Several motor ships have borne the name Sama:
USS Bowfin (SS/AGSS-287), is a Balao-class submarine of the United States Navy named for the bowfin fish. Since 1981, she has been open to public tours at the USS Bowfin Submarine Museum & Park in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, next to the USS Arizona Memorial Visitor Center.
USS Shark (SS-314), a Balao-class submarine, was the sixth ship of the United States Navy to be named for the shark, a large marine predator.
USS Seahorse (SS-304), a Balao-class submarine, was the first submarine and second ship of the United States Navy to be named for the seahorse, a small fish whose head and the fore part of its body suggest the head and neck of a horse.
Tango Maru (丹後丸), originally named Rendsburg, was a cargo ship built in Germany in 1925. It was sunk by an American submarine on February 25, 1944, while in the service of the Imperial Steamship Co., a Japanese government-owned company. The sinking cost about 3,000 passengers and crew their lives.
SM UB-47 was a Type UB II submarine or U-boat for the German Imperial Navy during World War I. UB-47 was sold to the Austro-Hungarian Navy during the war. In Austro-Hungarian service the B was dropped from her name and she was known as SM U-47 or U-XLVII as a member of the Austro-Hungarian U-43 class.
Several steamships have borne the name Donau, after the German name for the river Danube:
Several steamships have borne the name Sirius:
Several motor ships have borne the name Monte Rosa after Monte Rosa, the highest mountain in Switzerland:
Three steamships have borne the name Oria:
Several steamships have borne the name Stella:
Two steamships have borne the name Abessinia, after the German name for the Ethiopian Empire:
Four steamships have borne the name Dronning Maud, after the Norwegian Queen Maud:
Several steamships have borne the name Irma:
Five steamships have borne the name Tottenham, after Tottenham in the United Kingdom:
Five steamships have borne the name Bosnia, after Bosnia:
Three motor ships have borne the name Fernglen:
MS Sama was a Norwegian motor merchant ship, she was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine during World War II.
Sakito Maru was a 7,126-ton Japanese troop transport that operated during World War II. She was sunk on 1 March 1944 with great loss of life.