Kurama may refer to one of the following ships of the Japanese Navy:
USS Constellation may refer to:
Six ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Indefatigable:
Twelve ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Repulse:
Two ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS New Zealand, after the country of New Zealand, a British Dominion; a third was cancelled while under construction:
Five ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Furious:
Yokosuka Naval Arsenal was one of four principal naval shipyards owned and operated by the Imperial Japanese Navy, and was located at Yokosuka, Kanagawa prefecture on Tokyo Bay, south of Yokohama.
Kirov may refer to:
The Shirane-class destroyers were a pair of Japanese destroyers originally built during the late 1970s. They are built around a large central hangar which houses up to three helicopters and they are the natural successor of the Haruna-class destroyers.
Borodino was an 1812 battle in the Napoleonic Wars during the French invasion of Russia.
Kurama (鞍馬) was the final vessel of the two-ship Ibuki class of armored cruisers in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Kurama was named after Mount Kurama located north of Kyoto, Japan. On 28 August 1912, the Ibukis were re-classified as battlecruisers.
Kurama may refer to:
At least five warships of Russia have borne the name Admiral Nakhimov, in honour of Pavel Nakhimov an admiral of the Imperial Russian Navy.
At least three ships of the Russian navy have borne the name Pyotr Veliky, Petr Veliky or Pyotr Velikiy, in honor of Peter the Great of Russia
Ibuki may refer to one of the following ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy named after Mount Ibuki:
The Amagi class was a series of four battlecruisers planned for the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) as part of the Eight-eight fleet in the early 1920s. The ships were to be named Amagi, Akagi, Atago, and Takao. The Amagi design was essentially a lengthened version of the Tosa-class battleship, but with a thinner armored belt and deck, a more powerful propulsion system, and a modified secondary armament arrangement. They were to have carried the same main battery of ten 41 cm (16.1 in) guns and been capable of a top speed of 30 knots.
The Ibuki class, also called the Kurama class, was a ship class of two large armoured cruisers built for the Imperial Japanese Navy after the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905. These ships reflected Japanese experiences during that war as they were designed to fight side-by-side with battleships and were given an armament equal to, or superior to existing Japanese battleships. The development of the battlecruiser the year before Ibuki was completed made her and her sister ship Kurama obsolete before they were completed because the foreign battlecruisers were much more heavily armed and faster.
Several ships have been named Takao (高雄):
Four ships of the Soviet Navy and Russian Navy have been named for the transliteration of Москва, the Russian for Moscow.
Three naval vessels of Japan have been named Kongō:
At least four warships of Japan have borne the name Atago: