A bramble is any rough, tangled, prickly shrub, belonging to the genus Rubus .
Bramble or Brambles may also refer to:
Medina in Saudi Arabia is the second holiest city in Islam.
Six ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Foxhound. A seventh was planned but never completed:
Two vessels of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Condor after the condor, the largest flying land birds in the Western Hemisphere.
Ten ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Rattlesnake, including:
Sampson may refer to:
Nine ships and one shore establishment of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Wasp, with one other government vessel using the name:
Eight ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Cockatrice after the legendary creature:
Six ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Thistle, after the thistle, the national flower of Scotland:
Eleven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Porpoise, after the marine mammal, the porpoise:
Seven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Britomart, after the Britomartis of Greek mythology:
Neptune is a planet in the Solar System.
Seven ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Bramble. An eighth was planned but never completed:
Vice Admiral John Collings Taswell Glossop, was a British Royal Navy officer best known for captaining the Australian cruiser HMAS Sydney during the Battle of Cocos in which the German cruiser SMS Emden was sunk.
HMS Lizard was a Bramble-class screw gunboat of the Royal Navy, built by Harland & Wolff, Belfast and launched on 27 November 1886.
The Bramble-class gunboat was a class of four gunboats mounting six 4-inch guns, built for the Royal Navy in 1886. In 1887 the first three were reclassified as gunvessels.
Two classes of British Royal Navy gunboats have been named Bramble-class gunboats:
The Bramble-class gunboat was a type of warship used by the Royal Navy between the 1890s and the 1920s. The four ships of this class were notable as the final development of the Victorian gunboat tradition, and for being one of the last classes of warship designed to travel under sail. One of them, HMS Thistle, retained a functional sailing rig into the mid-1920s.
Seven vessels of the Royal Navy have been named Dwarf: