Five steamships have borne the name Bosnia, after Bosnia:
Rostock is a city in the north German state Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. Rostock is on the Warnow river; the district of Warnemünde, 12 kilometres north of the city centre, is directly on the Baltic Sea coast. Rostock is the largest city in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, as well as its only regiopolis.
The North German Confederation was the German federal state which existed from July 1867 to December 1870. Some historians also use the name for the alliance of 22 German states formed on 18 August 1866. In 1870–1871, the south German states of Baden, Hesse-Darmstadt, Württemberg and Bavaria joined the country. On 1 January 1871, the country adopted a new constitution, which was written under the title of a new "German Confederation" but already gave it the name "German Empire" in the preamble and article 11. As the state system largely remained the same in the German Empire, the North German Confederation continues as the German nation state which still exists.
SS Bosnia was an Italian cargo liner built in the 1890s that was shelled and sunk by a German submarine in the Mediterranean during World War I.
Several steamships have borne the name Donau, after the German name for the river Danube:
Several steamships have borne the name Selma:
Several steamships have borne the name Sirius:
Three steamships have borne the name Oria:
Several steamships have borne the name Pfalz, after the Palatinate region in Germany:
Several steamships have borne the name Westfalen, after the Westphalia region in Germany:
Several steamships have borne the name Stella:
Two steamships have borne the name Abessinia, after the German name for the Ethiopian Empire:
Two steamships have borne the name Barøy, after the Norwegian island Barøy:
Four steamships have borne the name Dronning Maud, after the Norwegian Queen Maud:
Several steamships have borne the name Irma:
Several steamships have borne the name Flynderborg, after the fortress in Denmark:
Five steamships have borne the name Tottenham, after Tottenham in the United Kingdom:
SS Telefon was a Norwegian cargo steamship of about 1,400 GRT built by on the River Tyne in 1900. She was wrecked in South Shetland Islands in 1908, though later salved, repaired and returned to service. She was sunk in a collision off Denmark in 1913 as the British Kinneil.
Several steamships have borne the name Main:
Three motor ships have borne the name Fernglen:
Several motor ships have borne the name Sama:
The Jubilee class were a group of five passenger and cargo ocean liners built by Harland and Wolff at Belfast, for the White Star Line, specifically for the White Star Line's service from the UK to Australia on the Liverpool–Cape Town–Sydney route. The five ships in order of the dates they entered service were:
This article includes a list of ships with the same or similar names. If an internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists. |