「HMS」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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development of the submarine was the design for | HMS A1, the first British-designed boat and a signi |
Wreck of | HMS A1, the first British submarine casualty, disco |
s, although slightly bigger than the lead ship, | HMS A1. |
HMS A11 was an early Royal Navy submarine. | |
HMS A12 was an early Royal Navy submarine. | |
During World War I, | HMS A2 served on harbour service at Portsmouth. |
HMS A2 was an early Royal Navy submarine. | |
HMS A3 was an early Royal Navy submarine. | |
HMS A6 was an early Royal Navy submarine. | |
HMS A8 was an early Royal Navy submarine. | |
Appointed command of | HMS A9 on 5 October 1911. |
HMS A9 was an early Royal Navy submarine. | |
Temporarily named | HMS Abbot and then quickly renamed HMS Charlestown, |
by the cruiser USS Boise and the fast minelayer | HMS Abdiel. |
HMS Abeille was a 14-gun cutter of the Royal Navy. | |
HMS Abelia (K184) was a Flower-class corvette that | |
HMS Abercrombie sailed for the Dardanelles on 24 Ju | |
HMS Abercrombie was laid down at the Harland and Wo | |
HMS Abercrombie was built by Vickers Armstrong, Tyn | |
HMS Abercrombie was a Royal Navy Roberts class moni | |
On completion of repairs, | HMS Abercrombie was despatched to the Pacific, but |
Guadeloupe in the captured D'Haupoult, renamed | HMS Abercromby. |
HMS Aboukir was a Cressy-class armoured cruiser. | |
lescent British Cressy-class armoured cruisers ( | HMS Aboukir, HMS Hogue, and HMS Cressy), (sardonica |
ptember, U-9 sank the obsolete British warships | HMS Aboukir, Cressy and Hogue (the "Live Bait Squad |
ce ( with a loss 1,459 lives in the sinkings of | HMS Aboukir, Cressy and Hogue) in the same morning |
f the Glorious and her two screening destroyers | HMS Acasta and HMS Ardent were left to fend for the |
ng been appointed to command the 40-gun frigate | HMS Acasta. |
rth Western Approaches and on 16 August she and | HMS Achates attacked a U-boat that had been sighted |
HMS Acheron was the name ship of the Acheron-class | |
HMS Acheron (P411) was an Amphion-class submarine o | |
HMS Acheron was an A-class destroyer of the Royal N | |
In 1956 he took command of his first submarine, | HMS Acheron, and went on to command the submarines |
essential for economic development and in 1848 | HMS Acheron, a steam paddle sloop, began the "Great |
e served in the New Zealand Division commanding | HMS Achilles at the Battle of the River Plate in De |
The broadside ironclad | HMS Achilles was the third member of the 1861 progr |
it was stopped in the North Sea by the cruiser | HMS Achilles and ordered to proceed to the boarding |
HMS Achilles was a Dunkirk-class fourth rate, along | |
HMS Achilles was a Duke of Edinburgh-class armoured | |
HMS Achilles seen from Ajax during the Battle of th | |
He commanded the | HMS Achilles from 1877 until he was drawn into serv |
HMS Achilles was a 60-gun fourth rate ship of the l | |
ilt for the Royal Navy, she was commissioned as | HMS Achilles on 10 October 1933. |
er a period of 21 years, including the cruisers | HMS Achilles and HMS Leander, the training mineswee |
2 as a Midshipman aboard the broadside ironclad | HMS Achilles. |
at Port St. George and leave behind the 20-gun | HMS Acorn to protect the harbour. |
In 1836, Charlton requested the | HMS Actaeon sent under command of Lord Edward Russe |
HMS Active | |
HMS Active (F171) was a Type 21-class frigate of th | |
In May 1947 | HMS Active was decommissioned and sold for scrap. |
court martial and given command of the frigate | HMS Active. |
ent doing initial Deck Launch Training (DLT) on | HMS Activity. |
During the war, Griffiths served on | HMS Adamant and played football for the English Com |
ny, Ireland 1749 - 1783) was a quartermaster on | HMS Adventure during Captain Cook's Second Voyage 1 |
In 1628 he was given command of the | HMS Adventure and later he commanded the HMS Garlan |
nine years served under Phillip Parker King on | HMS Adventure and John Franklin in the Mediterranea |
HMS Adventure was a 34-gun fourth rate frigate of t | |
capacity he successively commanded: The frigate | HMS Adventure, the third rate HMS Dictator, the thi |
HMS Advice was a 40-gun fourth-rate frigate of the | |
HMS Aeneas (P427), named after the hero Aeneas from | |
Hurd's Deep is the final resting place of | HMS Affray which sank in 1951. |
1 she heard and decoded a distress message from | HMS Affray, which was sunk with the ultimate loss o |
HMS Africa | |
HMS Africa was a 64-gun third-rate ship of the line | |
HMS Africa attacked the head of the Allied line (to | |
He commanded | HMS Africa at the Battle of Trafalgar, manoeuvering |
Dundas went on to command the 64-gun | HMS Africa, another Trafalgar veteran, and the 74-g |
f the English Channel, but in 1803 he was given | HMS Africa, an old, small battleship which possesse |
906, she transferred her crew to the battleship | HMS Africa. |
HMS Afridi was a Tribal class destroyer of the Roya | |
Survivors from the Bison were picked up by | HMS Afridi, which was then sunk by the Stukas. |
In 1919 she became | HMS Afrikander and was transferred to the South Afr |
to the Royal Navy in December 1932 and re-named | HMS Afrikander II in 1933. |
to the Royal Navy in December 1932 and renamed | HMS Afrikander II in 1933. |
nuary 1794 and in May 1796 was appointed to the | HMS Agamemnon with Captain Nelson, whom he followed |
HMS Agamemnon on an earlier visit to Moudros during | |
96, Captain Horatio Nelson was transferred from | HMS Agamemnon into Captain by Admiral Sir John Jerv |
l Somerset Arthur Gough-Calthorpe, on board the | HMS Agamemnon in Moudros harbor on the Greek island |
d who had recently been appointed as Captain of | HMS Agamemnon a 64-gun third-rate, which was being |
22 October 1853 to 1 January 1854 as captain of | HMS Agamemnon, flagship to Rear-Admiral Edmund Lyon |
readnought in active service (outlasted only by | HMS Agamemnon, which served as a disarmed seagoing |
Launch of | HMS Agamemnon, May 22, 1852. |
mouth, England, 28 March, and experimented with | HMS Agamemnon. |
n of the village prior to his departure to join | HMS Agamemnon. |
HMS Agincourt was a 64-gun third-rate ship of the l | |
ships were commissioned into the Royal Navy as | HMS Agincourt and HMS Erin respectively.) |
In July 1871 she successfully towed | HMS Agincourt off Pearl Rock (Gibraltar). |
ander-in-chief of that Station in his Flagship, | HMS Agincourt in 1844. |
By 1918, | HMS Agincourt had been transferred from the 1st Bat |
HMS Agincourt (D86) was a later or 1943 Battle-clas | |
HMS Agincourt was a 74-gun third rate ship of the l | |
He also commanded the destroyer | HMS Agincourt at home and in East Asia before takin |
The Great Dreadnought: The Strange Story of | H.M.S. Agincourt: The Mightiest Battleship of World W |
d to sea aboard Tyler's new command, the 38-gun | HMS Aigle. |
noon, no less than twelve aircraft had targeted | HMS Airedale, and left it a smoldering wreck. |
HMS Aisne (D22) was a 1943 or later Battle-class fl | |
HMS Ajax was the last of the four ships of the King | |
ley's side when the admiral moved to the 74-gun | HMS Ajax under Captain N. Chasington in December, a |
art in the Battle of the River Plate, alongside | HMS Ajax and HMS Exeter. |
935, McCarthy served in World War II commanding | HMS Ajax from 1940 and HMS Anson from 1943, taking |
Later he commanded | HMS Ajax and then HMS Formidable. |
HMS Ajax and HMS Achilles then shadowed the Graf Sp | |
In 1965, he was given command of the frigate | HMS Ajax and the Second Destroyer Squadron in the F |
HMS Ajax formed part of Admiral Nelson's fleer at t | |
HMS Ajax Captain G. H. Baird; | |
He then commanded the frigate, | HMS Ajax and the First Frigate Squadron from 1983 t |
HMS Ajax bombards Bardia in Libya in December, 1941 | |
HMS Ajax was a 74-gun third rate ship of the line o | |
rved as an ordinary seaman in a famous cruiser, | HMS Ajax, during Operation Torch - the first combin |
Amongst these were the British cruisers | HMS Ajax, HMS Argonaut, HMS Emerald, HMS Orion, the |
HMS Ajax, meanwhile, was detached from the other cr | |
was deposed in 1923 he was conveyed to Mecca in | HMS Ajax. |
rd after an engagement with the British cruiser | HMS Ajax. |
Lend-Lease, and designated British Minesweeper | HMS Akbar (BAM-1). |
g the nineteenth century, the reformatory ships | HMS Akbar and HMS Clarence were also moored there. |
HMS Al Rawdah was a ship of the Royal Navy. | |
damaged by gunfire from the Lynx helicopter of | HMS Alacrity early in the war on 1 May, just off Ki |
HMS Alacrity was a Cruizer-class brig-sloop built b | |
HMS Alamein (D17) was a Later or 1943 Battle-class | |
HMS Alaric (P441), was an Amphion-class submarine o | |
es under George Rodney, Seymour was attached to | HMS Alarm as a midshipman in the Mediterranean. |
HMS Alarm was a 32-gun fifth rate Niger-class friga | |
In 1796, | HMS Alarm violated Trinidad's neutrality, so contri |
experiments held by the British Royal Navy with | HMS Alarm, which was coppered in 1761 and thoroughl |
He was then promoted Commander, and assigned to | HMS Albemarle in 1911. |
in 1904, he was given command of the battleship | HMS Albemarle, of the training ship HMS Impegnable |
leet's new 6th Battle Squadron with battleships | HMS Albemarle, HMS Cornwallis, HMS Duncan, HMS Exmo |
At Singapore, they rendezoused with battleships | HMS Albion and HMS Vengeance. |
By the time evening arrived, | HMS Albion (1763) had also come within range, but t |
On 26 February 1915, Majestic and battleships | HMS Albion and HMS Triumph became the first Allied |
HMS Albion was announced in December 2010 as the ne | |
n the staging collapsed during the launching of | HMS Albion in 1898. |
e was appointed Captain of the aircraft carrier | HMS Albion in 1955, Director of Plans at the Admira |
On 1 September 1914, her sister ship | HMS Albion relieved her, and Canopus transferred to |
HMS Albion was a 74-gun third-rate ship of the line | |
ry, and Sidney, who served in the Royal Navy on | HMS Albion. |
in November 1811 was Captain Murray Maxwell of | HMS Alceste with two other frigates and a sloop. |
Posted | HMS Alcide - A class submarine, 5 July 1951 |
HMS Alcide (P415), was an Amphion-class submarine o | |
She was scuttled the following day by | HMS Aldenham and Hurworth. |
rent range limitations of Hunt class destroyers | HMS Aldenham and RHN Pindos and RHN Themistoklis pr |
HMS Alderney (P416), was an Amphion-class submarine | |
ed the Royal Navy as a Captain's servant aboard | HMS Alderney. |
For Royal Navy ships of this name, see | HMS Alderney. |
Two ships, | HMS Alert and HMS Discovery (captained by Henry Fre |
1952 and was then given command of the frigate | HMS Alert in 1954. |
HMS Alert in pack ice during the Arctic Expedition | |
northern end of Ellesmere Island; he arrived in | HMS Alert in 1875-76. |
st Station before taking command of the frigate | HMS Alert in 1949. |
Alert is named after | HMS Alert, a British ship which wintered about 10 k |
n 18 February 1800 lookouts on the British ship | HMS Alexander sighted the French and gave chase, fo |
He was Captain of the ironclad warship | HMS Alexandra when she fired the first shot at the |
HMS Alexandra was the Flagship of the Mediterranean | |
He subsequently commanded the frigates | HMS Alexandria and HMS Orontes on the North Sea and |
HMS Alexandria, Naval Database | |
HMS Alfred was stationed in the West Indies and wit | |
naki War, he had been promoted in 1859, joining | HMS Algiers in the Mediterranean as lieutenant. |
kyard and recommissioned on 25 February 1953 as | HMS Algonquin (224). |
A new | HMS Alliance gallery is also part of the project to |
planned, which includes reclaiming land beneath | HMS Alliance using a cofferdam and backfill. |
It was announced on 30 May 2011 that | HMS Alliance would share in a £11 million Heritage |
The head on the submarine | HMS Alliance (P417) |
Damage to the stern of | HMS Alliance in 2008 |
e many shipwrecks, which included the submarine | HMS Alliance, now a museum ship at Gosport and the |
eboats and were then ferried to the waiting AMC | HMS Alsatian, and HMS Forward. |
HMS Altham was one of 93 ships of the Ham class of | |
on in an ammunition tent manned by sailors from | HMS Amaranthe. |
HMS Amazon (F169) was the first Type 21 frigate of | |
ion, Canterbury relieved the Royal Navy frigate | HMS Amazon in the Indian Ocean during the Falklands |
ir Squadron and then took charge of the frigate | HMS Amazon. |
HMS Amberley Castle (K386) was a Castle-class corve | |
HMS Ambuscade was a 32-gun fifth-rate frigate of th | |
HMS Ambuscade | |
y planned and ordered from Woolwich Dockyard as | HMS Ambuscade on 13 May 1828, but was renamed on 31 |
ariq (1973), the former British Type 21 frigate | HMS Ambuscade (F172); acquired by the Pakistan Navy |
Artillery and naval gunfire support provided by | HMS Ambuscade's 4.5-in gun. |
rfare Officer in 1981, he served in the frigate | HMS Ambuscade, which included the Falklands War in |
He commanded the frigate, | HMS Ambuscade, from 1976 to 1980 when he was made s |
Dutch ships were based on the British destroyer | HMS Ambuscade. |
HMS Ambush (P418), launched in 1945, was an Amphion | |
HMS Ambush (S120), launched in 2011, is an Astute-c | |
HMS Ambush (P418), was an Amphion-class submarine o | |
He then commanded successively the submarines | HMS Ambush, HMS Aurochs, HMS Tally-Ho and HMS Sangu |
Three vessels of the Royal Navy have been named | HMS Ambush. |
rted the presence of the French frigates to the | HMS Amelia (Captain Frederick Paul Irby). |
HMS America was a 74-gun third rate ship of the lin | |
In 1949, Youde was serving on the frigate | HMS Amethyst amidst the Chinese Civil War when it c |
s Michael Seymour and Frederick Lewis Maitland, | HMS Amethyst and HMS Emerald respectively. |
n the North bank of the Yangtze, which fired on | HMS Amethyst as she steamed up to Nanking in April |
being offered command of the 36-gun fifth rate | HMS Amethyst in 1806. |
Brind's command as C-in-C Far East station that | HMS Amethyst sailed up the Yangtze River and was st |
arch 1909 she collided with third-class cruiser | HMS Amethyst in Portsmouth Harbor, but suffered no |
der Stuart Hett, who had been an officer aboard | HMS Amethyst and had been tasked with responding to |
a vital part in the ‘Yantze incident' involving | HMS Amethyst |
Lt. Cdr. Kerans, commanding | HMS Amethyst, had from the beginning requested that |
1957 film called Yangtse Incident: The Story of | HMS Amethyst, in which Kerans was portrayed by the |
HMS Amphion (P439), was an Amphion-class submarine | |
HMS Amphion, later S-43, was the first of the class | |
When | HMS Amphion, the first Royal Naval ship to be sunk |
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