Cruise ship Bashkortostan (22 June 2012) | |
Class overview | |
---|---|
Built | 1959-1963 |
Planned | 13 |
Building | 13 |
Completed | 13 |
General characteristics | |
Decks | 2 |
Propulsion | 2 |
Yerofey Khabarov class motorship is a class of Russian river passenger ships. [1] It is named after Yerofey Khabarov.
Two-deck cargo-passenger ships built in the Soviet Union, 1959–1963. [2]
USS Solomons (CVE-67) was the thirteenth of fifty Casablanca-class escort carriers built for the United States Navy during World War II. She was the first Navy vessel named after the Solomon Islands campaign, a lengthy operation that most famously included the Guadalcanal campaign, albeit she was not the first named Solomons. The ship was launched in October 1943, commissioned in November, and served in anti-submarine operations during the Battle of the Atlantic, as well as in other miscellaneous training and transport missions. Her frontline duty consisted of four anti-submarine patrols, with her third tour being the most notable, when her aircraft contingent sank the German submarine U-860 during her third combat patrol. She was decommissioned in August 1946, being mothballed in the Atlantic Reserve Fleet. Ultimately, she was broken up in 1947.
Yerofey Pavlovich Khabarov or Svyatitsky, was a Russian entrepreneur and adventurer, best known for his exploring the Amur river region and his attempts to colonize the area for Russia. For background see Russian–Manchu border conflicts.
The Olyokma is a tributary of the Lena in eastern Siberia.
Primorskaya Oblast was an administrative division of the Russian Empire and the early Russian SFSR, created on October 31, 1856 by the Governing Senate. The name of the region literally means "Maritime" or "Coastal." The region was established upon a Russian conquest of Daur people that used to live along Amur River. Before the Russian conquest of Russian Manchuria, the territory belonged to the Chinese region of Manchuria.
MS Oslofjord was an ocean liner built in 1938 by A/G Weser Shipbuilders, Bremen, Germany, for Norwegian America Line. She was of 18,673 gross register tons and could carry 860 passengers. She would have an uneventful career until 1939 were two separate incidents happened. One from 27 April 1939, where she collided with the American an pilot boat, and another where she struck a mine sinking her.
Baykal class is a class of Russian river passenger ships. It is named after Baikal.
The Rodina class is a class of Russian river passenger ships. "Rodina" means "motherland" in Russian.
Dunay class is a class of Russian river passenger ships, named after Danube River. They are two-deck cargo-passenger ships built in Hungary between 1959 and 1964.
Ukraina class is a class of Russian river passenger ships. It is named after the first ship in the class Ukraina, which in her turn was named after Ukraine.
Vladimir Ilyich class is a class of Russian river passenger ships. It is named after the first ship of the class Vladimir Ilyich.
Maksim Gorkiy class is a class of Russian river passenger ships. It is named after the first ship in the class Maksim Gorkiy.
The Volga class is a class of Russian river passenger ships. It is named after the first ship in the class Volga, which in her turn was named after Volga River.
Dmitriy Furmanov class is a class of Russian river passenger ships, project 302, 302M, 302MK / German name BiFa129M.
Amur class is a class of Russian river passenger ships. It is named after the first ship in the class, which in her turn was named after the Amur River.
Boris Petrovich Polevoy was a Soviet historian known for his work on the history of the Russian Far East. He was honored in Kamchatka for his work on the study of the region's history, and has been described in the West as "a leading Soviet specialist on the history of Russian cartography".
The Sukhoi KR-860 "Wings of Russia", earlier named the SKD-717, was a proposed design for a double decker wide-body superjumbo jet aircraft by Russian aerospace company Sukhoi. A 1/24th scale model was shown at the 1999 Paris Air Show.
Arena Yerofey is a bandy arena in Khabarovsk, Russia, which hosted the 2015 Bandy World Championship. The 2018 Bandy World Championship was also hosted there, but only Division A that time around. The arena was built in 2013, is 46,000 m2 and can seat 10,000 spectators. It is named after Yerofey Khabarov, the city's eponym.
The Tungir is a river in Transbaikalia, East Siberia, Russian Federation. It is the third largest tributary of the Olyokma in terms of length and area of its basin. The river is 500 kilometres (310 mi) long and has a drainage basin of 14,700 square kilometres (5,700 sq mi). The Tungir is known as the Shiroky Brook in its uppermost stretch. Almost all of its basin is in the Olyokma-Stanovik Highlands area.
Yerofey Khabarov was a Soviet and later Russian icebreaker in service from 1963 until 1993. It was one of twelve Project 97A icebreakers built by Admiralty Shipyard in Leningrad in 1961–1971.