Проект:Адмиралтейство/Страницы разрешения неоднозначностей:Суда/19
The ships named USS Ticonderoga commemorate the capture of Fort Ticonderoga on 10 May 1775 by Ethan Allen and the Green Mountain Boys.
- U.S. Navy vessels
- The first USS Ticonderoga (1814) (en:USS Ticonderoga (1814)) was a 17-gun schooner of Commodore Thomas Macdonough's flotilla in the victorious Battle of Lake Champlain on 11 September 1814. It was in service from 1814 to 1825.
- The second USS Ticonderoga (1862) (en:USS Ticonderoga (1862)) was a screw sloop-of-war which served with distinction during the American Civil War. It was in commission from 1863 to 1881.
- The third USS Ticonderoga (1918) (en:USS Ticonderoga (1918)) was a former German cargo ship that served the Naval Overseas Transportation Service during World War I in 1917 and 1918.
- USS Ticonderoga (CV-14) USS Ticonderoga (CV-14) — американский авианосец типа «Эссекс» времён Второй мировой войны. (The fourth en:USS Ticonderoga (CV-14) was a long-hull Essex-class fleet aircraft carrier which served from 1944 to 1973, earning 17 battle stars for service during World War II and the Vietnam War.)
- USS Ticonderoga (CG-47) USS Ticonderoga (DDG/CG-47) («Тико») — головной ракетный крейсер типа «Тикондерога», первый ракетный крейсер в мире с многофункциональной боевой информационно-управляющей системой (БИУС) «Иджис» и пятый корабль ВМС США с подобным названием. (The fifth en:USS Ticonderoga (CG-47) was a guided-missile cruiser and lead ship of her class. Launched in 1981, she was decommissioned on 30 September 2004)
- Fictional vessels
- CVN-87 Ticonderoga Submersible Carrier from the fictional world of Rifts.<ref>CVN-87 Ticonderoga Submersible Carrier</ref>
- NCC-74676 USS Ticonderoga is a Star Trek Fan club in Utah. It was founded on 25 October 1997 for members of Starfleet Command's Seventh Fleet living in the Ogden through Layton areas.
- A fictional fleet battle station in the 1997 film Starship Troopers was named Ticonderoga.
- A fictional Proxima class starship in the video game Star Trek: Legacy for the PC and Xbox 360.
- References
<references/>
Star Trek Fan Club of USS Ticonderoga
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2010}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Ticonderoga}}
[[de:USS Ticonderoga]]
[[en:USS Ticonderoga]]
[[es:USS Ticonderoga]]
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[[sl:USS Ticonderoga]]
[[Тикондерога]]
USS Tide may refer to:
- USS Tide (SP-953) (en:USS Tide (SP-953)), a tug built in 1916 at Manitowoc, Wis., by the Manitowoc Shipbuilding Co
- USS Tide (AM-125) (en:USS Tide (AM-125)), laid down on 16 March 1942 at Savannah, Ga., by the Savannah Machinery and Foundry Company.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tide}}
[[en:USS Tide]]
Fifteen ships of the British Royal Navy have carried the name HMS Tiger after the feline tiger, with a number of others provisionally bearing the name at various stages in their construction:
- HMS Tyger (1546) (en:HMS Tiger) was a 22-gun ship built in 1546, rebuilt in 1570 and in use as a floating battery after 1600. She was condemned in 1605. (not exists)
- HMS Tiger (1613) (en:HMS Tiger) was a discovery vessel recorded in the Arctic in 1613. (not exists)
- HMS Tyger (1647) (en:HMS Tyger) was a 32-gun ship launched in 1647, rebuilt in 1681, 1701, 1705 and 1721, and wrecked in 1742.
- HMS Harwich (1743) (en:HMS Tiger) was a 50-gun fourth rate renamed Harwich shortly before launching in 1743. She was wrecked in 1760.
- HMS Tiger (1747) (en:HMS Tiger) was a 60-gun fourth rate launched in 1747. She was hulked in 1761 and sold in Bombay in 1765.
- HMS Tiger (1762) (en:HMS Tiger) was a 74-gun third rate, previously the Spanish Tigre. She was captured in 1762 and sold in 1784. (not exists)
- HMS Ardent (1764) (en:HMS Tiger) was a 64-gun third rate launched in 1764 as HMS Ardent. She was captured by the French in 1764, but was recaptured in 1782 and renamed HMS Tiger. She was sold in 1784.
- HMS Grampus (1802) (en:HMS Tiger) was to have been a 50-gun fourth rate, but she was renamed HMS Grampus before her launch in 1802.
- HMS Tiger (1794) (en:HMS Tiger) was a 4-gun hoy purchased in 1794 and sold in 1798. (not exists)
- HMS Tiger (1795) (en:HMS Tiger) was an 80-gun second rate captured from the French in 1795. She was broken up by 1817. (not exists)
- HMS Tiger (1808) (en:HMS Tiger) was a 12-gun brig in service from 1808 to 1812. (not exists)
- HMS Tiger (1849) (en:HMS Tiger) was a wooden-hulled paddle sloop launched in 1849, reclassified as a frigate in 1852, and captured by the Russians in 1854, becoming Tigr. (not exists)
- HMS Tiger (1900) (en:HMS Tiger) was a C class destroyer launched in 1900. She was sunk in 1908 in a collision with the cruiser HMS Berwick. (not exists)
- HMS Tiger (1913) Его Величества корабль «Тайгер» (англ. HMS Tiger) — линейный крейсер Королевского военно-морского флота Великобритании времён Первой мировой войны. (en:HMS Tiger was a battlecruiser launched in 1913 and scrapped in 1932.)
- HMS Tiger was to have been a Minotaur class light cruiser. She was initially ordered in 1942, but renamed HMS Bellerophon later that year and was laid down in 1944. She was renamed HMS Blake in 1944, HMS Bellerophon again in 1945 and was cancelled in 1946.
- HMS Tiger was another proposed Minotaur class cruiser, initially ordered as HMS Blake. She was renamed HMS Tiger in 1944, and then HMS Blake again in 1945. After work was suspended in 1946, she was completed and launched in 1961 as HMS Blake
- HMS Tiger (C20) (en:HMS Tiger) was another Minotaur class cruiser, initially ordered as HMS Bellerophon. She was renamed HMS Tiger in 1945 and launched in 1941. She was laid up in 1946 and completed in 1959 as a Tiger class missile cruiser. She was scrapped in 1986.
- See also
- HMS Tiger Bay (en:HMS Tiger Bay)
- HMS Tiger Prize (en:HMS Tiger Prize) (not exists)
- HMS Tiger Snake (en:HMS Tiger Snake) (not exists)
- HMS Tiger Whelp (en:HMS Tiger Whelp) (not exists)
- HMS Tigress (en:HMS Tigress)
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[[en:HMS Tiger]]
[[es:HMS Tiger]]
[[fi:HMS Tiger]]
[[pl:HMS Tiger]]
[[sl:HMS Tiger]]
USS Tigress is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Tigress (1813) (en:USS Tigress (1813)), a schooner built at Erie, Pennsylvania
- USS Tigress (1861) (en:USS Tigress (1861)), a screw tugboat which operated on the Potomac River
- USS Tigress (1871) (en:USS Tigress (1871)), a screw steamer constructed in 1871
- USS Tigress (1905) (en:USS Tigress (1905)), a yawl built in 1905 at Bridgeport, Connecticut (not exists)
- References
{{DANFS}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tigress}}
[[en:USS Tigress]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Tigress, after the female tiger:
- HMS Tigress (1797) (en:HMS Tigress) was a 12-gun gun-brig launched in 1797 and sold in 1802. (not exists)
- HMS Tigress (1804) (en:HMS Tigress) was a 12-gun gun-brig launched in 1804 and captured by the Danes in 1808. (not exists)
- HMS Tigress (1808) (en:HMS Tigress) was a 12-gun gun-brig, previously the French ship Pierre Czar. She was captured in 1808, and was later renamed HMS Algerine in 1814. She was sold in 1818.
- HMS Tigress (1912) (en:HMS Tigress) was an Acheron class destroyer launched in 1911. She was sold in 1921 and was broken up the following year.
- See also
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tigress, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Tigress]]
Five ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Tigris, after the river Tigris, in modern day Iraq. Another was planned but never completed:
- HMS Tigris (1813) (en:HMS Tigris) was a 36-gun fifth rate. She was built as HMS Forth but was renamed in 1812, before being launched in 1813. She was sold for breaking up in 1818. (not exists)
- HMS Tigris was to have been a 46-gun fifth rate. She was laid down in 1822 but was cancelled in 1832.
- HMS Tigris (1829) (en:HMS Tigris) was a 10-gun survey brig launched in 1829 and sold in 1862. (not exists)
- HMS Tigris (1834) (en:HMS Tigris) was an iron paddle gunboat launched in sections in 1834. She was reassembled later that year at Basra, and was lost in 1835. (not exists)
- HMS Tigris (1882) (en:HMS Tigris) was a paddle vessel launched in 1882 and sold into civilian service in 1904, being renamed Amarapoora. (not exists)
- HMS Tigris (N63) (en:HMS Tigris) was a T class submarine launched in 1939 and sunk by an unknown cause in 1943.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tigris, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Tigris]]
[[en:HMS Tigris]]
USS Tillamook has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Tillamook (AT-16) (en:USS Tillamook (AT-16)), previously Tug No. 16, later YT-122, later YTM-122, a tug in commission from 1914 to 1947
- USS Tillamook (SP-269) (en:USS Tillamook (SP-269)), later USS SP-269, a patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1919
- USS Tillamook (ATA-192) (en:USS Tillamook (ATA-192)), originally USS ATA-192, a tug in commission from 1945 to 1971
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tillamook}}
[[en:USS Tillamook]]
USS Tillman has been the name of two ships in the United States Navy. Both are named for Senator Benjamin Tillman.
- USS Tillman (DD-135) (en:USS Tillman (DD-135)), a Wickes-class destroyer, which served from 1921 until 1940. She was then transferred to Britain where she served as HMS Wells, from 1941 until 1945.
- USS Tillman (DD-641) (en:USS Tillman (DD-641)), a Gleaves-class destroyer, that served from 1942 until 1947.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tillman}}
[[en:USS Tillman]]
[[pl:USS Tillman]]
USS Tingey may refer to:
- USS Tingey (TB-34) (en:USS Tingey (TB-34)), a Blakely-class torpedo boat, launched in 1901 and struck in 1919.
- USS Tingey (DD-272) (en:USS Tingey (DD-272)), a Clemson-class destroyer, launched in 1919 and struck in 1936.
- USS Tingey (DD-539) (en:USS Tingey (DD-539)), a Fletcher-class destroyer, launched in 1943 and struck in 1965.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tingey}}
[[en:USS Tingey]]
[[pl:USS Tingey]]
USS Tinosa has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Tinosa (SS-283) (en:USS Tinosa (SS-283)), a submarine in commission from 1943 to 1949 and from 1952 to 1953
- USS Tinosa (SSN-606) (en:USS Tinosa (SSN-606)), a submarine in commission from 1964 to 1992
{{Shipindex|Tinosa, USS}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tinosa, USS}}
[[de:USS Tinosa]]
[[en:USS Tinosa]]
Several ships in the United States Navy have borne the name USS Tippecanoe or USNS Tippecanoe, after the Tippecanoe River, site of the Battle of Tippecanoe.
- USS Wyandotte (1864) (en:USS Tippecanoe (1864)), was a Canonicus class monitor launched in 1864, renamed Vesuvius and then Wyandotte in 1869, and decommissioned in 1898.
- USS Tippecanoe (AO-21) (en:USS Tippecanoe (AO-21)), was a Patoka-class fleet replenishment oiler launched in 1920, commissioned in 1940, and decommissioned in 1946
- USNS Tippecanoe (T-AO-199) (en:USNS Tippecanoe (T-AO-199)) is a Henry J. Kaiser-class underway replenishment oiler in service since 1993
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tippecanoe, Uss}}
PNS Tippu Sultan may refer to one of the following ships of the Pakistan Navy:
- HMS Onslow (G17) (en:PNS Tippu Sultan (1941)), the former British O class destroyer HMS Onslow (G17); acquired by the Pakistan Navy in 1949; served until 1979
- USS Damato (DD-871) (en:PNS Tippu Sultan (D168)), the former American Gearing-class destroyer USS Damato (DD-871) launched in 1945; acquired by the Pakistan Navy in 1980; scrapped in 1994
- HMS Avenger (F185) (en:PNS Tippu Sultan (1975)), the former British Type 21 frigate HMS Avenger (F185); acquired by the Pakistan Navy in 1994; active in Pakistan Navy {{as of|2009|lc=on}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tippu Sultan}}
Two submarines of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Tireless:
- HMS Tireless (P327) (en:Tireless (P327)) was a Taciturn- or T-class submarine that served during the Cold War
- HMS Tireless (S88) (en:Tireless (S88)) is a Trafalgar-class submarine currently in service as of 2007.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tireless}}
[[de:HMS Tireless]]
[[en:HMS Tireless]]
[[sl:HMS Tireless]]
- See also: Titan (disambiguation)
USS Titan may refer to:
- USNS Titan (T-AGOS-15) (en:USS Titan (AGOS-15)), a ship in the United States Navy
- Star Trek: Titan (en:USS Titan (NCC-80102)), a fictional starship in the Star Trek universe
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Titan}}
[[en:USS Titan]]
[[pl:USS Titan]]
SS Titan may refer to:
- SS Titan, the fictional title ship in the 1898 novella Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan, which presented a scenario similar to the real-life sinking of RMS Titanic some 14 years later
- SS Titan (1943) (en:SS Titan (1943)), a Type C2-S-B1 ship; later renamed American Packer; scrapped in 1970 (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Titan}}
[[en:SS Titan]]
Two ships of the Royal Australian Navy have been named HMAS Tobruk, after the town of Tobruk in Libya and the siege fought there in 1941.
- HMAS Tobruk (D37) (en:HMAS Tobruk (D37)), a Battle class destroyer launched in 1947 and in service until 1960, when she was damaged beyond repair during a gunnery exercise
- HMAS Tobruk (L 50) (en:HMAS Tobruk (L 50)), a modified Round Table class Landing Ship Heavy launched in 1980 and operational as of 2010
- Battle honours
Three battle honours has been awarded to ships named HMAS Tobruk:<ref name=newhonours>{{cite news |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/Navy_Marks_109th_Birthday_With_Historic_Changes_To_Battle_Honours |title=Navy Marks 109th Birthday With Historic Changes To Battle Honours |date=1 March 2010 |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=14 March 2010}}
</ref><ref name=honourslist>{{cite web |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/w/images/Units_entitlement_list.pdf |title=Royal Australian Navy Ship/Unit Battle Honours |date=1 March 2010 |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=14 March 2010}}
</ref>
- Корейская война Корейская война — конфликт между Северной Кореей и Южной Кореей, длившийся с 25 июня 1950 по 27 июля 1953 года (хотя официального окончания войны объявлено не было). (en:Korea 1951-53)
- Война в Малайе Война в Малайе — колониальный военный конфликт между силами Британского Содружества и вооружённым крылом Малайской коммунистической партии в 1948—1960 годах. (en:Malaya 1956)
- International Force for East Timor (en:East Timor) 1999
- References
{{reflist}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tobruk, Hmas}}
[[de:HMAS Tobruk]]
[[en:HMAS Tobruk]]
[[sl:HMAS Tobruk]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Toledo for Toledo, Ohio.
- The first Toledo was a patrol frigate that was renamed the USS Dearborn (PF-33) in 1943.
- The second USS Toledo (CA-133) (en:USS Toledo (CA-133)) was a Baltimore-class heavy cruiser of the United States Navy active during the Korean War.
- The third USS Toledo (SSN-769) (en:USS Toledo (SSN-769)) is a Los Angeles-class submarine still in service as of 2008.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Toledo}}
[[de:USS Toledo]]
[[en:USS Toledo]]
USS Tomahawk is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Tomahawk (AO-88) (en:USS Tomahawk (AO-88)) laid down under Maritime Commission contract (MC hull 1267) on 1 June 1943.
- USS Tomahawk (YTB-789) (en:USS Tomahawk (YTB-789)) laid down in January 1966 at Marinette, Wisconsin.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tomahawk}}
[[en:USS Tomahawk]]
USS Tonawanda is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Tonawanda (1864) (en:USS Tonawanda (1864)), a monitor operating during the American Civil War.
- References
{{DANFS}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tonawanda}}
[[en:USS Tonawanda]]
Two ships of the British Royal Navy have been called HMS Tonbridge, after the Kent town:
- HMS Tonbridge (1918) (en:HMS Tonbridge) was a Hunt-class minesweeper launched in 1918 and sold in 1928.<ref>{{colledge}}
</ref> - HMS Tonbridge (1939?) (en:HMS Tonbridge) was a 683 ton civilian ship built in 1924 but requisitioned by the Royal Navy as a netlayer during World War II. It was sunk near Great Yarmouth, Norfolk on 22 August 1941 by the German Air Force with the loss of 35 lives.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.naval-history.net/xDKWW2-4108-35AUG02.htm | title = British and Other Navies in World War 2 Day-by-Day | author = Don Kindell | work = Naval-History.net | accessdate=2008-11-08}}
</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.kentfallen.com/PDF%20REPORTS/DOVER%20BOOK%20OF%20REMEMBERANCE%20WW2.pdf | title = Dover Book of Remembrance - 1939–1945 | format = PDF | work = Kent War Memorials Transcription Project | accessdate = 2008-11-08}}
</ref> (not exists)
- See also
- HMS Tonbridge Castle (en:HMS Tonbridge Castle) (not exists)
- References
{{reflist|1}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tonbridge, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Tonbridge]]
Tone may refer to one of the following cruisers of the Imperial Japanese Navy:
- Тоне (бронепалубный крейсер) «Тоне» (利根) — бронепалубный крейсер Японского Императорского флота. (en:Japanese cruiser Tone (1907), a protected cruiser; participated in the World War I Siege of Tsingtao; stricken in 1931 and sunk as an aircraft target in 1933 )
- Japanese cruiser Tone (1937) (en:Japanese cruiser Tone (1937)), lead ship of the Tone class of heavy cruisers; sunk in the July 1945 Bombing of Kure; raised and scrapped, 1947–1948
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tone}}
USS Tonkawa is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS ATA-176 (en:USS Tonkawa (ATA-176)) was laid down as ATR-103 on 30 January 1944 at Orange, Texas.
- Tonkawa (YTB-710,)a Hisada-class harbor tug, was slated to be built at San Pedro, California, by the Bethlehem Steel Co., but the contract for her construction was canceled on 1 October 1945.
- USS Tonkawa (YTB-786) (en:USS Tonkawa (YTB-786)), a Natick-class tugboat serving from 1966 to 2000.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tonkawa}}
[[en:USS Tonkawa]]
{{French Navy}}
A number of ships of the French Navy have borne the name Tonnant ("Thundering"). Among them:
- French ship Tonnant (1680) (en:Tonnant) (1680), a 76-gun ship of the line (not exists)
- French ship Tonnant (1693) (en:Tonnant) (1693), a 90-gun ship of the line (not exists)
- French ship Tonnant (1740) (en:Tonnant) (1740), a 80-gun ship of the line
- HMS Tonnant (1798) (en:Tonnant) (1789), a 80-gun ship of the line, lead ship of her class
- French ship Tonnant (1808) (en:Tonnant) (1808), (not exists)
- French ship Louis-XIV (1854) (en:Louis-XIV) (1854), an Océan class ship of the line was laid as Tonnant
- Tonnant (Q172) (en:Tonnant) (Q172), a Redoutable class submarine during the Second World War (1934-1942) (not exists)
- Tonnant (S614) (en:Tonnant) (S614), a Redoutable class nuclear submarine (1977 - 1999) (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tonnant}}
{{French Navy}}
Eight ships of the French Navy have borne the name Tonnerre ("thunder"):
- French ship Tonnerre (1696) (en:Tonnerre) (1696-1713), formerly HMS Thunder, a captured 4-gun bomb ship. (not exists)
- French ship Tonnerre (1759) (en:Tonnerre) (1759-1768), a gunboat (not exists)
- French ship Tonnerre (1785) (en:Tonnerre) (1785-1807), a 3-gun gunboat (not exists)
- French ship Tonnerre (1808) (en:Tonnerre) (1808-1809), a 74-gun Téméraire class ship of the line
- French ship Tonnerre (1838) (en:Tonnerre) (1838-1878), a 4-gun wheeled steam corvette (not exists)
- French ship Tonnerre (1875) (en:Tonnerre) (1875-1921), an armoured coast-guard (not exists)
- French ship Tonnerre (1946) (en:Tonnerre) (1946-1955), an armoured barge in Indochina (not exists)
- French ship Tonnerre (L9014) (en:Tonnerre) (L 9014), a Projection and Command ship presently in service.
- Reference and sources
- Les bâtiments ayant porté le nom de Tonnerre
- Dictionnaire des bâtiments de la flotte de guerre de Colbert à nos jours, Jean-Michel Roche
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tonnerre, French Ship}}
Two ships of the Royal Australian Navy have been named HMAS Toowoomba, for the city of Toowoomba, Queensland.
- HMAS Toowoomba (J157) (en:HMAS Toowoomba (J157)), a Bathurst class corvette active between 1941 and 1946, before transferring to other navies
- HMAS Toowoomba (FFH 156) (en:HMAS Toowoomba (FFH 156)), an Anzac class frigate entering service in 2005 and active as of 2010
- Battle honours
Ships named HMAS Toowoomba are entitled to carry two battle honours:<ref name=newhonours>{{cite news |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/Navy_Marks_109th_Birthday_With_Historic_Changes_To_Battle_Honours |title=Navy Marks 109th Birthday With Historic Changes To Battle Honours |date=1 March 2010 |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=14 March 2010}}
</ref><ref name=honourslist>{{cite web |url=http://www.navy.gov.au/w/images/Units_entitlement_list.pdf |title=Royal Australian Navy Ship/Unit Battle Honours |date=1 March 2010 |publisher=Royal Australian Navy |accessdate=14 March 2010}}
</ref>
- South West Pacific theatre of World War II (en:Pacific) 1942
- Indian Ocean in World War II (en:Indian Ocean) 1942-44
- References
{{reflist}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Toowoomba, Hmas}}
SS Topa Topa may refer to one of two Type C2-S-E1 ships built by Gulf Shipbuilding for the United States Maritime Commission:
- USS Graffias (AF-29) (en:SS Topa Topa (1943)) (MC hull number 485), transferred to the United States Navy as the Hyades-class stores ship USS Graffias (AF-29); scrapped in 1974
- SS Topa Topa (1945) (en:SS Topa Topa (1945)) (MC hull number 1610), scrapped in 1973 (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Topa Topa}}
[[en:SS Topa Topa]]
{{French Navy}}
Nine ships of the French Navy have borne the name Topaze, in honour of the gemstone Topaz:
- French frigate Topaze (1751) (en:Topaze) (1751), a 26-gun frigate, lead ship of her class (not exists)
- French frigate Topaze (1791) (en:Topaze) (1791), a 32-gun Magicienne class frigate (not exists)
- French frigate Topaze (1805) (en:Topaze) (1805), a 44-gun frigate
- French schooner Topaze (1823) (en:Topaze) (1823), a 2-carronade Émeraude class schooner (not exists)
- French schooner Topaze (1844) (en:Topaze) (1844), a 6-gun schooner (not exists)
- French schooner Topaze (1870) (en:Topaze) (1879), a 2-gun schooner (not exists)
- French ship Topaze (1891) (en:Topaze) (1891), a 6-gun Opale class aviso (not exists)
- French submarineTopaze (1910) (en:Topaze) (1910), an Émeraude class submarine (not exists)
- French ship Topaze (1917) (en:Topaze) (1917), an auxiliary ship (not exists)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Topaze}}
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Topaze, after the French word for the gemstone Topaz:
- HMS Topaze (1793) (en:HMS Topaze (1793)), a 38-gun fifth rate, previously the French frigate Topaze. She was handed over to the British in 1793 by French royalists, and was sold in 1814.
- French frigate Étoile (1813) (en:HMS Topaze (1814)), a 38-gun fifth rate, previously the French frigate Étoile. She was captured by HMS Hebrus in 1814 and became a receiving ship in 1823. She was used as a target from 1850 and broken up in 1851.
- HMS Topaze (1858) (en:HMS Topaze (1858)), a Liffey class wood screw frigate launched in 1858 and sold in 1884.
- HMS Topaze (1903) (en:HMS Topaze (1903)), a Topaze class cruiser launched in 1903, and sold in 1921. (not exists)
There was also a naval trawler named Topaze. She was formerly the trawler Melbourne launched in 1935, and used for anti-submarine training during the Second World War, before being sunk in a collision with HMS Rodney in 1941. She does not seem to have been formally commissioned into the Royal Navy, and does not have the HMS prefix.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Topaze, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Topaze]]
USS Topeka, named after the state capital Topeka, Kansas, may be any one of these United States Navy ships:
- USS Topeka (PG-35) (en:USS Topeka (PG-35)), a gunboat bought in England 1898, originally built as Diogenes by Howaldtswerke in Kiel and in periodic use until 1929.
- USS Topeka (CL-67) (en:USS Topeka (CL-67)), a light cruiser of World War II, recommissioned in 1960 as the guided missile cruiser CLG-8, with service in the Vietnam War before decommissioning in 1969.
- USS Topeka (SSN-754) (en:USS Topeka (SSN-754)), a Los Angeles-class nuclear attack submarine, commissioned in 1989 and still on active service in 2008.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Topeka}}
[[de:USS Topeka]]
[[en:USS Topeka]]
[[sl:USS Topeka]]
Five ships of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Torbay, after Torbay on the southwest English coast.
- HMS Torbay (1693) (en:HMS Torbay), an 80-gun second rate launched in 1693, rebuilt in 1719 and broken up in 1749.
- HMS Torbay was previously HMS Neptune, a 90-gun second rate launched in 1683, renamed Torbay in 1750 and sold in 1785.
- HMCS Champlain (1919) (en:HMS Torbay), an S-class destroyer launched in 1919. She was transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1928 and renamed HMCS Champlain. She was sold in 1937.
- HMS Torbay (N79) (en:HMS Torbay), a T-class submarine launched in 1940 and sold in 1945.
- HMS Torbay (S90) (en:HMS Torbay), a Trafalgar class submarine nuclear submarine launched 1985 and currently in service.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Torbay}}
[[de:HMS Torbay]]
[[en:HMS Torbay]]
[[sl:HMS Torbay]]
Toreador was the name of two ships of the Royal Navy.
- HMCS Vancouver (F6A) (en:HMS Toreador (1918)), an S Class destroyer.
- HMS Toreador (1925) (en:HMS Toreador (1925)), a requisitioned Great Western Railway passenger ferry. (not exists)
{{shipindex|name=Toreador, HMS}}
[[en:HMS Toreador]]
Several Canadian naval units have been named HMCS Toronto.
- HMCS Toronto (K538) (en:HMCS Toronto (K538)) was a River-class frigate that served in the Second World War in the Royal Canadian Navy. It was sold to the Royal Norwegian Navy in 1956.
- HMCS Toronto (FFH 333) (en:HMCS Toronto (FFH 333)) is a Halifax-class frigate that has served in the Canadian Forces since 1993.
- Battle honours
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Toronto, Hmcs}}
[[en:HMCS Toronto]]
[[sl:HMCS Toronto]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Toronto, after the Canadian city of Toronto. A fourth was renamed before being launched:
- HMS Toronto (1799) (en:HMS Toronto) was a schooner launched in 1799 and wrecked and subsequently broken up in 1811.
- HMS Toronto (1813) (en:HMS Toronto) was a schooner listed in 1813 and wrecked in 1817. (not exists)
- HMS Toronto (1838) (en:HMS Toronto) was a wooden paddle steamer purchased in 1838 and sold in 1843. (not exists)
- HMS Mary Rose (J360) (en:HMS Toronto) was to have been an Algerine-class minesweeper. She was renamed HMS Mary Rose before her launch in 1943, and was broken up in 1957. (not exists)
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Toronto, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Toronto]]
Two ships and a shore establishment of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) have been named HMAS Torrens, after the River Torrens.
- HMAS Torrens (D67) (en:HMAS Torrens (D67)), a River class torpedo boat destroyer commissioned in 1916, decommissioned into reserve in 1920, and sunk as a target in 1930.
- HMAS Torrens (naval base) (en:HMAS Torrens (naval base)), a naval depot at Port Adelaide, South Australia, which was operated from 1940 to 1964. (not exists)
- HMAS Torrens (DE 53) (en:HMAS Torrens (DE 53)), a River class destroyer escort commissioned in 1971, decommissioned in 1998, and sunk as a target in 1999.
- One of the Adelaide class frigates was to be named HMAS Torrens, but at a point between 1982 and 1993 the decision was made to name the ship HMAS Melbourne.<ref>{{cite book |last=MacDougall |first=Anthony K. |title=Australians at war: a pictoral history |origyear=1991 |edition=2nd (revised and expanded) |year=2002 |publisher=The Five Mile Press |location=Noble Park, Vic |isbn=1-86503-865-2 |oclc= |doi= |id= |pages=344}}
</ref>
- References
{{reflist}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Torrens, Hmas}}
[[en:HMAS Torrens]]
[[nl:HMAS Torrens]]
[[pl:HMAS Torrens]]
[[sl:HMAS Torrens]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Torrington, while the name has also been used for one ship of the navy during the Commonwealth period:
- HMS Dreadnought (1654) (en:Torrington) was a 62-gun ship launched in 1654. She was renamed HMS Dreadnought in 1660, and foundered in 1690.
- HMS Charles Galley (1676) (en:HMS Torrington) was a 32–gun fifth rate launched in 1676 as HMS Charles Galley. Charles Galley was renamed Torrington in 1729, was hulked in 1740 and sold in 1744.
- HMS Torrington (1743) (en:HMS Torrington) was a 44-gun fifth rate launched in 1743 and sold in 1763. (not exists)
- HMS Torrington (K577) (en:HMS Torrington) was a Captain-class frigate launched in 1943 under lend-lease, and returned to the US Navy in 1946. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Torrington, Hms}}
Two Dock Landing Ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Tortuga, after the Dry Tortugas, islands off Florida.
- The first USS Tortuga (LSD-26) (en:Tortuga (LSD-26)) was commissioned in 1945, in action during the Korean War and the Vietnam War, and decommissioned in 1970.
- The second USS Tortuga (LSD-46) (en:Tortuga (LSD-46)) was commissioned in 1990 and is on active service as of 2009.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tortuga}}
[[de:USS Tortuga]]
[[en:USS Tortuga]]
{{French Navy}}
Several ships of the French Navy have been named in honour of Anne Hilarion de Tourville. Among them:
- French ship Tourville (1788) (en:Tourville), a Téméraire class 74-gun ship of the line (1790-1833)
- Spanish ship San Gennaro (1765) (en:San Gennaro), a Spanish 86-gun ship of the line ceded to France, bore the name from 1811 to 1816 (not exists)
- French ship Tourville (1853) (en:Tourville), a 80-gun ship of the line (1853-1872) (not exists)
- An unbuilt Lyon class battleship (1914)
- The French cruiser Tourville (en:Tourville), a heavy cruiser (1928-1962)
- The French frigate Tourville (D 610) (en:Tourville) (D 610), a F67 type frigate.
- Подводные лодки типа «Сюффрен» Подводные лодки типа «Сюффрен» (фр. «Suffren», проектное название — «Барракуда») — серия из шести французских атомных подводных лодок, планируемых к постройке в 2002—2027 годах. (A en:Barracuda type submarine is scheduled to bear the name)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tourville, French Ship}}
[[de:Tourville]]
[[en:French ship Tourville]]
[[fr:Tourville]]
[[ja:トゥールヴィル]]
[[nl:Tourville]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Tower:
- HMS Tower (1668) (en:HMS Tower) was a 4-gun smack purchased in 1668 and sold in 1674. (not exists)
- HMS Tower (1809) (en:HMS Tower) was a 6-gun tender launched in 1809, lent to the Thames Police in 1817 and sold in 1825. (not exists)
- HMS Tower (1917) (en:HMS Tower) was a modified R-class destroyer launched in 1917 and sold in 1928.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tower, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Tower]]
Two ships of the Royal Australian Navy have been named HMAS Townsville, for the city of Townsville, Queensland.
- HMAS Townsville (J205) (en:HMAS Townsville (J205)) was a Bathurst class corvette that was launched in 1941, served until 1946, and was scrapped in 1956.
- HMAS Townsville (FCPB 205) (en:HMAS Townsville (FCPB 205)) was a Fremantle class patrol boat launched in 1981, in service until 2007, and preserved as a museum ship.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Townsville, Hmas}}
Type L submarine may refer to one of the following classes of submarines based on the British L-class submarine:
- Подводные лодки типа RO-60 Подводные лодки типа RO-60 (яп. 呂六〇型潜水艦), также известные как тип «L4» — серия японских дизель-электрических подводных лодок периода Второй мировой войны. (en:Japanese Type L submarine, a class of submarine for the Imperial Japanese Navy; built in the mid 1920s and active in World War II)
- Подводные лодки типа «Ленинец» Подводные лодки типа «Ленинец» — тип советских дизель-электрических подводных лодок-минных заградителей времён Второй мировой войны. (en:Soviet Type L submarine, an alternate name for the Soviet Navy's Leninets-class submarine; built between 1931–1941 and active during World War II; most decommissioned by the 1950s)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tpye L Submarine}}
Three vessels of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Tracker:
- HMS Tracker (D24) (en:Tracker (D24)), an Attacker-class escort carrier built in the USA and completed in 1943. She saw extensive action in 1943 with the Western Approach Command covering Atlantic, Mediterranean and Russian convoys.
- HMS Tracker (LST) (en:Tracker), a Landing Ship Tank (LST) built towards the end of World War II. In 1952 she acted as the hospital ship for the first British atomic bomb test, (Operation Hurricane), which took place off the north-west coast of Australia. (not exists)
- HMS Tracker (P274) (en:Tracker (P274)), an Archer-class patrol and training vessel
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tracker}}
[[en:HMS Tracker]]
[[sl:HMS Tracker]]
Five ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Trafalgar, after the Battle of Trafalgar:
- HMS Trafalgar (1820) (en:HMS Trafalgar) was a 106-gun first-rate launched in 1820. She was renamed HMS Camperdown in 1825, was used for harbour service from 1854 and became a coal hulk in 1857. She was renamed HMS Pitt in 1882 and was sold in 1906.
- HMS Trafalgar (1841) (en:HMS Trafalgar) was a 110-gun first-rate launched in 1841. She was converted to screw propulsion in 1859, and was renamed HMS Boscawen in 1873. She was sold in 1906.
- HMS Trafalgar (1887) (en:HMS Trafalgar) was a Trafalgar class battleship launched in 1887 and sold in 1911.
- HMS Trafalgar (D77) (en:HMS Trafalgar) was a Battle class destroyer launched in 1944 and sold in 1970.
- HMS Trafalgar (S107) (en:HMS Trafalgar) is a Trafalgar class submarine launched in 1981 and decommissioned in 2009.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trafalgar, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Trafalgar]]
[[sl:HMS Trafalgar]]
SS Transylvania may refer to:
- SS Transylvania (1914) (en:SS Transylvania (1914)), an ocean liner sunk by German submarine U-63 on 4 May 1917 while serving as a troopship
- SS Transylvania (1925) (en:SS Transylvania (1925)), an ocean liner torpedoed by U-56 on 10 August 1940; sank from damage while under tow
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Transylvania}}
USS Traveler and USS Traveller have been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Traveller (1805) (en:USS Traveller (1805)), a supply boat in commission in 1805
- USS Traveler (SP-122) (en:USS Traveler (SP-122)), a patrol boat in commission from 1917 to 1919
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Traveler}}
[[en:USS Traveler]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Traveller:
- HMS Traveller (1839) (en:HMS Traveller) was a wooden paddle vessel purchased in 1839 and sold into mercantile service in 1844. (not exists)
- HMS Traveller (1856) (en:HMS Traveller) was an Albacore-class wooden screw gunboat launched in 1856 and broken up by 1863. (not exists)
- HMS Traveller (N48) (en:HMS Traveller) was a T-class submarine launched in 1941 and sunk by an unknown cause in 1942.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Traveller, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Traveller]]
[[en:HMS Traveller]]
USS Trefoil has been the name of two ships of the United States Navy.
- USS Trefoil (1865) (en:USS Trefoil (1865)), a wooden-hulled screw steamboat purchased by the Navy and used for approximately six months
- USS Trefoil (IX-149) (en:USS Trefoil (IX-149)), the lead ship of the Trefoil class concrete barge
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trefoil}}
[[en:USS Trefoil]]
[[pl:USS Trefoil]]
Three vessels of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Trenchant:
- HMS Trenchant (1916) (en:Trenchant (1916)), a 1,085 ton modified 'R' class destroyer (not exists)
- HMS Trenchant (P331) (en:Trenchant (P331)), a 'T' class diesel submarine (1943)
- HMS Trenchant (S91) (en:Trenchant (S91)), a 5,200 ton Trafalgar class nuclear powered submarine
- External links
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trenchant, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Trenchant]]
[[en:HMS Trenchant]]
[[sl:HMS Trenchant]]
Five ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Trent, after the River Trent:
- HMS Trent (1757) (en:HMS Trent) was a 28-gun sixth rate frigate launched in 1757 and sold in 1764. (not exists)
- HMS Trent (1796) (en:HMS Trent) was a 36-gun fifth rate launched in 1796, a hospital ship in 1803, a receiving ship in 1818 and was broken up in 1823. (not exists)
- HMS Trent (1862) (en:HMS Trent) was a 17-gun sloop laid down in 1862. She was selected for conversion to an ironclad, and renamed HMS Research later that year, before being launched in 1863. (not exists)
- HMS Trent (1877) (en:HMS Trent) was an iron screw gunboat launched in 1877. She was renamed HMS Pembroke in 1905, and HMS Gannet in 1917 when she served as a diving tender. She was scrapped in 1923. (not exists)
- HMS Trent (K243) (en:HMS Trent) was a River class frigate launched in 1942. She was transferred to the Royal Indian Navy in 1946 and was renamed Kukri. She was converted into a survey vessel in 1952 and renamed Investigator. She was broken up in 1975. (not exists)
- See also
- The mail steamer RMS Trent, at the centre of the Trent Affair.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trent}}
[[en:HMS Trent]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Trenton, after the city of Trenton, New Jersey, site of the Battle of Trenton in the American Revolutionary War.
- USS Trenton (1876) (en:USS Trenton) was a wooden screw steamer commissioned in 1877 and wrecked at Samoa by a hurricane in 1889.
- USS Trenton (CL-11) (en:USS Trenton (CL-11)) was a light cruiser initially in service in 1924, seeing some action during World War II, and decommissioned in 1945.
- USS Trenton (LPD-14) (en:USS Trenton (LPD-14)) was an amphibious transport dock commissioned in 1971. It was sold to the Indian Navy in 2007 and renamed INS Jalashva, meaning "river/sea horse".
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trenton}}
[[de:USS Trenton]]
[[en:USS Trenton]]
[[sl:USS Trenton]]
Two submarines of the United States Navy have been named USS Trepang, for the trepang, a marine animal having a long, tough, muscular body, sometimes called a sea slug or a sea cucumber, found in the coral reefs of the East Indies.
- USS Trepang (SS-412) (en:USS Trepang (SS-412)), a Balao-class submarine, served during World War II.
- USS Trepang (SSN-674) (en:USS Trepang (SSN-674)), a Sturgeon-class submarine, served during the Cold War.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trepang}}
[[en:USS Trepang]]
[[pl:USS Trepang]]
Two ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Trepassey, or the alternative spelling HMS Trepassy:
- HMS Trepassey (1779) (en:HMS Trepassey) was a 14-gun brig-sloop purchased in 1779 . She was captured by the Americans in 1781, but was subsequently retaken. She was sold in 1784.
- HMS Trepassey (1790) (en:HMS Trepassey) was a brig launched in 1790 and sold in 1803. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trepassey, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Trepassey]]
Six ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Tribune, after the Tribunes, elected magistrates of the Roman Republic and Empire:
- HMS Tribune (1796) (en:HMS Tribune) was a 36-gun fifth rate, previously in French service. She was captured in 1796 by HMS Unicorn, and was wrecked in 1797.
- HMS Tribune (1803) (en:HMS Tribune) was a 36-gun fifth rate launched in 1803. She was rebuilt as a 24-gun sixth rate in 1832 and was wrecked in 1839. (not exists)
- HMS Tribune (1853) (en:HMS Tribune) was a wood screw corvette launched in 1853 and sold in 1866. (not exists)
- HMS Tribune (1891) (en:HMS Tribune) was an Apollo-class cruiser launched in 1891 and sold in 1911. (not exists)
- HMS Tribune (1918) (en:HMS Tribune) was an S-class destroyer launched in 1918 and sold in 1931. (not exists)
- HMS Tribune (N76) (en:HMS Tribune) was a T-class submarine launched in 1938 and broken up in 1947.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tribune, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Tribune]]
[[en:HMS Tribune]]
Six ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Trident or HMS Trydent, after the Trident, often associated with the Roman God of the Sea, Neptune:
- HMS Trydent (1695) (en:HMS Trydent) was a 58-gun fourth rate ship of the line, previously the French ship Trident, captured in 1695. She was sunk as a breakwater in 1702. (not exists)
- HMS Trydent (1747) (en:HMS Trydent) was a 64-gun third rate ship of the line, previously the French ship Trident, captured in 1747 at the Second battle of Cape Finisterre and sold in 1763. (not exists)
- HMS Trident (1768) (en:HMS Trident) was a 64-gun third rate ship of the line, launched in 1768 at Portsmouth and sold in 1816.
- HMS Trident (1845) (en:HMS Trident) was a sloop built by Ditchburn & Mare in 1845 at Leamouth, and scrapped in 1866.
- HMS Trident (1915) (en:HMS Trident) was a Turkish Talisman-class destroyer under construction in Britain, but taken over while under construction by the Royal Navy in the First World War as HMS Offa. She was renamed HMS Trident before being launched in 1915. She was sold in 1921. (not exists)
- HMS Trident (N52) (en:HMS Trident) was a T-class submarine built by Cammell Laird, Birkenhead in 1937 and sold in 1947.
- In fiction
- HMS Trident is a Trident-class trimaran stealth destroyer in John Birmingham's Axis of Time novels.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trident, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Trident]]
[[en:HMS Trident]]
There have been two US Navy ships called Trieste:
- (DSV-0) Bathyscaphe Trieste
- (DSV-1) Bathyscaphe Trieste II
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trieste}}
[[en:USS Trieste]]
[[pl:USS Trieste]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS Trigger, named in honor of the triggerfish, any of numerous deep-bodied fishes of warm seas having an anterior dorsal fin with two or three stout erectile spines.
- The first USS Trigger (SS-237) (en:Trigger) (SS-237) was a Gato-class submarine commissioned in 1942 and sunk in 1945.
- The second USS Trigger (SS-564) (en:Trigger) (SS-564) was a Tang-class submarine, commissioned in 1952, stricken in 1973 and sold to Italy.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trigger}}
[[en:USS Trigger]]
[[pl:USS Trigger]]
Three ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Trinidad, after the Caribbean island and former British possession Trinidad:
- HMS Trinidad (1805) (en:HMS Trinidad) was a 10 gun schooner, listed in service between 1805 and 1809. (not exists)
- HMS Trinidad (1918) (en:HMS Trinidad) was an S-class destroyer launched in 1918 and sold in 1932. (not exists)
- HMS Trinidad (46) (en:HMS Trinidad) was a Crown Colony-class cruiser launched in 1940. She was struck by her own torpedo whilst on convoy escort duties in 1942, and sunk later that year in a German air attack.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trinidad, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Trinidad]]
[[en:HMS Trinidad]]
[[fi:HMS Trinidad]]
{{French Navy}}
Eight ships of the French Navy have borne the name Triomphant ("triumphing one"):
- French ship Le Triomphant (1667) (en:Triomphant) (1667), a ship of the line launched as Princesse ("Princess"), renamed Le Triomphant in 1671, and Le Constant ("reliable one") in 1678.
- French ship Le Triomphant (1675) (en:Triomphant) (1675), a ship of the line launched as Le Constant and renamed in 1678
- French ship Triomphant (1693) (en:Triomphant) (1693), a ship of the line
- French ship Le Triomphant (1778) (en:Triomphant) (1778), a ship of the line
- French ship Le Triomphant (1797) (en:Triomphant) (1797), privateer (not exists)
- French ship Le Triomphant (1804) (en:Triomphant) (1804), a ship of the line
- French destroyer Triomphant (en:Triomphant), a Fantasque class destroyer (1931-1957)
- French submarine Triomphant (S616) (en:Triomphant (S 616)), lead ship of the Triomphant class of strategic missile submarines
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Triomphant, French Ship}}
[[en:French ship Triomphant]]
[[fr:Le Triomphant]]
[[id:Le Triomphant]]
[[jv:Le Triomphant]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Tripoli, after the city of Tripoli in Libya, scene of action in the Barbary Wars, and commemorated in the Marines' Hymn.
- The first USS Tripoli (CVE-64) (en:Tripoli (CVE-64)) was an escort aircraft carrier in service from 1943 to 1958.
- The second USS Tripoli (LPH-10) (en:Tripoli (LPH-10)) was an Iwo Jima-class amphibious assault ship in service from 1966 to 1995.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tripoli}}
[[de:USS Tripoli]]
[[en:USS Tripoli]]
[[es:USS Tripoli]]
[[pl:USS Tripoli]]
Four ships in the United States Navy have been named USS Trippe for John Trippe.
- The first USS Trippe (1812) (en:Trippe) was purchased in 1812, served in the War of 1812 and was burned by the British.
- The second USS Trippe (DD-33) (en:USS Trippe (DD-33)) was a Paulding-class destroyer launched in 1910 and served in World War I. She served in the United States Coast Guard from 1924 to 1930. She was sold in 1934.
- The third USS Trippe (DD-403) (en:USS Trippe (DD-403)) was a Benham-class destroyer launched in 1938, served in World War II and was sunk as a result of her participation in Operation Crossroads.
- The fourth USS Trippe (FF-1075) (en:USS Trippe (DE-1075/FF-1075)) was a Knox-class frigate launched in 1969 and decommissioned in 1991.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trippe}}
[[en:USS Trippe]]
[[nl:USS Trippe]]
[[pl:USS Trippe]]
The following ships of the Indian Navy have been named INS Trishul:
- INS Trishul (1960) (en:INS Trishul (1960)) was a Type 12, Whitby class frigate commissioned in 1960, which served in the Portuguese-Indian War and the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971 (not exists)
- INS Trishul (F43) (en:INS Trishul (F43)) is a Talwar class frigate, currently in active service with the Indian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trishul}}
[[en:INS Trishul]]
Triton class may refer to:
- Королевский военно-морской флот Великобритании Королевский военно-морской флот (англ. Royal Navy) — основная часть военно-морских сил Соединённого Королевства Великобритании и Северной Ирландии. (The en:Royal Navy's T class (or Triton class) of diesel-electric submarines designed in the 1930s to replace the O, P and R classes. )
- A proposed class of United States Navy nuclear-powered radar picket submarines, numbering between four to eight units, with the USS Triton (SSRN-586) serving as the lead ship.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
[[en:Triton class]]
Eight vessels of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Triton or HMS Tryton, after Triton, the son of Poseidon and Amphitrite, and the personification of the roaring waters:
- HMS Tryton (1702) (en:HMS Tryton) was a 42-gun fifth-rate, originally the French ship Triton, captured by the British in 1702 at the battle of Vigo Bay, and sold in 1709. (not exists)
- HMS Tryton (1741) (en:HMS Tryton) was a sloop in commission in 1741. (not exists)
- HMS Tryton (1745) (en:HMS Tryton) was a 24-gun sixth-rate frigate launched in 1745 and burned on 28 April 1758 to avoid capture by the French. (not exists)
- HMS Triton (1771) (en:HMS Triton) was a 28-gun sixth-rate frigate launched in 1771. She served with Rear Admiral Sir Samuel Hood's fleet off Nevis on 25 January 1782. She was broken up in 1796. (not exists)
- HMS Triton (1796) (en:HMS Triton) was a 32-gun fifth-rate frigate launched in 1796. She served in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars and was broken up in 1820. (not exists)
- HMS Triton (1846) (en:HMS Triton) was an iron paddle sloop launched in 1846 and sold in 1872. (not exists)
- HMS Triton (1882) (en:HMS Triton) was a paddle survey vessel launched in 1882. She was a school ship at Gravesend from 1919, and was broken up in 1961. (not exists)
- HMS Triton (N15) (en:HMS Triton) was a T class submarine launched in 1937 and sunk in 1940.
- See also
- HMS Tryton Prize (en:HMS Tryton Prize) was a 28-gun sixth rate, formerly the French privateer Royal. She was captured in 1705 by HMS Tryton and was sold in 1709. (not exists)
- RV Triton (en:RV Triton) was an experimental trimaran operated by the Royal Navy in the early 2000s before being sold to the Maritime and Coastguard Agency in 2005 as a survey vessel. She was not commissioned however and did not carry the HMS prefix.
- References
- {{Colledge}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Triton, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Triton]]
[[en:HMS Triton]]
[[sl:HMS Triton]]
USS Triton may refer to:
- USS Triton (YT-10) (en:USS Triton (YT-10)), a tug in commission from 1889 to 1930
- USS Triton (ID-3312) (en:USS Triton (ID-3312)), a tug that served briefly during 1918 (not exists)
- USS Triton (SS-201) (en:USS Triton (SS-201)), a submarine commissioned in 1940 and sunk in 1943
- USS Triton (SSRN-586) (en:USS Triton (SSRN-586)), later SSN-586, a submarine in commission from 1959 to 1969
- See also
- United States Coast Guard vessels of this name: USCGC Triton.
{{Shipindex|Triton, USS}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Triton}}
[[de:USS Triton]]
[[en:USS Triton]]
Two ships of the U.S. Coast Guard have been named USCGC Triton, after Triton, the son of Poseidon and Amphitrite, and the personification of the roaring waters:
- The first Triton was a 165-foot cutter which operated out of Coast Guard Base 15 at Biloxi, Mississippi during what was referred to at the time as "the Prohibition War"—with operations against alcohol smugglers during Prohibition.
- The second USCGC Triton (WPC-116) (en:Triton (WPC/WMEC-116)) was a patrol boat that was commissioned in 1934 and served until 1967.
- See also
- For U.S. Navy vessels of this name, see USS Triton.
- For Royal Navy vessels of this name, see HMS Triton.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Triton, Uscgc}}
[[en:USCGC Triton]]
Ten ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Triumph. Another was planned, but renamed before being launched:
- HMS Triumph (1562) (en:HMS Triumph (1562)) was a 68-gun galleon built in 1561. She was rebuilt in 1596, and sold in 1618.
- HMS Triumph (1623) (en:HMS Triumph (1623)) was a 44-gun ship launched in 1623 and broken up in 1687.
- HMS Triumph (1698) (en:HMS Triumph (1698)) was a 90-gun second rate ship of the line launched in 1698. She was renamed HMS Prince in 1714, rebuilt in 1750 and broken up in 1773.
- HMS Triumph (1739) (en:HMS Triumph (1739)) was an 18-gun sloop, formerly the Spanish Triunfo. She was captured in 1739 and foundered in 1740. (not exists)
- HMS Triumph (1764) (en:HMS Triumph (1764)) was a 74-gun third-rate ship of the line launched in 1764. She was used for harbour service from 1813 and was broken up in 1850.
- HMS Prince Consort (1862) (en:HMS Prince Consort (1862)), to have been a 91-gun screw propelled Bulwark class second rate. She was renamed HMS Prince Consort (1862) before her launch in 1862 as a Prince Consort class armoured frigate.
- HMS Triumph (1870) (en:HMS Triumph (1870)) was a Swiftsure-class battleship launched in 1870. She was renamed HMS Tenedos in 1904, being used as a depot ship, and then a training ship. She was renamed HMS Indus IV in 1912, and HMS Algiers in 1915. She was sold in 1921.
- HMS Triumph (1903) (en:HMS Triumph (1903)) was a Swiftsure class battleship launched in 1903 and sunk by U-21 in 1915.
- HMS Triumph (N18) (en:HMS Triumph (N18)) was a T-class submarine launched in 1938 and sunk in 1942.
- HMS Triumph (1944) HMS Triumph (ЕВК «Трайэмф» или ЕВК «Триумф», от латинского триумф (лат. triumphus), десятый британский военный корабль с таким именем) — авианосец типа «Колоссус» КВМФ Великобритании. (en:HMS Triumph (R16) was a Colossus-class light fleet aircraft carrier launched in 1944. She was converted to a heavy repair ship in 1964 and was scrapped in 1981.)
- HMS Triumph (S93) (en:HMS Triumph (S93)) is a Trafalgar-class fleet submarine launched in 1990 and currently in service.
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Triumph, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Triumph]]
[[en:HMS Triumph]]
[[fi:HMS Triumph]]
[[fr:HMS Triumph]]
[[ja:トライアンフ]]
[[sl:HMS Triumph]]
Two ships of the Royal Norwegian Navy have borne the name HNoMS Troll, after the Norse mythological creature Troll:
- HNoMS Troll (1910) (en:HNoMS Troll (1910)) was a Draug class destroyer launched in 1910 and scrapped in 1949.
- HNoMS Troll (frigate) (en:HNoMS Troll (?)) was an ex-Canadian River class frigate transferred to the Royal Norwegian Navy, probably in 1956. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Troll, Hnoms}}
[[en:HNoMS Troll]]
[[no:KNM «Troll»]]
At least eight ships of the Royal Netherlands Navy have been named HNLMS Tromp after Admiral Maarten Tromp (1598–1653), or his son Cornelis Tromp (1629–1691):
- Hr. Ms. Tromp, a 54-gun ship of the line, captured by the British in 1796, and served in the Royal Navy as HMS Tromp. Sold for scrap in 1815.
- Hr. Ms. Admiral C. Tromp, a 7-gun armed schooner, which served from 1809-1826.
- Hr. Ms. Tromp, a 64/68 gun ship-of-the-line launched in 1808, and sold in 1820.
- Hr. Ms. Tromp, a 74-gun ship-of-the-line laid down in 1830, but not completed until 1850, struck in 1867, and sold for scrap in 1872.
- HNLMS Tromp (1877) (en:Hr. Ms. Tromp, launched in 1877), was an Atjeh-class unprotected cruiser. (not exists)
- HNLMS Tromp (1937) (en:Hr. Ms. Tromp, launched in 1937), was a Tromp-class light cruiser that served in World War II.
- HNLMS Tromp (1973) (en:Hr.Ms. Tromp (F801)), launched in 1973, was the lead ship of her class of guided missile frigates. (not exists)
- HNLMS Tromp (F803) (en:Hr.Ms. Tromp (F803)), second of the De Zeven Provinciën-class frigates, entered service in 2003.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tromp, Hnlms}}
[[de:Hr. Ms. Tromp]]
[[en:HNLMS Tromp]]
[[nl:Hr. Ms. Tromp]]
Three ships of Britain's Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Trompeuse, after the French word for "deceptive":
- HMS Trompeuse (1794) (en:HMS Trompeuse) was a former French 16 gun brig-sloop captured on 12 January 1794 by HMS Sphinx near Cape Clear Island and wrecked off Kinsale on 15 July 1796. (not exists)
- HMS Trompeuse (1797) (en:HMS Trompeuse) was a former French 18 gun privateer originally called Mercure, captured in the Bay of Biscay in May 1797 by HMS Melampus. The vessel foundered on 17 May 1800 in the English Channel.
- HMS Trompeuse (1800) (en:HMS Trompeuse) was a former French 18 gun sloop captured on 4 March 1800 and broken up in 1811. (not exists)
- References
- {{Colledge}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trompeuse, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Trompeuse]]
Two submarines of the United States Navy have been named USS Trout for the trout fish.
- USS Trout (SS-202) (en:USS Trout (SS-202)), a Tambor-class submarine, was lost during World War II and is most famous for one mission which successfully transported 20 tons of gold and various other securities of the Philippine currency reserve to Pearl Harbor.
- USS Trout (SS-566) (en:USS Trout (SS-566)), a Tang-class submarine, is currently held for disposal by scrapping.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trout}}
[[en:USS Trout]]
[[pl:USS Trout]]
Several ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Truculent.
- HMS Truculent (1916) (en:Truculent) was a Yarrow Later M class destroyer that saw service in World War I. (not exists)
- HMS Truculent (P315) (en:Truculent), pennant number P315, was a T class submarine that saw service in World War II.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Truculent, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Truculent]]
[[en:HMS Truculent]]
USS Trumbull may refer to:
- USS Trumble, a shoal-draft galley built on Lake Champlain at Skenesboro, New York
- USS Trumbull (1776) (en:USS Trumbull (1776)), one of the 13 frigates authorized by the Continental Congress on 13 December 1775.
- USS Trumbull (1799) (en:USS Trumbull (1799)), an 18 gun sloop-of-war constructed by Naval Agent Joseph Howland between 1799 and 1800.
- References
{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/t/trumbull.htm}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trumbull}}
[[en:USS Trumbull]]
Several ships of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Trumpeter.
- HMS Trumpeter (D09) (en:HMS Trumpeter (D09)) - an escort carrier of the Second World War
- HMS Trumpeter (P294) (en:HMS Trumpeter (P294)) - a fast patrol boat.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trumpeter, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Trumpeter]]
Four ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Trusty:
- HMS Trusty (1855) (en:HMS Trusty (1855)) was an Aetna class ironclad floating battery launched in 1855 and broken up in 1864. It was the first turret ship. (not exists)
- HMS Trusty (1866) (en:HMS Trusty (1866)) was a tug launched in 1866, renamed in 1917 as HMS Trustful and broken up in 1920. (not exists)
- HMS Trusty (1918) (en:HMS Trusty (1918)) was an S-class destroyer launched in 1918 and broken up in 1936. (not exists)
- HMS Trusty (N45) (en:HMS Trusty (N45)) was an T-class submarine launched in 1941 and broken up in 1947.
- References
- {{colledge}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trusty, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Trusty]]
USS Truxtun has been the name of various United States Navy ships, and may refer to:
- USS Truxtun (1842) (en:USS Truxtun (1842)), a brig launched in 1842 and destroyed after running aground off Mexico in 1846
- USS Truxtun (DD-14) (en:USS Truxtun (DD-14)), a destroyer in service from 1902 to 1919
- USS Truxtun (DD-229) (en:USS Truxtun (DD-229)), a destroyer commissioned in 1921 that ran aground and sank in 1942
- USS Truxtun (APD-98) (en:USS Truxtun (APD-98)), laid down as a destroyer escort (DE-282) in 1943, completed as a high-speed transport (APD-98) in 1945, and in commission as such from 1945 to 1946.
- USS Truxtun (CGN-35) «Тракстан» (CGN-35 Truxtun) — атомный ракетный крейсер флота США. (en:USS Truxtun (CGN-35), originally guided missile destroyer leader DLGN-35, a guided missile cruiser in commission from 1967 to 1995)
- USS Truxtun (DDG-103) USS Truxtun (DDG-103) — 55-й эскадренный миноносец из серии запланированных к 13 сентября 2002 года. 62 эсминцев УРО типа «Арли Бёрк», строительство которых было одобрено Конгрессом США. (en:USS Truxtun (DDG-103), an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, commissioned in 2009.)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Truxtun}}
[[de:USS Truxtun]]
[[en:USS Truxtun]]
[[ja:トラクスタン]]
[[nl:USS Truxtun]]
[[pl:USS Truxtun]]
[[sl:USS Truxtun]]
Two ships of the Royal Norwegian Navy have borne the name HNoMS Trygg. Trygg is Norwegian for safe, secure, dependable:
- HNoMS Trygg (1919) (en:HNoMS Trygg (1919)) was a Trygg class torpedo boat launched in 1919, sunk by German aircraft in 1940. Salvaged the same year by the Germans, sunk by British aircraft in 1944.
- Ракетные катера типа «Сторм» Тип «Сторм» (норв. Storm-klassen) — тип норвежских ракетных катеров. (en:HNoMS Trygg (P964) was Storm class fast patrol boat launched in the 1960s.)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trygg, Hnoms}}
[[en:HNoMS Trygg]]
Two ships in the United States Navy have been named USS Tucker for Captain Samuel Tucker.
- USS Tucker (DD-57) (en:USS Tucker (DD-57)) was the lead ship of her class of destroyers, commissioned in 1916, served in World War I, transferred to the United States Coast Guard as USCGC Tucker (CG-23) and struck in 1936.
- USS Tucker (DD-374) DD 374 Tucker (Корабль соединённых штатов Такер) — американский эсминец типа «Мэхэн». (en:USS Tucker (DD-374) was a Mahan-class destroyer, commissioned in 1936, served in World War II, and sank following hitting a mine in August 1942.)
- See also
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tucker}}
[[en:USS Tucker]]
[[pl:USS Tucker]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Tucson, after the city of Tucson, Arizona.
- USS Tucson (CL-98) (en:USS Tucson (CL-98)) was a light cruiser commissioned in 1945, active in the Pacific War for a few weeks before its end, and decommissioned in 1949.
- USS Tucson (SSN-770) (en:USS Tucson (SSN-770)) is a Los Angeles-class nuclear attack submarine commissioned in 1995 and on active service as of 2008.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tucson}}
[[de:USS Tucson]]
[[en:USS Tucson]]
The name HMNZS Tui may apply to
- HMNZS Tui (T234) (en:HMNZS Tui (T234)), a minesweeper commissioned 1941-1967
- HMNZS Tui (1970) (en:HMNZS Tui (1970)), an oceanographic research ship commissioned 1970–1998
{{Shipindex|name=Tui, HMNZS}}
[[en:HMNZS Tui]]
USS Tulip is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Tulip (1862) (en:USS Tulip (1862)), a tugboat employed by the Union Navy during the American Civil War.
- USS Tulip (1908) (en:USS Tulip (1908)), a lighthouse tender serving during World War I. (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tulip}}
[[en:USS Tulip]]
USS Tullibee has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
- USS Tullibee (SS-284) (en:USS Tullibee (SS-284)), a submarine commissioned in 1943 and sunk in 1944
- USS Tullibee (SSN-597) (en:USS Tullibee (SSN-597)), a submarine in commission from 1960 to 1988
{{Shipindex|Tullibee, USS}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tullibee, USS}}
[[de:USS Tullibee]]
[[en:USS Tullibee]]
[[pl:USS Tullibee]]
One ship of the United States Navy has been named USS Tulsa, after Tulsa, Oklahoma.
- USS Tulsa (PG-22) (en:USS Tulsa (PG-22)), a gunboat that served during World War II receiving two battle stars. Commissioned 3 December 1923 and renamed Tacloban 18 December 1944. She was decommissioned 6 March 1946.
- USS Tulsa (en:USS Tulsa (CA-129)), assigned 27 November 1944 to be an Oregon City-class cruiser built at Quincy, Massachusetts, by the Bethlehem Steel Company's Fore River Plant. However, on 12 August 1945, before the ship's keel had been laid, the contract for her construction was cancelled.<ref>http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/t9/tulsa.htm</ref>
- References
- {{DANFS}}
{{Refend}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tulsa}}
[[en:USS Tulsa]]
[[pl:USS Tulsa]]
Two ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Tumult:
- HMS Tumult (1918) (en:HMS Tumult) was an S-class destroyer launched in 1918 and sold for scrapping in 1928. (not exists)
- HMS Tumult (R11) (en:HMS Tumult) was a T-class destroyer launched in 1942. She was converted to a Type 16 frigate between 1953 and 1954, and was scrapped in 1965.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tumult, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Tumult]]
Three ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Tuna for the tuna, large, vigorous, spiny-finned fishes including some highly esteemed for sport and food.
- USS G-2 (SS-27) (en:USS Tuna (SS-27)) was a G-class submarine, which served before World War I. She was renamed G-2 before she was launched.
- USS Tuna (SP-664) (en:USS Tuna (SP-664)) was a civilian motor yacht acquired during World War I. (not exists)
- USS Tuna (SS-203) (en:USS Tuna (SS-203)) was a Tambor-class submarine that served during World War II.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tuna}}
[[en:USS Tuna]]
[[pl:USS Tuna]]
Two submarines of the United States Navy have been named USS Tunny, for the tunny, any of several oceanic fishes resembling the mackerel.
- The first USS Tunny (SS-282) (en:USS Tunny (SS/SSG/APSS/LPSS-282)), a Gato-class submarine, served in World War II, as a Regulus missile boat, and during the Vietnam War.
- The second USS Tunny (SSN-682) (en:USS Tunny (SSN-682)), a Sturgeon-class submarine, served during the last years of the Cold War.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tunny}}
[[en:USS Tunny]]
[[pl:USS Tunny]]
USS Tunxis is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Tunxis (1864) (en:USS Tunxis (1864)), an American Civil War monitor.
- References
{{DANFS}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tunxis}}
[[en:USS Tunxis]]
Two submarines of the United States Navy have been named USS Turbot for the turbot, a large, brown and white flatfish, valued as a food.
- USS G-3 (SS-31) (en:USS Turbot (SS-31)) was a G-class submarine which served before World War I. She was renamed G-3 before she was launched.
- USS Turbot (SS-427) (en:USS Turbot (SS-427)) was a Balao-class submarine that had not been completed at the end of World War II.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Turbot}}
[[en:USS Turbot]]
[[pl:USS Turbot]]
Five vessels of the British Royal Navy have been named HMS Turbulent:
- HMS Turbulent (1805) (en:Turbulent), launched in 1805, was a gun-brig.
- HMS Turbulent (1916) (en:Turbulent), launched in 1916, was a Talisman-class destroyer. She served in World War I and was sunk at the battle of Jutland on 1 June 1916.
- HMS Turbulent (1919) (en:Turbulent), launched in 1919, was an S-class destroyer. She was sold in 1936.
- HMS Turbulent (N98) (en:Turbulent (N98)), launched in 1941, was a T-class submarine. She served in World War II and was sunk by a mine off Maddalena, Sardinia.
- HMS Turbulent (S87) (en:Turbulent (S87)), launched in 1982, is a Trafalgar-class submarine.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Turbulent, Hms}}
[[de:HMS Turbulent]]
[[en:HMS Turbulent]]
[[sl:HMS Turbulent]]
[[sv:HMS Turbulent]]
USS Turkey may refer to:
- USS Turkey (AM-13) (en:USS Turkey (AM-13)), laid down on 19 August 1917 at Chester, Pennsylvania
- USS Turkey (AMS-56) (en:USS Turkey (AMS-56)), laid down as YMS-444 on 16 November 1943 at Kingston, New York
- References
{{DANFS}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Turkey}}
[[en:USS Turkey]]
USS Turner may refer to:
- USS Turner (DD-259) (en:USS Turner (DD-259)), a Clemson-class destroyer commissioned in 1919; converted to a water barge in 1936 as USS Moosehead (IX-98) in 1943; scrapped in 1947
- USS Turner (DD-506), a planned destroyer; contract was cancelled, 1941
- USS Turner (DD-648) (en:USS Turner (DD-648)), a Gleaves-class destroyer commissioned in 1943 and destroyed by internal explosions in 1944
- USS Turner (DD-834) (en:USS Turner (DD-834)), a Gearing-class destroyer commissioned in 1945 and decommissioned in 1969
- USS Turner Joy (DD-951) (en:USS Turner Joy (DD-951))
- USS Richmond K. Turner (CG-20) (en:USS Richmond K. Turner (CG-20))
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Turner}}
[[en:USS Turner]]
[[pl:USS Turner]]
[[sl:USS Turner]]
USS Tuscaloosa has been the name of two ships of the United States Navy. Both are named for the city of Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
- USS Tuscaloosa (CA-37) (en:USS Tuscaloosa (CA-37)), a New Orleans-class heavy cruiser, which served from 1934 until 1946.
- USS Tuscaloosa (LST-1187) (en:USS Tuscaloosa (LST-1187)), a Newport-class tank landing ship, that served from 1970 until 1994.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tuscaloosa}}
Tuscan Star was the name of two ships operated by the Blue Star Line.
- SS Tuscan Star (en:SS Tuscan Star) (not exists)
- MV California Star (1945) (en:MV Tuscan Star)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
[[en:Tuscan Star]]
USS Tuscumbia is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
- USS Tuscumbia (1862) (en:USS Tuscumbia (1862)), a gunboat in the United States Navy during the American Civil War.
- USS Tuscumbia (YTB-762) (en:USS Tuscumbia (YTB-762)), a tugboat launched in November 1945.
- References
{{DANFS}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tuscumbia}}
[[en:USS Tuscumbia]]
HMS Tweed may refer to several Royal Navy ships, including:
- HMS Tweed (1759) (en:HMS Tweed (1759))
- HMS Tweed (1823) (en:HMS Tweed (1823)) was a 28-gun Sixth Rate frigate built in 1823 at Portsmouth and sold in 1852. (not exists)
- HMS Tweed (1877) (en:HMS Tweed (1877)), torpedo gunboat (not exists)
- HMS Tweed (1943) (en:HMS Tweed (1943)), River Class frigate of 1460 tons displacement launched about 1943 and sunk during the Second World War[1] (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tweed, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Tweed]]
Two ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS Twiggs, named in honor of Marine Major Levi Twiggs (1793–1847).
- USS Twiggs (DD-127) (en:USS Twiggs (DD-127)) was a Wickes-class destroyer, launched in 1918. She was transferred to the United Kingdom in 1940 as HMS Leamington (G19). She was subsequently transferred to the Royal Canadian Navy in 1942, back to the Royal Navy in 1943, and to the Soviet Navy in 1944 who renamed her Jgoochyi or Zhguchi. She was returned to Great Britain in 1950, and scrapped 1951.
- USS Twiggs (DD-591) (en:USS Twiggs (DD-591)) was a Fletcher-class destroyer, launched in 1943 and sunk during the Battle of Okinawa in 1945.
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Twiggs}}
[[en:USS Twiggs]]
[[pl:USS Twiggs]]
[[sl:USS Twiggs]]
SS Twilight may refer to one of two Type C2-S-B1 ships built for the United States Maritime Commission:
- USS Ormsby (APA-49) (en:SS Twilight (1942)) (MC hull number 288), built by Moore Dry Dock in Oakland, California; later became USS Ormsby (AP-94/APA-49); scrapped in 1969 after accident
- SS Twilight (1946) (en:SS Twilight (1946)) (MC hull number 2823), built by Consolidated Steel in Wilmington, California; scrapped in 1973 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Twilight}}
[[en:SS Twilight]]
Six ships of the Royal Navy have been named HMS Tyne, after the River Tyne, England:
- The first HMS Tyne (1814) (en:Tyne), launched in 1814, was a 28-gun sixth-rate. (not exists)
- The second HMS Tyne (1826) (en:Tyne) 1826 was another 28-gun sixth-rate. (not exists)
- The third HMS Tyne (1867) (en:Tyne), launched in 1867 as Active, was a Royal Naval Reserve training ship. (not exists)
- The fourth HMS Tyne (1878) (en:Tyne), launched in 1878 as SS Mariotis, was a troop ship sunk in 1920. (not exists)
- The fifth HMS Tyne (F24) (en:Tyne (F24)), launched in 1940, was a Hecla-class depot ship. She served in World War II and the Korean War and was scrapped in 1972. (not exists)
- The sixth and current Tyne (P281) is a River-class patrol vessel.
- Battle honours
- Бомарсунд Бомарсунд — крепость XIX века, расположенная в Финляндии на Аландских островах в муниципалитете Сунд. (en:Baltic 1854)
- Корейская война Корейская война — конфликт между Северной Кореей и Южной Кореей, длившийся с 25 июня 1950 по 27 июля 1953 года (хотя официального окончания войны объявлено не было). (en:Korea 1953)
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tyne, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Tyne]]
[[sl:HMS Tyne]]
Type 12 frigate can refer to several ship classes. It most commonly describes the common design of three ship classes of the Royal Navy designed during the 1950s and constructed during the 1960s.
- The first Type 12 frigates, designed as convoy escorts, were later named the Whitby class. Six operated in the Royal Navy, with one loaned to the Royal New Zealand Navy, and two built for the Indian Navy.
- The design of the Type 12 Modified (Type 12M) or Rothesay class was optimised towards anti-submarine warfare and fleet escort duties, and fitted with the Sea Cat missile system. Nine were built for the Royal Navy, two for the Royal New Zealand Navy, and three (as the 'President class') for the South African Navy.
- The third class, designed as an all-purpose warship, was known as the Type 12 Improved (Type 12I) or the Leander class. The class was made up of three 'batches'; the main differences between each batch being variations in propulsion machinery and weapons outfit. 26 were built for the Royal Navy, some of which later saw service in the navies of Chile, Ecuador, New Zealand, and Pakistan.
The Type 12 designation is sometimes used to refer to warship classes based on the Type 12 design, but constructed or operated by other naval forces. Some of these are still in service as of 2009:
- The Condell class frigate (en:Condell-class) frigates of the Chilean Navy. Based on the Leander class, this class consisted of four ships, two purpose-built, and two former Royal Navy Leanders.
- The River class destroyer escort (en:River-class) destroyer escorts of the Royal Australian Navy. Six were constructed: two to the Rothesay design, two to the same design but modified to carry a variable-depth sonar and an Ikara missile system (which was retrofitted to the first to), and two to an Australian-designed Leander variant.
- The Nilgiri class frigate (en:Nilgiri-class) frigates of the Indian Navy. Six were constructed to an updated design based on the Leanders.
- The Godavari class frigate (en:Godavari) and Brahmaputra-class frigates of the Indian Navy. An enlarged Nilgiri design was used as the basis for six ships (three of each class), with the weapons outfit the main difference between them.
- Фрегаты типа «Ван Спейк» «Ван Спейк» (нидерл. Van Speijkklasse) — тип фрегатов УРО ВМС Нидерландов. (The en:Van Speijk-class frigates of the Royal Netherlands Navy. Based on the Leander design but with Dutch radars, six ships were built. All six were later transferred to the Indonesian Navy)
- References
- {{cite book |last=Jeremy |first=John C. |editor=Stevens, David & Reeve, John |title=The Navy and the Nation: the influence of the Navy on modern Australia |year=2005 |publisher=Allen & Unwin |location=Crows Nest, NSW |isbn=1741142008 |oclc=67872922 |chapter=Australian shipbuilding and the impact of World War II |pages=196–8}}
- External links
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Five ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS Tyrian:
- HMS Tyrian (1808) (en:HMS Tyrian) was a 10-gun Cherokee-class brig-sloop launched in 1808 and sold in 1819. (not exists)
- HMS Tyrian (1826) (en:HMS Tyrian) was a 10-gun Cherokee-class brig-sloop launched in 1826. She was used as a quarantine hulk from 1847, a coastguard depot ship from 1866 and was sold in 1892. (not exists)
- HMS Tyrian (1861) (en:HMS Tyrian) was a Britomart-class wooden screw gunboat launched in 1861, used as a tug from 1883 and was sold in 1891. (not exists)
- HMS Tyrian (1919) (en:HMS Tyrian) was an S-class destroyer launched in 1919 and scrapped in 1930. (not exists)
- HMS Tyrian (R67) (en:HMS Tyrian) was a T-class destroyer launched in 1942. She was converted to a Type 16 frigate between 1951 and 1952, and was scrapped in 1965.
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Tyrian, Hms}}
[[en:HMS Tyrian]]
{{For|other uses of U-1|U-1 (disambiguation)}}
U-1 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-1 (Germany) (en:SM U-1 (Germany)) (1906), Germany's first U-boat, now preserved in the Deutsches Museum in Munich; served in the First World War as a German training submarine for the Kaiserliche Marine; now a museum ship
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM U-10 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM UB-1), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915; transferred to Austria-Hungary on 12 July 1915 and renamed U-10; sunk on 9 July 1918
- SM UC-1 (en:SM UC-1), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk in July 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-1 (1935) U-1 — немецкая подводная лодка типа IIA, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-1 (1935), a Type IIA submarine that served in the Second World War and was sunk in April 1940)
- German submarine U-1 (S180) (en:German submarine U-1 (S180)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1967 and sold in 1991 (not exists)
U-1 or U-I may also refer to:
- SM U-1 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-1 (Austria-Hungary)), lead boat of the U-1 class submarines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-001}}
U-1 class submarine may refer to:
- U-1 class submarine (Austria-Hungary) (en:U-1 class submarine (Austria-Hungary)), a class of two submarines built 1909–1910
- SM U-1 (Germany) (en:U-1 class submarine (Germany)), a class of one submarine built 1906
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-001 Class Submarine}}
{{otherusesof|U-2|U-2 (disambiguation)}}
U-2 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-2 (Germany) (en:SM U-2 (Germany)), a unique submarine launched in 1908 that served in the First World War as a training submarine and was scrapped in 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-2 (en:SM UB-2), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and scrapped in 1919
- SM UC-2 (en:SM UC-2), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 30 June 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-2 (1935) U-2 — немецкая подводная лодка типа IIA времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-2 (1935), a Type IIA submarine that served in the Second World War and was sunk on 8 April 1944)
- German submarine U-2 (S181) (en:German submarine U-2 (S181)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1966 and sold in 1993 (not exists)
U-2 or U-II may also refer to:
- SM U-2 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-2 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-1 class Austro-Hungarian Navy submarine
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-002}}
{{otherusesof|U-3|U-3 (disambiguation)}}
U-3 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-3 (Germany) (en:SM U-3 (Germany)), lead ship of the Type U-3 class of submarines; launched in 1909 and served in the First World War as a training submarine; surrendered in 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-3 (en:SM UB-3), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 23 May 1915
- SM UC-3 (en:SM UC-3), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 27 May 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-3 (1935) U-3 — немецкая подводная лодка типа II-A времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-3 (1935), a Type IIA submarine that served in the Second World War and was scrapped in 1945)
- German submarine U-3 (S182) (en:German submarine U-3 (S182)), a Type 201 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1964; loaned out to Royal Norwegian Navy from 1964 to 1966; later broken up (not exists)
U-3 or U-III may also refer to:
- SM U-3 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-3 (Austria-Hungary)), lead boat of the U-3 class submarines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-003}}
U-4 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-4 (Germany) (en:SM U-4 (Germany)), was a Type U 3 submarine launched in 1909 and served in the First World War as a training submarine; scrapped in 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-4 (en:SM UB-4), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 15 August 1915
- SM UC-4 (en:SM UC-4), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and scuttled on 5 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-4 (1935) U-4 — немецкая подводная лодка типа IIA времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-4 (1935), a Type IIA submarine that served in the Second World War and was stricken in 1944 and scrapped in 1945)
- German submarine U-4 (S183) (en:German submarine U-4 (S183)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1962 and scrapped in 1974 (not exists)
U-4 or U-IV may also refer to:
- SM U-4 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-4 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-3 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-004}}
U-5 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-5 (Germany) (en:SM U-5 (Germany)), was the lead ship of the Type U 5 class of submarines; launched in 1910 and served in the First World War until sunk on 18 December 1914
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-5 (en:SM UB-5), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and broken up in 1919
- SM UC-5 (en:SM UC-5), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and grounded on 27 April 1916; the scuttling charges did not go off and the submarine was captured and displayed in London and New York for propaganda purposes
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-5 (1935) U-5 — немецкая подводная лодка типа II-A времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-5 (1935), a Type IIA submarine that served in the Second World War and was sunk on 19 March 1943)
- German submarine U-5 (S184) (en:German submarine U-5 (S184)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1963 and scrapped in 1974 (not exists)
U-5 or U-V may also refer to:
- SM U-5 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-5 (Austria-Hungary)), lead boat of the U-5 class submarines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-005}}
[[de:SM U 5]]
[[en:German submarine U-5]]
U-6 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-6 (Germany) (en:SM U-6 (Germany)), was a Type U 5 submarine launched in 1910 and served in the First World War until sunk on 15 September 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-6 (en:SM UB-6), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 18 March 1917
- SM UC-6 (en:SM UC-6), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 27 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-6 (1935) U-6 — немецкая подводная лодка типа II-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-6 (1935), a Type IIA submarine that served in the Second World War and was stricken on 7 August 1944)
- German submarine U-6 (S185) (en:German submarine U-6 (S185)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1963 and sold in 1974 (not exists)
U-6 or U-VI may also refer to:
- SM U-6 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-6 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-5 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-006}}
U-7 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-7 (en:SM U-7), was a Type U 5 submarine launched in 1910 and served in the First World War until sunk on 21 January 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-7 (en:SM UB-7), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 27 September 1916
- SM UC-7 (en:SM UC-7), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and grounded on 5 July 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-7 (1935) U-7 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-7 (1935), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and stricken on 18 February 1944)
- German submarine U-7 (S186) (en:German submarine U-7 (S186)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1964 and sold in 1965 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-007}}
SM U-7 (Austria-Hungary) may refer to one of the following World War I German U-boats:
- SM U-66 (en:SM U-66), ordered as U-7, the lead boat for the Austro-Hungarian Navy U-7 class; sold to Germany before 1915 launch; became lead boat of German Type U 66 submarine; disappeared September 1917
- SM UB-7 (en:SM UB-7), a German Type UB I submarine that operated in the Mediterranean; co-flagged as the Austro-Hungarian U-boat SM U-7; disappeared September 1916
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-007 (Austria-Hungary)}}
U-8 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-8 (en:SM U-8), a Type U 5 submarine launched in 1911 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 4 March 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-8 (en:SM UB-8), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915; transferred to Bulgaria on 25 March 1916; surrendered on 25 February 1919; broken up at Bizerte in August 1921
- SM UC-8 (en:SM UC-8), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and grounded on 4 November 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-8 (1935) U-8 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-8 (1935), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was scuttled on 2 May 1945)
- German submarine U-8 (S187) (en:German submarine U-8 (S187)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1964 and scrapped in 1974 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-008}}
SM U-8 (Austria-Hungary) may refer to one of the following World War I German U-boats:
- SM U-67 (en:SM U-67), ordered as U-8, part of the Austro-Hungarian Navy U-7 class; sold to Germany before 1915 launch and became one of the German Type U 66 submarines; surrendered to the British and broken up in 1921
- SM UB-8 (en:SM UB-8), a German Type UB I submarine that operated in the Mediterranean; co-flagged as the Austro-Hungarian U-boat SM U-8; sold to Bulgaria in May 1916 as Podvodnik No. 18 (in Cyrillic: Пoдвoдник No. 18); surrendered to France and broken up in August 1921
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-008 (Austria-Hungary)}}
U-9 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- U-9 (1910) U-9 — германская керосин-электрическая подводная лодка времён Первой мировой войны. 22 сентября 1914 года под командованием Отто Веддигена U-9 за полтора часа последовательно потопила три британских крейсера. (en:SM U-9, was the lead ship of the Type U 9 class of submarines; launched in 1910 and served in the First World War until surrendered on 26 November 1918, and famous for the Action of 22 September 1914)
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-9 (en:SM UB-9), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and stricken on 19 February 1919
- SM UC-9 (en:SM UC-9), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk 20 October 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-9 (1935) U-9 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-9 (1935), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and sank on 20 August 1944)
- German submarine U-9 (S188) (en:German submarine U-9 (S188)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1967 and decommissioned in 1993
U-9 or U-IX may also refer to:
- U-IX, an Austro-Hungarian Navy submarine
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-009}}
[[de:U 9 (Bundeswehr)]]
[[en:German submarine U-9]]
[[es:U-9]]
[[pl:U-9]]
[[sl:U-9 (Kriegsmarine)]]
SM U-9 (Austria-Hungary) may refer to one of the following World War I German U-boats:
- SM U-68 (en:SM U-68), ordered as U-9, part of the Austro-Hungarian Navy U-7 class; sold to Germany before 1915 launch and became one of the German Type U 66 submarines; sunk in March 1916 during first patrol by British Q ship
- SM UB-3 (en:SM UB-3), a German Type UB I submarine that operated in the Mediterranean; co-flagged as the Austro-Hungarian U-boat SM U-9; disappeared May 1915
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-009 (Austria-Hungary)}}
{{redirect|U-10|U-10 Aircraft|Helio Courier}}
U-10 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-10 (Germany) (en:SM U-10 (Germany)), was a Type U 9 submarine launched in 1911 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 30 June 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-10 (en:SM UB-10), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and scuttled on 5 October 1918
- SM UC-10 (en:SM UC-10), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk 21 August 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-10 (1935) U-10 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-10 (1935), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was stricken on 1 August 1944)
- German submarine U-10 (S189) (en:German submarine U-10 (S189)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1967; sold in 1993; now a museum ship in Wilhelmshaven (not exists)
U-10 or U-X may also refer to:
- SM U-10 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-10 (Austria-Hungary)), lead boat of the U-10 class submarines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-010}}
U-11 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-11 (Germany) (en:SM U-11 (Germany)), was a Type U 9 submarine launched in 1911 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 9 December 1914
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-11 (en:SM UB-11), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and stricken on 19 February 1919
- SM UC-11 (en:SM UC-11), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk 26 June 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-11 (1935) U-11 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-11 (1935), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was stricken on 5 January 1945; scuttled 2 May 1945)
- German submarine U-11 (S190) (en:German submarine U-11 (S190)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1968; decommissioned in 2003; now a museum ship in Burgstaaken, Fehmarn (not exists)
U-11 or U-XI may also refer to:
- SM U-11 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-11 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-10 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-011}}
[[U-11]]
[[de:U 11]]
[[en:German submarine U-11]]
[[es:U-11]]
[[fr:U11]]
[[nl:U11]]
[[pl:U-11]]
{{Other uses|U12 (disambiguation)}}
U-12 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-12 (Germany) (en:SM U-12 (Germany)), was a Type U 9 submarine launched in 1910 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 10 March 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-12 (en:SM UB-12), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and disappeared in August 1918
- SM UC-12 (en:SM UC-12), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 16 March 1916; raised by Italy and became Italian submarine X-1;
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-12 (1935) U-12 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-12 (1935), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was sunk on 8 October 1939)
- German submarine U-12 (S191) (en:German submarine U-12 (S191)), a Type 205 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1969 and decommissioned in 2005 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-012}}
U-13 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-13 (en:SM U-13), was the lead ship of the Type U 13 class of submarines; launched in 1910 and served in the First World War until sunk on 12 August 1914
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-13 (en:SM UB-13), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 24 April 1916
- SM UC-13 (en:SM UC-13), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and grounded on 29 November 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-13 (1935) U-13 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-13 (1935), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was sunk on 31 May 1940)
- German submarine U-13 (S192) (en:German submarine U-13 (S192)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1973 and scrapped in 1997 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-013}}
[[U-13]]
[[de:U 13]]
[[en:German submarine U-13]]
[[es:U-13]]
[[fr:U13]]
[[nl:U13]]
[[pl:U-13]]
U-14 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-14 (Germany) (en:SM U-14 (Germany)), was a Type U 13 submarine launched in 1911 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 5 June 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-14 (en:SM UB-14), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and surrendered in November 1918
- SM UC-14 (en:SM UC-14), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 3 October 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-14 (1936) U-14 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-14 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was scuttled on 2 May 1945)
- German submarine U-14 (S193) (en:German submarine U-14 (S193)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1973 and scrapped in 1997 (not exists)
U-14 or U-XIV may also refer to:
- SM U-14 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-14 (Austria-Hungary)), the former French submarine Curie (Q 87); captured, raised, and commissioned into the Austro-Hungarian Navy during the First World War
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-014}}
[[U-14]]
[[de:U 14]]
[[en:German submarine U-14]]
[[es:U-14]]
[[fr:U14]]
[[nl:U14]]
[[pl:U-14]]
U-15 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-15 (Germany) (en:SM U-15 (Germany)), was a Type U 13 submarine launched in 1911 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 9 August 1914
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM U-11 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM UB-15), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915; transferred to Austria-Hungary on 14 June 1915 and became U-11; broken up in Pola in 1920
- SM UC-15 (en:SM UC-15), a Type UC I submarine launched in 1915 and lost in November 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-15 (1936) U-15 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-15 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was sunk on 30 January 1940)
- German submarine U-15 (S194) (en:German submarine U-15 (S194)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and still in service {{as of|2008|1|17|lc=on|url=http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUVQ2?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699KBL528INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp}}
(not exists)
U-15 or U-XV may also refer to:
- SM U-15 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-15 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-10 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-015}}
U-16 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-16 (Germany) (en:SM U-16 (Germany)), was the lead ship of the Type U 16 class of submarines; launched in 1911 and served in the First World War until sunk in an accident on 8 February 1919, en route to surrender
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-16 (en:SM UB-16), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 and sunk 10 May 1918
- SM UC-16 (en:SM UC-16), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and lost in October 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-16 (1936) U-16 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-16 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was sunk on 25 October 1939)
- German submarine U-16 (S195) (en:German submarine U-16 (S195)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1973 and still in service {{as of|2008|1|17|lc=on|url=http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUVQ2?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699KBL528INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp}}
(not exists)
U-16 or U-XVI may also refer to:
- SM U-16 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-16 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-10 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-016}}
U-17 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-17 (Germany) (en:SM U-17 (Germany)), was the lead ship of the Type U 17 class of submarines; launched in 1912 and served in the First World War until stricken on 27 January 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-17 (en:SM UB-17), a Type UB I submarine launched in 1915 that disappeared in March 1918
- SM UC-17 (en:SM UC-17), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered 26 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-17 (1935) U-17 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-17 (1935), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was scuttled on 5 May 1945)
- German submarine U-17 (S196) (en:German submarine U-17 (S196)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1973 and still in service {{as of|2008|1|17|lc=on|url=http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUVQ2?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699KBL528INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp}}
(not exists)
U-17 or U-XVII may also refer to:
- SM U-17 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-17 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-10 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-017}}
U-18 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-18 (en:SM U-18), was a Type U 17 submarine launched in 1912 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 23 November 1914
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-18 (en:SM UB-18), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk 9 December 1917
- SM UC-18 (en:SM UC-18), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk 19 February 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-18 (1936) U-18 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-18 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was scuttled on 25 August 1944)
- German submarine U-18 (S197) (en:German submarine U-18 (S197)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1973 and still in service {{as of|2008|1|17|lc=on|url=http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUVQ2?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699KBL528INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp}}
(not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-018}}
[[U-18]]
[[de:U 18]]
[[en:German submarine U-18]]
[[es:U-18]]
[[fr:U18]]
[[nl:U18]]
[[pl:U-18]]
U-19 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-19 (en:SM U-19), was the lead ship of the Type U 19 class of submarines; launched in 1912 and served in the First World War until surrendered on 24 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-19 (en:SM UB-19), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk 30 November 1916
- SM UC-19 (en:SM UC-19), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk 6 December 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-19 (1936) U-19 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-19 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was scuttled on 11 September 1944)
- German submarine U-19 (S198) (en:German submarine U-19 (S198)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1973 and scrapped in 1998 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-019}}
{{Redirect6|U-20|the football event|FIFA U-20 World Cup|the women's event|FIFA U-20 Women's World Championship}}
U-20 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-20 (en:SM U-20 (Germany)), was a Type U 19 submarine launched in 1912 and that served in the First World War until grounded on 4 November 1916; notable for sinking RMS Lusitania
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-20 (en:SM UB-20), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk 28 July 1917
- SM UC-20 (en:SM UC-20), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 16 January 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-20 (1936) U-20 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-20 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and was scuttled on 10 September 1944)
- German submarine U-20 (S199) (en:German submarine U-20 (S199)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and scrapped in 1996 and sold to Indonesia (not exists)
U-20 or U-XX may also refer to:
- SM U-20 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-20 (Austria-Hungary)), lead boat of the U-20 class submarines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-020}}
[[U-20]]
[[de:U 20]]
[[en:German submarine U-20]]
[[es:U-20]]
[[fr:U20]]
[[nl:U20]]
[[pl:U-20]]
U-21 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-21 (Germany) (en:SM U-21 (Germany)), was a Type U 19 submarine launched in 1913 and that served in the First World War; sank HMS Pathfinder, the first ship sunk by a torpedo fired from a submarine; U-21 sank on 22 February 1919 while en route to be surrendered
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-21 (en:SM UB-21), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and surrendered 24 November 1918
- SM UC-21 (en:SM UC-21), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and lost in September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-21 (1936) (en:German submarine U-21 (1936)), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War; stricken on 5 August 1944 and scrapped in February 1945
- German submarine U-21 (S170) (en:German submarine U-21 (S170)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and scrapped in 1998 (not exists)
U-21 or U-XXI may also refer to:
- SM U-21 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-21 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-20 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-021}}
U-22 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-22 (Germany) (en:SM U-22 (Germany)), was a Type U 19 submarine launched in 1913 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 1 December 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-22 (en:SM UB-22), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk 19 January 1918
- SM UC-22 (en:SM UC-22), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 3 February 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-22 (1936) U-22 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-22 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War and went missing 27 March 1940)
- Подводные лодки проекта 206 Подводные лодки проекта 206 (нем. Klasse 206) — серия германских дизель-электрических подводных лодок. (en:German submarine U-22 (S171), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and still in service {{as of|2008|1|17|lc=on|url=http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUVQ2?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699KBL528INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp}}
)
U-22 or U-XXII may also refer to:
- SM U-22 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-22 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-20 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-022}}
[[U-22]]
[[de:U 22]]
[[en:German submarine U-22]]
[[nl:U22]]
[[pl:U-22]]
U-23 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-23 (Germany) (en:SM U-23 (Germany)), was the lead ship of the Type U 23 class of submarines; launched in 1913 and served in the First World War until sunk on 20 July 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-23 (en:SM UB-23), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and interned in Spain 29 July 1917
- SM UC-23 (en:SM UC-23), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 25 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-23 (1936) U-23 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-23 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 10 September 1944)
- German submarine U-23 (S172) (en:German submarine U-23 (S172)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and still in service {{as of|2008|1|17|lc=on|url=http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUVQ2?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699KBL528INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp}}
(not exists)
U-23 or U-XXIII may also refer to:
- SM U-23 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-23 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-20 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-023}}
[[U-23]]
[[de:U 23]]
[[en:German submarine U-23]]
[[nl:U23]]
[[pl:U-23]]
U-24 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-24 (en:SM U-24), was a Type U 23 submarine launched in 1913 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 22 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-24 (en:SM UB-24), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and surrendered on 24 November 1918
- SM UC-24 (en:SM UC-24), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 24 May 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-24 (1936) U-24 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-B для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-24 (1936), a Type IIB submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 25 August 1944)
- German submarine U-24 (S173) (en:German submarine U-24 (S173)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and still in service {{as of|2008|1|17|lc=on|url=http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUVQ2?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699KBL528INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp}}
(not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-024}}
[[U-24]]
[[de:U 24]]
[[en:German submarine U-24]]
[[nl:U24]]
[[pl:U-24]]
U-25 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-25 (en:SM U-25), was a Type U 23 submarine launched in 1913 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 23 February 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-25 (en:SM UB-25), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and surrendered on 26 November 1918
- SM UC-25 (en:SM UC-25), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and scuttled on 28 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-25 (1936) U-25 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа I, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-25 (1936), a Type IA submarine that served in the Second World War until lost in August 1940)
- German submarine U-25 (S174) (en:German submarine U-25 (S174)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974; no longer in service {{as of|2008|1|17|http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUVQ2?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699KBL528INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp%7Clc=on}}
(not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-025}}
[[U-25]]
[[de:U 25]]
[[en:German submarine U-25]]
[[nl:U25]]
[[pl:U-25]]
U-26 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-26 (en:SM U-26), was a Type U 23 submarine launched in 1913 and that served in the First World War; torpedoed Russian armored cruiser Pallada in October 1914; sunk in August/September 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-26 (en:SM UB-26), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and scuttled on 5 April 1916; later raised by French and commissioned as Roland Morillot
- SM UC-26 (en:SM UC-26), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and scuttled on 8 May 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-26 (1936) U-26 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа I, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-26 (1936), a Type IA submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 1 July 1940)
- German submarine U-26 (S175) (en:German submarine U-26 (S175)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and removed from service in 2005 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-026}}
[[U-26]]
[[de:U 26]]
[[en:German submarine U-26]]
[[nl:U26]]
[[pl:U-26]]
U-27 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-27 (Germany) (en:SM U-27 (Germany)), was the lead ship of the Type U 27 class of submarines; launched in 1913 and served in the First World War until sunk on 19 August 1915; the events surrounding U-27{{'}}
s sinking are known as the Baralong Incident- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-27 (en:SM UB-27), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 27 July 1917
- SM UC-27 (en:SM UC-27), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 3 February 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-27 (1936) U-27 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-27 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 20 September 1939)
- German submarine U-27 (S176) (en:German submarine U-27 (S176)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and scrapped in 1996 (not exists)
U-27 or U-XXVII may also refer to:
- SM U-27 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-27 (Austria-Hungary)), lead boat of the U-27 class submarines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-027}}
[[U-27]]
[[de:U 27]]
[[en:German submarine U-27]]
[[nl:U27]]
[[pl:U-27]]
U-27 class submarine may refer to:
- U-27 class submarine (Austria-Hungary) (en:U-27 class submarine (Austria-Hungary)), a class of 8 boats based on the German Type UB II submarine and built 1916–1917
- U-27 class submarine (Germany) (en:U-27 class submarine (Germany)), a class of 4 boats built 1913 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-027 Class Submarine}}
U-28 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-28 (Germany) (en:SM U-28 (Germany)), was a Type U 27 submarine launched in 1913 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 2 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-28 (en:SM UB-28), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 24 November 1918
- SM UC-28 (en:SM UC-28), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 12 February 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-28 (1936) U-28 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-28 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk at pier on 17 March 1944; later raised, but stricken 4 August 1944)
- German submarine U-28 (S177) (en:German submarine U-28 (S177)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and scrapped in 1996 (not exists)
U-28 or U-XXVIII may also refer to:
- SM U-28 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-28 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-27 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
- U-28 is the designation for the Pilatus PC-12 used by the United States Air Force
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-028}}
[[U-28]]
[[de:U 28]]
[[en:German submarine U-28]]
[[nl:U28]]
[[pl:U-28]]
U-29 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-29 (Germany) (en:SM U-29 (Germany)), was a Type U 27 submarine launched in 1913 and that served in the First World War until sunk by HMS Dreadnought on 18 March 1915, the only submarine to be sunken by a battleship
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-29 (en:SM UB-29), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 13 December 1916
- SM UC-29 (en:SM UC-29), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 7 June 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-29 (1936) U-29 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-29 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 4 May 1945)
- German submarine U-29 (S178) (en:German submarine U-29 (S178)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1974 and decommissioned in 2004 (not exists)
U-29 or U-XXIX may also refer to:
- SM U-29 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-29 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-27 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-029}}
U-30 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-30 (Germany) (en:SM U-30 (Germany)), was a Type U 27 submarine launched in 1913 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 22 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-30 (en:SM UB-30), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 13 August 1918
- SM UC-30 (en:SM UC-30), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 21 April 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-30 (1936) U-30 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-30 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 4 May 1945)
- German submarine U-30 (S179) (en:German submarine U-30 (S179)), a Type 206 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 1975 (not exists)
U-30 or U-XXX may also refer to:
- SM U-30 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-30 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-27 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-030}}
[[U-30]]
[[de:U 30]]
[[en:German submarine U-30]]
[[nl:U30]]
[[pl:U-30]]
[[sl:U-30]]
U-31 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-31 (Germany) (en:SM U-31 (Germany)), was the lead ship of the Type U 31 class of submarines; launched in 1914 and served in the First World War until sunk on 13 January 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-31 (en:SM UB-31), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 2 May 1918
- SM UC-31 (en:SM UC-31), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 26 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-31 (1936) U-31 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-31 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 2 November 1940)
- German submarine U-31 (S181) (en:German submarine U-31 (S181)), a Type 212 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 2002 and still in service {{as of | 2008 | 1 | 17 | lc = on | url = http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUjBR?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699K5A242INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp }}
U-31 or U-XXXI may also refer to:
- SM U-31 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-31 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-27 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-031}}
[[U-31]]
[[de:U 31]]
[[en:German submarine U-31]]
[[nl:U31]]
[[pl:U-31]]
U-32 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-32 (Germany) (en:SM U-32 (Germany)), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 8 May 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-32 (en:SM UB-32), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 22 September 1917
- SM UC-32 (en:SM UC-32), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 23 February 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-32 (1937) U-32 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-32 (1937), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 30 October 1940)
- German submarine U-32 (S182) (en:German submarine U-32 (S182)), a Type 212 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 2003 and in service {{as of | 2008 | 1 | 17 | lc = on | url = http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUjBR?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699K5A242INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp }}
U-32 or U-XXXII may also refer to:
- SM U-32 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-32 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-27 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-032}}
U-33 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-33 (en:SM U-33), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 16 January 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-33 (en:SM UB-33), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 11 April 1918
- SM UC-33 (en:SM UC-33), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 26 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-33 (1936) U-33 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-33 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 12 February 1940)
- German submarine U-33 (S183) (en:German submarine U-33 (S183)), a Type 212 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 2004 and in service {{as of | 2008 | 1 | 17 | lc = on | url = http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUjBR?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699K5A242INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp }}
(not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-033}}
[[U-33]]
[[de:U 33]]
[[en:German submarine U-33]]
[[nl:U33]]
[[pl:U-33]]
U-34 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-34 (en:SM U-34), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War; disappeared after 18 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-34 (en:SM UB-34), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and surrendered on 26 November 1918
- SM UC-34 (en:SM UC-34), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and scuttled on 30 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-34 (1936) U-34 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-34 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 5 August 1943)
- German submarine U-34 (S184) (en:German submarine U-34 (S184)), a Type 212 submarine of the Bundesmarine that was launched in 2006 and in service {{as of | 2008 | 1 | 17 | lc = on | url = http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUjBR?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699K5A242INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp }}
(not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-034}}
[[U-34]]
[[de:U 34]]
[[en:German submarine U-34]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 34]]
[[nl:U34]]
[[pl:U-34]]
U-35 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-35 (en:SM U-35), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 26 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-35 (en:SM UB-35), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 26 January 1918
- SM UC-35 (en:SM UC-35), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and scuttled on 17 May 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-35 (1936) U-35 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-35 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 29 November 1939)
- German submarine U-35 (S185) (en:German submarine U-35 (S185)), a Type 212 submarine of the Bundesmarine that has been ordered and is not yet in service {{as of | 2008 | 1 | 17 | lc = on | url = http://www.marine.de/portal/a/marine/kcxml/04_Sj9SPykssy0xPLMnMz0vM0Y_QjzKLNzKOD_QzA8mB2d5mIfqRcNGglFR9X4_83FR9b_0A_YLciHJHR0VFAMCgKn8!/delta/base64xml/L2dJQSEvUUt3QS80SVVFLzZfMjNfUjBR?yw_contentURL=%2F01DB070000000001%2FW2699K5A242INFODE%2Fcontent.jsp }}
(not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-035}}
[[U-35]]
[[de:U 35]]
[[en:German submarine U-35]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 35]]
[[nl:U 35]]
[[pl:U-35]]
U-36 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-36 (en:SM U-36), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 24 July 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-36 (en:SM UB-36), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 9 May 1917
- SM UC-36 (en:SM UC-36), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 21 May 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-36 (1936) U-36 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIA времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-36 (1936), a Type VIIA submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 4 December 1939)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-036}}
[[U-36]]
[[de:U 36]]
[[en:German submarine U-36]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 36]]
[[nl:U 36]]
[[pl:U-36]]
U-37 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-37 (en:SM U-37), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 30 April 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-37 (en:SM UB-37), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1915 and sunk on 14 January 1917
- SM UC-37 (en:SM UC-37), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered in 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-37 (1938) U-37 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-37 (1938), a Type IX submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 8 May 1945)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-037}}
[[U-37]]
[[de:U 37]]
[[en:German submarine U-37]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 37]]
[[nl:U 37]]
[[pl:U-37]]
U-38 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-38 (en:SM U-38), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 23 February 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-38 (en:SM UB-38), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 8 February 1918; in 2008 UB-38{{'}}
s wreck was moved to reduce the danger to shipping - SM UC-38 (en:SM UC-38), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk 14 December 1917
- SM UB-38 (en:SM UB-38), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 8 February 1918; in 2008 UB-38{{'}}
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-38 (1938) U-38 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-38 (1938), a Type IX submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 5 May 1945)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-038}}
U-39 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-39 (en:SM U-39), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until interned in Spain on 18 May 1918; surrendered to France on 22 March 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-39 (en:SM UB-39), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 7 May 1917
- SM UC-39 (en:SM UC-39), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk 8 February 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-39 (1938) U-39 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:U-39, was a Type IX submarine and the first U-Boat to be sunk during the Second World War on 14 September 1939.)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-039}}
[[U-39]]
[[de:U 39]]
[[en:German submarine U-39]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 39]]
[[nl:U 39]]
[[pl:U-39]]
German submarine U-40 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-40 (Germany) (en:SM U-40 (Germany)), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until sunk 23 June 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-40 (en:SM UB-40), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and scuttled on 5 October 1918
- SM UC-40 (en:SM UC-40), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 21 January 1919 while on way to surrender
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-40 (1939) U-40 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-40 (1938), a Type IX submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 13 October 1939)
U-40 or U-XL may also refer to:
- SM U-40 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-40 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-27 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-040}}
[[U-40]]
[[de:U 40]]
[[en:German submarine U-40]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 40]]
[[nl:U 40]]
[[pl:U-40]]
U-41 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-41 (Germany) (en:SM U-41 (Germany)), was a Type U 31 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until sunk 24 September 1915
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-41 (en:SM UB-41), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 5 October 1917
- SM UC-41 (en:SM UC-41), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 21 August 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-41 (1939) U-41 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-41 (1939), a Type IX submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 5 February 1940)
U-41 or U-XLI may also refer to:
- SM U-41 (Austria-Hungary) (en:SM U-41 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-27 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-041}}
[[U-41]]
[[de:U 41]]
[[en:German submarine U-41]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 41]]
[[nl:U 41]]
[[pl:U-41]]
U-42 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-42 (en:SM U-42) was ordered from Fiat-Laurenti for observation of competitive technologies; never delivered to Germany due to outbreak of war; served in Italian Navy as Balillo from 1915; sunk in July 1916 off the island of Lissa
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-42 (en:SM UB-42), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 16 November 1918
- SM UC-42 (en:SM UC-42), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 10 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-42 (1939) U-42 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-42 (1939), a Type IX submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 13 October 1939)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-042}}
[[U-42]]
[[de:U 42]]
[[en:German submarine U-42]]
[[nl:U 42]]
[[pl:U-42]]
U-43 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-43 (Germany) (en:SM U-43 (Germany)), the lead ship of the Type U 43 class of submarines; launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 20 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-43 (en:SM UB-43), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916; transferred to Austria-Hungary and renamed U-43; surrendered on 6 November 1918
- SM UC-43 (en:SM UC-43), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 10 March 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-43 (1939) U-43 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-43 (1939), a Type IX submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 30 July 1943)
U-43 or U-XLIII may also refer to:
- SM UB-43 (en:SM U-43 (Austria-Hungary)), lead boat of the U-43 class submarines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-043}}
[[U-43]]
[[de:U 43]]
[[en:German submarine U-43]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 43]]
[[nl:U 43]]
[[pl:U-43]]
U-43 class submarine may refer to:
- U-43 class submarine (Austria-Hungary) (en:U-43 class submarine (Austria-Hungary)), a class of two former German Type UB II coastal submarines sold to the Austro-Hungarian Navy during World War I
- U-43 class submarine (Germany) (en:U-43 class submarine (Germany)), a class of eight ocean-going submarines built at the Imperial Dockyard at Danzig during World War I (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-043 Class Submarine}}
U-44 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-44 (en:SM U-44), was a Type U 43 submarine launched in 1914 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 12 August 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-44 (en:SM UB-44), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and disappeared after 4 August 1916
- SM UC-44 (en:SM UC-44), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 4 August 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-44 (1939) U-44 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-A, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-44 (1939), a Type IX submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk in March 1940)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-044}}
[[U-44]]
[[de:U 44]]
[[en:German submarine U-44]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 44]]
[[nl:U 44]]
[[pl:U-44]]
[[sl:U-44]]
U-45 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-45 (en:SM U-45), was a Type U 43 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 12 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-45 (en:SM UB-45), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 6 November 1916
- SM UC-45 (en:SM UC-45), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 17 September 1917; raised on 11 April 1918; re-entered service on 24 October 1918; surrendered on 24 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-45 (1938) U-45 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-45 (1938), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 14 October 1939. )
- Media
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-045}}
[[U-45]]
[[de:U 45]]
[[en:German submarine U-45]]
[[nl:U 45]]
[[pl:U-45]]
U-46 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-46 (en:SM U-46), was a Type U 43 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until surrendered to Japan on 26 November 1918; later served as Japanese submarine O-2, 1920–21; rebuilt for test purposes in 1925 but lost in storm; hulk scuttled after discovered by U.S. merchant ship in August 1927
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-46 (en:SM UB-46), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 7 December 1916
- SM UC-46 (en:SM UC-46), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 8 February 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-46 (1938) U-46 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-46 (1938), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until stricken in 14 October 1943; scuttled 4 May 1945)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-046}}
U-47 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-47 (Germany) (en:SM U-47 (Germany)), a Type U 43 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until scuttled on 28 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-47 (en:SM UB-47), a Type UB II submarine launched in 1916; transferred to Austria-Hungary on 20 July 1917 and renamed U-47; surrendered in 1920
- SM UC-47 (en:SM UC-47), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 18 November 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-47 (1938) U-47 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-47 (1938), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until she went missing after 7 March 1941)
U-47 or U-XLVII may also refer to:
- SM UB-47 (en:SM U-47 (Austria-Hungary)), a U-43 class submarine of the Austro-Hungarian Navy
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-047}}
[[U-47]]
[[de:U 47]]
[[en:German submarine U-47]]
[[nl:U 47]]
[[pl:U-47]]
[[sl:U-47 (Kriegsmarine)]]
U-48 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-48 (en:SM U-48), a Type U 43 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until scuttled on 24 November 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-48 (en:SM UB-48), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and scuttled on 28 October 1918
- SM UC-48 (en:SM UC-48), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and interned in Spain on 23 March 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-48 (1939) U-48 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-48 (1939), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 3 May 1945)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-048}}
[[U-48]]
[[de:U 48]]
[[en:German submarine U-48]]
[[es:U-48]]
[[nl:U 48]]
[[pl:U-48]]
U-49 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-49 (en:SM U-49), a Type U 43 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 11 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-49 (en:SM UB-49), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered 16 January 1919; broken up at Swansea in 1922 (not exists)
- SM UC-49 (en:SM UC-49), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 8 August 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-49 (1939) U-49 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-49 (1939), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 15 April 1940)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-049}}
[[U-49]]
[[de:U 49]]
[[en:German submarine U-49]]
[[nl:U 49]]
[[pl:U-49]]
U-50 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-50 (en:SM U-50), a Type U 43 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk on or after 31 August 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-50 (en:SM UB-50), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered 16 January 1919; broken up at Swansea in 1922
- SM UC-50 (en:SM UC-50), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and went missing after 7 January 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-50 (1939) U-50 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-50 (1939), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 6 April 1940)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-050}}
[[U-50]]
[[de:U 50]]
[[en:German submarine U-50]]
[[nl:U 50]]
U-51 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-51 (en:SM U-51), the lead ship of the Type U 51 class of submarines; launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk 14 July 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-51 (en:SM UB-51), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered 16 January 1919; broken up at Swansea in 1922 (not exists)
- SM UC-51 (en:SM UC-51), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk 17 November 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-51 (1938) U-51 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-51 (1938), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 20 August 1940)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-051}}
[[U-51]]
[[de:U 51]]
[[en:German submarine U-51]]
[[nl:U 51]]
[[pl:U-51]]
U-52 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-52 (en:SM U-52), a Type U 51 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until surrendered 21 November 1918; broken up at Swansea in 1922
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-52 (en:SM UB-52), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 23 May 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-52 (en:SM UC-52), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 16 January 1919; broken up at Morecambe in 1922
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-52 (1938) (en:German submarine U-52 (1938)), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until stricken October 1943; scuttled 3 May 1945 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-052}}
[[U-52]]
[[de:U 52]]
[[en:German submarine U-52]]
[[nl:U 52]]
[[pl:U-52]]
U-53 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-53 (en:SM U-53), a Type U 51 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered 1 December 1918; broken up at Swansea in 1922
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-53 (en:SM UB-53), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 3 August 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-53 (en:SM UC-53), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and scuttled on 28 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-53 (1939) (en:German submarine U-53 (1939)), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 23 February 1940 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-053}}
[[U-53]]
[[de:U 53]]
[[en:German submarine U-53]]
[[nl:U 53]]
[[pl:U-53]]
U-54 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-54 (en:SM U-54), a Type U 51 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered 24 November 1918; broken up at Taranto in May 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-54 (en:SM UB-54), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and disappeared after 1 March 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-54 (en:SM UC-54), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and scuttled on 28 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-54 (1939) U-54 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-54 (1939), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until she went missing after 20 February 1940)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-054}}
[[U-54]]
[[de:U 54]]
[[en:German submarine U-54]]
[[nl:U 54]]
[[pl:U-54]]
U-55 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-55 (en:SM U-55), a Type U 51 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered 26 November 1918; in service as Japanese submarine O-3, 1920–21; dismantled at Sasebo, March–June 1921; briefly recommissioned as Auxiliary Vessel No. 2538, 1923
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-55 (en:SM UB-55), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 23 April 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-55 (en:SM UC-55), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 29 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-55 (1939) (en:German submarine U-55 (1939)), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk 30 January 1940 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-055}}
[[U-55]]
[[de:U 55]]
[[en:German submarine U-55]]
[[it:U-55]]
[[nl:U55]]
[[pl:U-55]]
U-56 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-56 (en:SM U-56), a Type U 51 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until she went missing after 3 November 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-56 (en:SM UB-56), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 19 December 1917 (not exists)
- SM UC-56 (en:SM UC-56), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and interned at Santander, Spain, on 24 May 1918. UC-56 sank the British hospital ship Glenart Castle on 26 February 1918.
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-56 (1939) (en:German submarine U-56 (1939)), a Type IIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk 28 April 1945 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-056}}
[[U-56]]
[[de:U 56]]
[[en:German submarine U-56]]
[[nl:U 56]]
[[pl:U-56]]
U-57 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-57 (en:SM U-57), the lead ship of the Type U 57 class of submarines; launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 24 November 1918; broken up at Cherbourg in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-57 (en:SM UB-57), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 14 August 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-57 (en:SM UC-57), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and disappeared after 18 November 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-57 (1938) U-57 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-C для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-57 (1938), a Type IIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk 3 September 1940; raised later in the month and returned to service on 11 January 1941; scuttled on 3 May 1945)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-057}}
U-58 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-58 (en:SM U-58), a Type U 57 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 17 November 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-58 (en:SM UB-58), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 10 March 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-58 (en:SM UC-58), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 24 November 1918; broken up at Cherbourg in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-58 (1939) (en:German submarine U-58 (1939)), a Type IIC submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 3 May 1945 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-058}}
[[U-58]]
[[de:U 58]]
[[en:German submarine U-58]]
[[nl:U 58]]
[[pl:U-58]]
U-59 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-59 (en:SM U-59), a Type U 57 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 14 May 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-59 (en:SM UB-59), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and scuttled on 5 October 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-59 (en:SM UC-59), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Bo'ness in 1920–21
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-59 (1939) (en:German submarine U-59 (1939)), a Type IIC submarine that served in the Second World War until stricken in April 1945; scuttled at Kiel (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-059}}
[[U-59]]
[[de:U 59]]
[[en:German submarine U-59]]
[[nl:U 59]]
[[pl:U-59]]
U-60 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-60 (en:SM U-60), a Type U 57 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 21 November 1918; grounded on English east coast on way to be broken up, 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-60 (en:SM UB-60), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 26 November 1918; grounded on English east coast on way to be broken up, 1921 (not exists)
- SM UC-60 (en:SM UC-60), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 23 February 1919; broken up at Rainham in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-60 (1939) (en:German submarine U-60 (1939)), a Type IIC submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled 2 May 1945 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-060}}
[[U-60]]
[[de:U 60]]
[[en:German submarine U-60]]
[[nl:U 60]]
[[pl:U-60]]
U-61 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-61 (en:SM U-61), a Type U 57 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 26 March 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-61 (en:SM UB-61), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk 29 November 1917 (not exists)
- SM UC-61 (en:SM UC-61), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and scuttled on 26 July 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-61 (1939) (en:German submarine U-61 (1939)), a Type IIC submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled 2 May 1945 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-061}}
[[U-61]]
[[de:U 61]]
[[en:German submarine U-61]]
[[nl:U 61]]
[[pl:U-61]]
U-62 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-62 (en:SM U-62), a Type U 57 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 22 November 1918; broken up at Bo'ness in 1920–21
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-62 (en:SM UB-62), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Swansea in 1922 (not exists)
- SM UC-62 (en:SM UC-62), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 14 October 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-62 (1939) U-62 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-C для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-62 (1939), a Type IIC submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled 2 May 1945)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-062}}
U-63 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-63 (en:SM U-63), the lead ship of the Type U 63 class of submarines; launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 16 January 1919; broken up at Blyth in 1922
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-63 (en:SM UB-63), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and disappeared after 14 January 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-63 (en:SM UC-63), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 1 November 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-63 (1940) U-63 — малая немецкая подводная лодка типа II-C для прибрежных вод, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-63 (1939), a Type IIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk 25 February 1940)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-063}}
[[U-63]]
[[de:U 63]]
[[en:German submarine U-63]]
[[nl:U 63]]
[[pl:U-63]]
U-64 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-64 (en:SM U-64), a Type U 63 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 17 June 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-64 (en:SM UB-64), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Fareham in 1921 (not exists)
- SM UC-64 (en:SM UC-64), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 20 June 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-64 (1939) U-64 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-B, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-64 (1939), a Type IXB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 13 April 1940)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-064}}
[[U-64]]
[[de:U 64]]
[[en:German submarine U-64]]
[[nl:U 64]]
[[pl:U-64]]
U-65 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-65 (en:SM U-65), a Type U 63 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until scuttled on 28 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-65 (en:SM UB-65), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk after 14 July 1918
- SM UC-65 (en:SM UC-65), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 3 November 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-65 (1940) (en:German submarine U-65 (1940)), a Type IXB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 28 April 1940
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-065}}
[[U-65]]
[[de:U 65]]
[[en:German submarine U-65]]
[[nl:U 65]]
[[pl:U-65]]
U-66 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-66 (en:SM U-66), the lead ship of the Type U 66 class of submarines; launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 3 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-66 (en:SM UB-66), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and went missing after 18 January 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-66 (en:SM UC-66), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 12 June 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-66 (1941) U-66 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-C, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-66 (1940), a Type IXC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 6 May 1944)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-066}}
[[U-66]]
[[de:U 66]]
[[en:German submarine U-66]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 66]]
[[nl:U 66]]
U-67 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-67 (en:SM U-67), a Type U 66 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 20 November 1918; broken up at Fareham in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-67 (en:SM UB-67), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 24 November 1918; broken up at Swansea in 1922 (not exists)
- SM UC-67 (en:SM UC-67), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 16 January 1919; broken up at Brighton Ferry in 1919–20
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-67 (1940) (en:German submarine U-67 (1940)), a Type IXC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 16 July 1943 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-067}}
U-68 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-68 (en:SM U-68), a Type U 66 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk 22 March 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-68 (en:SM UB-68), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 4 October 1918
- SM UC-68 (en:SM UC-68), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 17 March 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-68 (1940) U-68 — большая океанская немецкая подводная лодка типа IX-C, времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-68 (1940), a Type IXC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 10 April 1943)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-068}}
[[U-68]]
[[de:U 68]]
[[en:German submarine U-68]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 68]]
[[nl:U 68]]
[[pl:U-68]]
U-69 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-69 (en:SM U-69), a Type U 66 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk after 11 July 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-69 (en:SM UB-69), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 9 January 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-69 (en:SM UC-69), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 6 December 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-69 (1940) U-69 «Смеющаяся корова» (фр. «La Vache qui Rit») — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны, головная лодка модификации VIIC. (en:German submarine U-69 (1940), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 17 February 1943)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-069}}
[[U-69]]
[[de:U 69]]
[[en:German submarine U-69]]
[[es:U-69]]
[[nl:U 69]]
[[pl:U-69]]
U-70 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-70 (en:SM U-70), a Type U 66 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 20 November 1918; broken up at Bo'ness in 1920–21
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-70 (en:SM UB-70), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and disappeared after 5 May 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-70 (en:SM UC-70), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 28 August 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-70 (1940) U-70 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-70 (1940), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 7 March 1941)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-070}}
[[U-70]]
[[de:U 70]]
[[en:German submarine U-70]]
[[nl:U 70]]
[[pl:U-70]]
U-71 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-71 (en:SM U-71), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 23 February 1919; broken up at Cherbourg in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-71 (en:SM UB-71), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 21 April 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-71 (en:SM UC-71), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 20 February 1919 on way to surrender
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-71 (1940) (en:German submarine U-71 (1940)), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 2 May 1945 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-071}}
[[U-71]]
[[de:U 71]]
[[en:German submarine U-71]]
[[nl:U 71]]
[[pl:U-71]]
U-72 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-72 (en:SM U-72), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until scuttled on 1 November 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-72 (en:SM UB-72), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 12 May 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-72 (en:SM UC-72), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and went missing after 21 August 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-72 (1940) U-72 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-72 (1940), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until scuttled on 2 May 1945)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-072}}
[[U-72]]
[[de:U 72]]
[[en:German submarine U-72]]
[[nl:U 72]]
[[pl:U-72]]
U-73 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-73 (en:SM U-73), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until scuttled on 30 October 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-73 (en:SM UB-73), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Brest, France, in July 1921 (not exists)
- SM UC-73 (en:SM UC-73), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 6 January 1919; broken up at Brighton Ferry in 1919–20
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-73 (1940) U-73 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-73 (1940), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 16 December 1943)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-073}}
[[U-73]]
[[de:U 73]]
[[en:German submarine U-73]]
[[nl:U 73]]
[[pl:U-73]]
U-74 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-74 (en:SM U-74), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk 17 May 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-74 (en:SM UB-74), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 26 May 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-74 (en:SM UC-74), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and interned at Barcelona on 21 November 1918; surrendered on 26 March 1919; broken up at Toulon in July 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-74 (1940) U-74 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-74 (1940), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 2 May 1942)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-074}}
[[U-74]]
[[de:U 74]]
[[en:German submarine U-74]]
[[nl:U 74]]
[[pl:U-74]]
U-75 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-75 (en:SM U-75), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1915 and that served in the First World War until sunk 13 December 1917; laid the mine that sank HMS Hampshire, killing Lord Kitchener<ref>{{cite news | url = http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/north_east/6172692.stm | title = U-boats' last resting place found | work = BBC News | date = 2006-11-22 | accessdate = 2007-12-16 }}
</ref>- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-75 (en:SM UB-75), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 10 December 1917 (not exists)
- SM UC-75 (en:SM UC-75), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk 31 May 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-75 (1940) U-75 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-75 (1940), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 28 December 1941)
- References
{{reflist}}
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-075}}
[[U-75]]
[[de:U 75]]
[[en:German submarine U-75]]
[[nl:U 75]]
[[pl:U-75]]
U-76 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-76 (en:SM U-76), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk 22 January 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-76 (en:SM UB-76), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 12 February 1919; broken up at Rochester in 1922 (not exists)
- SM UC-76 (en:SM UC-76), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and surrendered on 1 December 1918; broken up at Brighton Ferry in 1919–20
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-76 (1940) (en:German submarine U-76 (1940)), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 5 April 1941
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-076}}
[[U-76]]
[[de:U 76]]
[[en:German submarine U-76]]
[[nl:U 76]]
[[pl:U-50]]
U-77 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-77 (en:SM U-77), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk 7 July 1916
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-77 (en:SM UB-77), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 16 January 1919; broken up at Swansea in 1922 (not exists)
- SM UC-77 (en:SM UC-77), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 14 July 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-77 (1940) U-77 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-77 (1940), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 28 March 1943)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-077}}
[[U-77]]
[[de:U 77]]
[[en:German submarine U-77]]
[[nl:U 77]]
[[pl:U-77]]
U-78 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-78 (en:SM U-78), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk 27 October 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-78 (en:SM UB-78), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 19 April 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-78 (en:SM UC-78), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk on 9 May 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-78 (1940) U-78 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-78 (1940), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 16 April 1945)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-078}}
[[U-78]]
[[de:U 78]]
[[en:German submarine U-78]]
[[nl:U 78]]
[[pl:U-78]]
U-79 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-79 (en:SM U-79), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered 21 November 1918; became the French submarine Victor Reveille; broken up in 1935
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-79 (en:SM UB-79), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 26 November 1918; broken up at Swansea in 1922 (not exists)
- SM UC-79 (en:SM UC-79), a Type UC II submarine launched in 1916 and sunk after 5 April 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-79 (1941) U-79 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-79 (1941), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 23 December 1941)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-079}}
[[U-79]]
[[de:U 79]]
[[en:German submarine U-79]]
[[nl:U 79]]
[[pl:U-79]]
U-80 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-80 (en:SM U-80), a Type UE 1 submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 16 January 1919; broken up at Swansea in 1922
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-80 (en:SM UB-80), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 26 November 1918; broken up at La Spezia in May 1919 (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- German submarine U-80 (1941) (en:German submarine U-80 (1941)), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 28 November 1944 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-080}}
[[U-80]]
[[de:U 80]]
[[en:German submarine U-80]]
[[nl:U 80]]
[[pl:U-80]]
U-81 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-81 (en:SM U-81), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 1 May 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-81 (en:SM UB-81), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 2 December 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- U-81 (1941) U-81 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-81 (1941), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 9 January 1944; raised on 22 April 1944 and broken up)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-081}}
[[U-81]]
[[de:U 81]]
[[en:German submarine U-81]]
[[nl:U 81]]
[[pl:U-81]]
U-82 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-82 (en:SM U-82), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 16 January 1919; broken up at Blyth in 1922
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-82 (en:SM UB-82), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 17 April 1918 (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- U-82 (1941) U-82 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-82 (1941), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 6 February 1942)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-082}}
[[U-82]]
[[de:U 82]]
[[en:German submarine U-82]]
[[fr:Unterseeboot 82]]
[[nl:U 82]]
[[pl:U-82]]
U-83 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-83 (en:SM U-83), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 17 February 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-83 (en:SM UB-83), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 10 September 1918 (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- U-83 (1941) U-83 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-83 (1941), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 4 March 1943)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-083}}
[[U-83]]
[[de:U 83]]
[[en:German submarine U-83]]
[[nl:U 83]]
[[pl:U-83]]
U-84 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-84 (en:SM U-84), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 26 January 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-84 (en:SM UB-84), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 26 November 1918; broken up at Brest in 1921 (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- U-84 (1941) U-84 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-84 (1941), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 7 August 1943)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-084}}
[[U-84]]
[[de:U 84]]
[[en:German submarine U-84]]
[[nl:U 84]]
[[pl:U-84]]
U-85 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-85 (en:SM U-85), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 12 March 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-85 (en:SM UB-85), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 30 April 1918. In a similar way to the SM U-28 sinking the British steamship Iberian, there were reports allegedly of a sea monster appearing as the U-Boat sunk. (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- U-85 (1941) U-85 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-85 (1941), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 14 April 1942)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-085}}
[[U-85]]
[[de:U 85]]
[[en:German submarine U-85]]
[[nl:U 85]]
[[pl:U-85]]
U-86 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-86 (en:SM U-86), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 20 November 1918; sank in English Channel on the way to being broken up in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-86 (en:SM UB-86), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 24 November 1918; grounded near Falmouth and broken up in situ in 1921 (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- U-86 (1941) U-86 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIB времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-86 (1941), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 29 November 1943)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-086}}
[[U-86]]
[[de:U 86]]
[[en:German submarine U-86]]
[[nl:U 86]]
[[pl:U-86]]
U-87 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-87 (en:SM U-87), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 25 December 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-87 (en:SM UB-87), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 20 November 1918; broken up at Brest in 1921 (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- German submarine U-87 (1941) (en:German submarine U-87 (1941)), a Type VIIB submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 4 March 1943 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-087}}
[[U-87]]
[[de:U 87]]
[[en:German submarine U-87]]
[[nl:U 87]]
[[pl:U-87]]
U-88 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-88 (en:SM U-88), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 5 September 1917
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-88 (en:SM UB-88), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and surrendered on 26 November 1918; used as an exhibition in the United States; scuttled at San Pedro, California on 3 January 1921 after being used as gunnery target by USS Wilkes (DD-67) (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- U-88 (1941) U-88 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-88 (1941), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 12 September 1942)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-088}}
[[U-88]]
[[de:U 88]]
[[en:German submarine U-88]]
[[nl:U 88]]
[[pl:U-88]]
U-89 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-89 (en:SM U-89), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 12 February 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- SM UB-89 (en:SM UB-89), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1917 and sunk on 21 October 1918 after collision with SMS Frankfurt; raised 30 October 1918; drifted off course on way to surrender on 7 March 1919; taken to IJmuiden and broken up at Dordrecht in 1920 (not exists)
- During the First World War, Germany also had this submarine with a similar name:
- U-89 (1941) U-89 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-89 (1941), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 12 May 1943)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-089}}
[[U-89]]
[[de:U 89]]
[[en:German submarine U-89]]
[[nl:U 89]]
[[pl:U-89]]
U-90 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-90 (en:SM U-90), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1917 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 20 November 1918; broken up at Bo'ness in 1920–21
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-90 (en:SM UB-90), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and sunk on 16 October 1918 (not exists)
- SM UC-90 (en:SM UC-90), a Type UC III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 1 December 1918; served as Japanese submarine O-4, 1920–21; broken up at Kure Navy Yard in 1921; used as target at submarine school at Kure, 1924–26; sold for scrap
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-90 (1941) (en:German submarine U-90 (1941)), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 24 July 1942 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-090}}
[[U-90]]
[[de:U 90]]
[[en:German submarine U-90]]
[[nl:U 90]]
[[pl:U-90]]
U-91 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-91 (en:SM U-91), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1917 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 26 November 1918; broken up at Brest in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-91 (en:SM UB-91), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Briton Ferry in 1919–20 (not exists)
- SM UC-91 (en:SM UC-91), a Type UC III submarine launched in 1918 and sunk on 10 January 1919 on way to surrender
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-91 (1941) U-91 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-91 (1941), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 26 February 1944)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-091}}
[[U-91]]
[[de:U 91]]
[[en:German submarine U-91]]
[[nl:U 91]]
[[pl:U-91]]
U-92 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-92 (en:SM U-92), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1917 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 9 September 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-92 (en:SM UB-92), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Bo'ness in 1920–21 (not exists)
- SM UC-92 (en:SM UC-92), a Type UC III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 24 November 1918; grounded near Falmouth and broken up in situ in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-92 (1942) (en:German submarine U-92 (1942)), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until damaged in an air attack on 4 October 1944; scrapped 1944–45 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-092}}
[[U-92]]
[[de:U 92]]
[[en:German submarine U-92]]
[[nl:U 92]]
[[pl:U-92]]
U-93 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-93 (en:SM U-93), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1916 and that served in the First World War until it went missing after 15 January 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-93 (en:SM UB-93), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Rochester in 1922 (not exists)
- SM UC-93 (en:SM UC-93), a Type UC III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 26 November 1918; broken up at La Spezia in August 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- German submarine U-93 (1940) (en:German submarine U-93 (1940)), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 15 January 1942 (not exists)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-093}}
[[U-93]]
[[de:U 93]]
[[en:German submarine U-93]]
[[nl:U 93]]
[[pl:U-93]]
U-94 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-94 (en:SM U-94), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1917 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 20 November 1918; broken up at Bo'ness in 1920–21
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-94 (en:SM UB-94), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 22 November 1918; became French submarine Trinité Schillemans until 24 July 1935; broken up (not exists)
- SM UC-94 (en:SM UC-94), a Type UC III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 26 November 1918; broken up at Taranto in August 1919
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-94 (1940) U-94 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-94 (1940), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 28 August 1942)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-094}}
[[U-94]]
[[de:U 94]]
[[en:German submarine U-94]]
[[nl:U 94]]
[[pl:U-94]]
U-95 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-95 (en:SM U-95), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1917 and that served in the First World War until sunk on 16 January 1918
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-95 (en:SM UB-95), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at La Spezia in May 1919 (not exists)
- SM UC-95 (en:SM UC-95), a Type UC III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 22 November 1918; broken up at Fareham in 1921
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-95 (1940) U-95 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны. (en:German submarine U-95 (1940), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 28 November 1941)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-095}}
[[U-95]]
[[de:U 95]]
[[en:German submarine U-95]]
[[nl:U 95]]
[[pl:U-95]]
U-96 may refer to one of the following German submarines:
- SM U-96 (en:SM U-96), a Type Mittel U submarine launched in 1917 and that served in the First World War until surrendered on 20 November 1918; broken up at Bo'ness in 1920–21
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- SM UB-96 (en:SM UB-96), a Type UB III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 21 November 1918; broken up at Bo'ness in 1920–21 (not exists)
- SM UC-96 (en:SM UC-96), a Type UC III submarine launched in 1918 and surrendered on 24 November 1918; broken up at Morecambe in 1919–20
- During the First World War, Germany also had these submarines with similar names:
- U-96 (1940) U-96 — средняя немецкая подводная лодка типа VIIC времён Второй мировой войны, стала одной из самых знаменитых субмарин после издания романа «Лодка» (нем. Das Boot) и одноимённого фильма. (en:German submarine U-96 (1940), a Type VIIC submarine that served in the Second World War until sunk on 30 March 1945; the subject of the director Wolfgang Petersen's 1981 film, Das Boot.)
{{неоднозначность|корабли}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:U-096}}
[[U-96]]
[[de:U 96]]
[[en:German submarine U-96]]
[[nl:U 96]]
[[pl:U-96]]