Ocean Monarch

Last updated

Ocean Monarch is the name of a number of ships.

Related Research Articles

Europa may refer to:

Hamburg, officially the Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, is Germany's second-largest city and a federated state.

Belgica was and is the name of three Belgian research vessels, with a name derived ultimately from the Latin Gallia Belgica.

SS America may refer to:

An empress is a female imperial monarch, or the wife of an imperial monarch; written with a capital, Empress is used as the title of an empress, placed before her name – often just the given name.

Saladin, was the first sultan of Egypt and Syria and founder of the Ayyubid dynasty.

Riviera was the name of a number of steamships including:

SS City of Adelaide may refer to one of three steamships named after the Australian city of Adelaide:

Peter Rickmers was the name of a number of ships operated by Rickmers Line.

Deike Rickmers may refer to several ships:

A number of steamships have been named Belgica.

Several ships have been named London for the city of London:

Canada may refer to a number of ships

SS <i>Parthia</i> (1870)

SS Parthia (1870–1956) was an iron-hulled transatlantic ocean liner built for the Cunard Line by William Denny and Brothers in Dumbarton, Scotland. Her sister ships were the Abyssinia and Algeria. Unlike her two sisters, Parthia was smaller, built in a different shipyard and had a slightly different funnel arrangement. The Parthia was retired by Cunard in 1883 and sold to John Elder & Co., who subsequently transferred her to the Guion Line. After serving with the Guion Line and operating on trans-Pacific routes with the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, she was refitted and renamed Victoria.

Reina del Mar was the name of a number of ships, including -

Three ships of the Bank Line were named Hazelbank:

The following ships have been named Patna after Patna:

Several ships of the Chilean Navy have been named Almirante Simpson after Admiral Robert Winthrop Simpson (1799–1877), a Chilean of British origin who fought in the Chilean War of Independence and War of the Confederation. It may also refer to his son, Admiral Enrique Simpson (1835–1901), who fought in the War of the Pacific.