Archimede is the French and Italian form of Archimedes. It may also refer to:
Venus is a planet in the Solar System.
CB and variants may refer to:
Archimedes was a celebrated mathematician and engineer of ancient Greece.
A scorpion is a predatory arthropod animal.
Striker or The Strikers may refer to:
Avenger, Avengers, The Avenger, or The Avengers may refer to:
A unicorn is a mythical and heraldic beast which looks like a horse with a horn between its eyes.
Poseidon is the god of the sea in ancient Greek mythology.
The Argo is the ship captained by Jason in Greek mythology.
The Redoutable-class submarines were a group of 31 submarines built between 1924 and 1937 for the French Navy. Most of the class saw service during the Second World War. The class is also known in French as the Classe 1 500 tonnes, and they were designated as "First Class submarines", or "large submarine cruisers". They are known as the Redoutable class in reference to the lead boat Redoutable, in service from 1931 to 1942. The class is divided into two sub-class series, Type I, known as Le Redoutable and Type II, Pascal.
Neptune is a planet in the Solar System.
Requin, shark in French, may refer to :
Amazon most often refers to:
Archimede was a Brin-class submarine built for the Royal Italian Navy during the 1930s.
Archimede has been borne by at least two ships of the Italian Navy:
Evangelista Torricelli or just Torricelli was the name of at least four ships of the Italian Navy and may refer to:
Galileo Ferraris was the name of at least two ships of the Italian Navy and may refer to:
Archimede was the lead ship of her class of four submarines built for the Regia Marina during the early 1930s. She was transferred to the Armada Española of Nationalists in 1937, renamed General Sanjurjo, and served in the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939.
Archimède was a French Navy Redoutable-class submarine of the M6 series commissioned in 1932. She participated in World War II, first on the side of the Allies from 1939 to June 1940, then in the navy of Vichy France until November 1942. She then returned to the Allied side, operating as part of the Free French Naval Forces. Along with Argo, Casabianca, Le Centaur, and Le Glorieux, she was one of only five out of the 31 Redoutable-class submarines to survive the war. She remained in French Navy service after World War II, and was decommissioned in 1952.
Two submarines of the French Navy have borne the name Archimède: