1798. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1790) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a sloop captured from the French in 1790 and sold in 1801. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1795) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a 16-gun brig-sloop launched in 1795 and sold to the Russian Navy in 1796. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1797) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a 6-gun tender in service between 1797 and 1801. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1799) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a 14-gun sloop, previously the French privateer Indefatigable. She was captured in 1799 and sold in 1801. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1804) (en:HMS Dispatch) was an 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop launched in 1804 and broken up in 1811.
- HMS Dispatch (1812) (en:HMS Dispatch) was an 18-gun Cruizer-class brig-sloop launched in 1812 and sold in 1836. (not exists)
- HMS Dispatch (1816) (en:HMS Dispatch) was a 6-gun brig-storeship transferred from the Transport Office c. 1816. She was hulked in 1820, used as a sheer hulk from 1826 and wrecked in 1846. She was ordered to be broken up, but remained listed until 1865. (not exists)
- HMS Despatch (1851) (en:HMS Despatch) was a 12-gun brig launched in 1851. She became Watch Vessel No. 24 under the name HMS Cadmus in 1863, and was sold in 1901. (not exists)
- HMS Despatch (D30) (en:HMS Despatch) was a Danae-class light cruiser launched in 1919 and sold in 1946.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dispatch, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Dispatch]]
[[fi:HMS Despatch]]
Two ships of the United States Navy were named USS Dixie:
- USS Dixie (1893) (en:USS Dixie (1893)) was converted into the first destroyer tender for World War I
- USS Dixie (AD-14) (en:USS Dixie (AD-14)) was also a destroyer tender built in 1939 and served until 1982
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dixie}}
[[de:USS Dixie]]
[[en:USS Dixie]]
[[sl:USS Dixie]]
Three ships of the French Navy have been named Dixmude, in honour of the Fusiliers Marins at the battle of Diksmuide:
- French airship Dixmude (en:Dixmude), an airship, formerly the German LZ 114, lost at sea on 21st of December 1923
- HMS Biter (D97) (en:Dixmude), an aircraft carrier
- The third French Mistral class amphibious assault ship is scheduled to bear the name
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dixmude, French Ship}}
USS Dolphin, was the name of one Continental Navy and has been the name of several United States Navy ships, and may refer to:
- Continental Navy
- USS Dolphin (1777) (en:USS Dolphin (1777)), a cutter in commission during 1777
- United States Navy
- USS Dolphin (1821) (en:USS Dolphin (1821)), a schooner in commission from 1821 to 1835
- USS Dolphin (1836) (en:USS Dolphin (1836)), a brig in commission from 1836 to 1839, from 1839 to 1854, from 1855 to 1857, and from 1858 to 1860
- USS Dolphin (PG-24) (en:USS Dolphin (PG-24)), a gunboat and dispatch vessel in commission from 1885 to 1897 and from 1898 to 1921
- USS Dolphin (SP-318) (en:USS Dolphin (SP-318)), a fishing vessel examined for potential naval use in 1917 but apparently never taken over by the Navy
- USS Dolphin (SP-874) (en:USS Dolphin (SP-874)), a patrol vessel in commission during 1918
- USS Dolphin (SS-169) (en:USS Dolphin (SS-169)), a submarine in commission from 1932 to 1945
- USS Dolphin (AGSS-555) (en:USS Dolphin (AGSS-555)), a research and development submarine in commission from 1968 to 2007
- Fiction
- USS Dolphin may also refer to a fictional United States Navy nuclear submarine featured in the 1963 Alistair MacLean novel Ice Station Zebra (novel)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dolphin}}
[[en:USS Dolphin]]
Several classes of submarine are named after the dolphin
- Подводные лодки проекта 667БДРМ «Дельфин» Подводные лодки проекта 667БДРМ «Дельфин» — серия советских атомных подводных лодок, вооружённых баллистическими ракетами Р-29РМ (РСМ-54, SS-N-24). (en:Delta class submarine, four classes of nuclear ballistic missile submarines operated by the Soviet and Russian navies since the 1960s. The submarines are sometimes referred to as the Dolphin class)
- Подводные лодки типа «Долфейн» Подводные лодки типа «Долфейн» (нидерл. Dolfejnklasse) — серия нидерландских дизель-электрических подводных лодок. (en:Dolfijn or Dolphin class submarine, a class of four submarines operated by the Royal Netherlands Navy from 1954 until 1992)
- Подводные лодки типа «Дольфин» Дольфин (Dolphin) — серия германских дизель-электрических подводных лодок , Тип 800. (en:Dolphin class submarine, a class of three submarines based on the German Type 209 submarine design and in operation with the Israeli Sea Corps since 1998)
- See also
- Dolphin (disambiguation)#Ships_and_aircraft (en:Dolphin (disambiguation)#Ships and aircraft) for individual surface vessels and submarines of this name (not exists)
- USS Dolphin (en:USS Dolphin), the name of seven ships of the United States Navy, including two submarines
- HMS Dolphin (disamb.) (en:HMS Dolphin, the name of sixteen ships of the Royal Navy, including a submarine base)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dolphin Class}}
[[en:Dolphin class]]
Numerous Royal Navy vessels have been named HMS Dolphin after the dolphin.
- The first seven Dolphins were small ketches and fireships.
- HMS Dolphin (1731) (en:HMS Dolphin), launched in 1731, was a 20-gun post ship, renamed Firebrand in 1755 and Penguin in 1757. (not exists)
- HMS Dolphin (1751) Дельфин — (англ. HMS Dolphin) — британский 24-пушечный фрегат, первый корабль совершивший кругосветное плавание дважды, под командованием сначала Джона Байрона, затем Самюэла Уоллиса. (en:HMS Dolphin, launched in 1751, was a 24-gun post ship. She was used as a survey ship from 1764 and made two circumnavigations under the command of John Byron and Samuel Wallis. She was broken up in 1777.)
- HMS Dolphin (1781) (en:HMS Dolphin) was a 44-gun fifth rate launched in 1781 and broken up in 1817. (not exists)
- HMS Dolphin (1799) (en:HMS Dolphin) was originally the Dutch 24-gun Dolflin, which HMS Wolverine and HMS Arrow captured at Vlie Island in 1799. She was listed until 1801. (not exists)
- HMS Dolphin (1801) (en:HMS Dolphin) was a 4-gun cutter purchased in 1801 and sold in 1802. (not exists)
- HMS Dolphin (1813) (en:HMS Dolphin) was the 12-gun American privateer schooner Dolphin that Admiral John Borlase Warren's squadron captured on 13 April 1813 and that participated in a boat action on 29 April and 5 May 1813 for which the Royal Navy issued a clasp for the Naval General Service Medal.<ref>Dudley, William S. (1992) The Naval War of 1812: A Documentary History. (Washington, DC: Department of the Navy, Naval Historical Center), V. 2, p. 339.</ref>
- HMS Hindostan (1804) (en:HMS Hindostan) was originally the East Indiaman Admiral Rainier, purchased in 1804 and renamed Hindostan, renamed Dolphin in 1819, and Justitia in 1830. She was used as a convict ship and sold in 1855.
- HMS Dolphin (1836) (en:HMS Dolphin) was a 3-gun brigantine launched in 1836 and sold in 1894. (not exists)
- HMS Dolphin (1882) (en:HMS Dolphin) was a screw sloop launched in 1882. She served as a submarine depot ship in World War I. She foundered in 1925 but was beached and used as a school ship. She was broken up in 1977. (not exists)
- HMS Dolphin (1914) (en:HMS Dolphin) was originally the depot ship Pandora, purchased in 1914. She was renamed Dolphin in 1924 and was sunk by a mine in 1939. (not exists)
- HMS Dolphin (shore establishment) (en:The shore establishment HMS Dolphin) was the spiritual home of the Royal Navy's submarine service at Fort Blockhouse in Gosport, and was a submarine base until 1994 and training school to 1999.
- References
{{reflist}}
- {{Colledge}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dolphin, Hms}}
[[HMS Dolphin]]
[[en:HMS Dolphin]]
[[fr:HMS Dolphin]]
INS Dolphin may refer to one of the following submarines of the Israeli Sea Corps:
- HMS Truncheon (P353) (en:INS Dolphin (1944)), the former British T-class submarine HMS Truncheon (P353); acquired by the Israeli Sea Corps in 1965; scrapped in 1977
- INS Dolphin (1996) (en:INS Dolphin (1996)), the lead ship of the Dolphin-class submarine; commissioned in May 1998; {{Ship in active service}}
(not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dolphin, Ins}}
[[en:INS Dolphin]]
USS Dominant is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Dominant (AMc-76) (en:USS Dominant (AMc-76)), was a coastal minesweeper laid down 9 April 1941 and struck from the Navy List on 1 May 1946.
- USS Dominant (AM-431) (en:USS Dominant (AM-431)), was a fleet minesweeper launched 5 November 1953 and decommissioned 1 October 1982.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dominant}}
[[en:USS Dominant]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named Donaldson, in honor of Lieutenant (junior grade) Trose Emmett Donaldson.
- The name Donaldson was assigned to DE-55 on 1 August 1942, canceled and reassigned to DE-508 on 26 April 1943, again canceled and reassigned to DE-44 on 23 June 1943.
- USS Donaldson (DE-44) (en:USS Donaldson (DE-44)), was a destroyer escort launched on 1 August 1943 and decommissioned 5 December 1945.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Donaldson}}
[[en:USS Donaldson]]
Three ships of the French Navy have born the name Donawerth, in honour of the battle of Donauwörth during the Ulm Campaign :
- French ship Donawerth (1808) (en:Donawerth) (1808), a 80-gun Tonnant class ship of the line
- French ship Donawerth (1854) (en:Donawerth) (1854), a 80-gun ship of the line
- French ship Jean Bart (1852) (en:Jean Bart) (1852), a 80-gun ship of the line renamed Donawerth in 1868
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Donawerth, French ship}}
Three ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Donegal, after the failed French attempt to land in County Donegal in 1798<ref>Name histories</ref>:
- HMS Donegal (1798) (en:HMS Donegal) was a 76-gun third rate, previously the French ship Hoche. She was captured in 1798 and commissioned into the Navy as HMS Donegal. She was broken up in 1845.<ref>Lyon p 41</ref>
- HMS Donegal (1858) (en:HMS Donegal) was a 101-gun first rate Conqueror-class ship of the line launched in 1858. She became part of the torpedo and mining school ship HMS Vernon in 1886 and was sold in 1925.<ref>Lyon p 189</ref>
- HMS Donegal (1902) (en:HMS Donegal) was a Monmouth-class armoured cruiser launched in 1902. She served in the First World War and was sold for scrap in 1920.
- References
{{reflist|2}}
- {{Colledge}}
- Lyon, D. & Winfield, R. The Sail & Steam Navy List, London (2004): Chatham Publishing. ISBN 1 86176 032 9
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[[en:HMS Donegal]]
Two ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Donovan:
- HMS Donovan (1918) (en:HMS Donovan) was a 24 class sloop launched in 1918 and sold in 1922.
- HMS Donovan was a Landing Ship, Infantry, built as Cape Berkely, but renamed HMS Empire Battleaxe before being launched in 1943. She was renamed HMS Donovan in 1945, the name reverting to Empire Battleaxe in 1946, before she was returned to the US Navy in 1947.
- See also
- H.M.S. Donovan (album) (en:HMS Donovan (album)), the tenth album by singer-songwriter Donovan
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[[en:HMS Donovan]]
Two submarines of the United States Navy have been named USS Dorado, the Spanish language name for the fish also known as the dolphinfish and the mahi-mahi.
- USS Dorado (SS-248) (en:USS Dorado (SS-248)) was lost in 1943 during her first voyage, possibly to friendly fire. (see other lost ships)
- USS Dorado (SS-526) (en:USS Dorado (SS-526)) was cancelled in 1944.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dorado}}
[[en:USS Dorado]]
[[pl:USS Dorado]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named Doran, in honor of John James Doran, a Medal of Honor recipient from the Spanish-American War.
- The USS Bagley (DD-185) (en:USS Doran (DD-185)) was a Wickes-class destroyer, originally named USS Bagley and later transferred to the Royal Navy as HMS St. Marys.
- The USS Doran (DD-634) (en:USS Doran (DD-634)) was a Fletcher-class destroyer during World War II.
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[[en:USS Doran]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Dorchester:
- USS Dorchester (SP-1509) (en:USS Dorchester (SP-1509)), a schooner in commission as a patrol vessel from 1917 to 1918
- USS Dorchester (APB-46) (en:USS Dorchester (APB-46)), a barracks ship in commission from 1945 to 1946
- See also
- USAT Dorchester (en:USAT Dorchester), a United States Army Transport famous for the "Four Chaplains" incident
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dorchester}}
[[en:USS Dorchester]]
[[sl:USS Dorchester]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Doris after the mythical Greek sea nymphe Doris, whilst another was planned:
- HMS Doris (1795) (en:HMS Doris) was a 36-gun fifth rate frigate launched in 1795 and wrecked in 1805.
- HMS Doris was to have been a 32-gun fifth rate frigate. She was ordered in 1806 but was cancelled later that year.
- HMS Doris (1808) (en:HMS Doris) was a 36-gun fifth rate frigate, launched in 1807 as the East Indiaman Salsette, but renamed Pitt later that year. She was purchased by the Royal Navy in 1808 and renamed HMS Doris. She was sold in 1829.
- HMS Doris (1857) (en:HMS Doris) was a wood screw frigate launched in 1857 and sold in 1885. (not exists)
- HMS Doris (1896) (en:HMS Doris) was an Eclipse class light cruiser launched in 1896 and sold in 1919.
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[[en:HMS Doris]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Dorsetshire, after the traditional county of Dorsetshire:
- HMS Dorsetshire (1694) (en:HMS Dorsetshire) was an 80-gun third-rate launched in 1694, rebuilt in 1712, and sold in 1749.
- HMS Dorsetshire (1757) (en:HMS Dorsetshire) was a 70-gun third-rate launched in 1757 and broken up in 1775.
- Дорсетшир (крейсер) «Дорсетшир» (HMS Dorsetshire, бортовой номер 40) — тяжёлый крейсер Королевского военно-морского флота Великобритании времён Второй мировой войны. (en:HMS Dorsetshire was a County-class heavy cruiser launched in 1929 and sunk in 1942.)
- See also
- HMS Dorset (en:HMS Dorset) (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Dorsetshire, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Dorsetshire]]
[[en:HMS Dorsetshire]]
[[fi:HMS Dorsetshire]]
[[hu:HMS Dorsetshire (egyértelműsítő lap)]]
[[sl:HMS Dorsetshire]]
Dover Hill can refer to:
- Dover Hill, Indiana (en:Dover Hill, Indiana), a town in the USA.
- SS Dover Hill (en:SS Dover Hill), a UK cargo ship completed in 1918 as the SS Clan Macvicar, renamed SS Dover Hill in 1936 and scuttled in the Normandy landings in 1944.
- SS Empire Nairobi, a UK Empire ship built in 1945, renamed SS Dover Hill in 1946, renamed five more times between 1951 and 1966 and scrapped in 1968.
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[[en:Dover Hill]]