A number of steamships have been named Arundel Castle, including:
Memel, a name derived from the Couronian-Latvian memelis, mimelis, mēms for "mute, silent", may refer to:
At least seven United States Navy ships have been named Alabama, after the southern state of Alabama.
The United States, or fully the United States of America, is a country in North America.
Arun may refer to:
The first RMS Windsor Castle, along with her sister, RMS Arundel Castle, was an ocean liner laid down by the Union-Castle Line for service from the United Kingdom to South Africa. During World War 2 the Windsor Castle was commissioned by the Royal Navy as troopship for the war. On March 23, 1943, the ship was sunk by an aerial torpedo off the coast of Algeria.
RMS Arundel Castle was a British ocean liner and Royal Mail Ship which entered service in 1921 for the Union-Castle Line. A previous vessel of the same name was built in 1864 by Donald Currie & Co. and sold in 1883, whereupon it was renamed Chittagong. Originally laid down as the Amroth Castle in 1915, building was delayed by the First World War. She was eventually launched on 11 September 1919. She was completed on 8 April 1921 and in 22 April 1921 the ship Departed Southampton on her maiden voyage to Cape Town. During World War 2 she was requisitioned by the Admiralty to serve as a troopship. After the war she resumed passenger service, eventually being scrapped in 1959.
A four-funnel liner, also known as a four-stacker, is an ocean liner with four funnels.
Arundel Castle is a restored medieval castle.
A number of steamships were named Bowes Castle, including
SS or MS Mormacyork may refer to one of two Type C3 ships built for the United States Maritime Commission on behalf of Moore-McCormack Lines:
SS Morro Castle may refer to:
Three steamships of the Castle Line or Union-Castle Line carried the name Braemar Castle.
Several naval ships were named Helgoland after the island of Heligoland or the Battle of Helgoland, an action during the Second Schleswig War.
Reina del Mar was the name of a number of ships, including -
Adriatic may refer to one of several ships named after the Adriatic Sea:
A number of steamships have been named Germania, including:-
A number of steamships have been named Cuxhaven, including:-
Several vessels have been named Walmer Castle for Walmer Castle:
SS Birma was a British-built transatlantic passenger ship. She was built in 1894 by Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company in Govan, United Kingdom, as Arundel Castle and later went through numerous ownership and name changes, including coming into the hands of the Russian American Line. In 1912, Birma was one of the ships to respond to the sinking of RMS Titanic. She was broken up in 1924 following acquisition by a German line after a liquidation sale.