「hms」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)
該当件数 : 2923件
Harris at a | HMS Cardiff reunion in 2002 |
a Cross while serving under Hall in 1854 aboard | HMS Hecla. |
the end of his career a Fleet Paymaster aboard | HMS Leander, then HMS President, and finally HMS Im |
d Able Seaman in the Royal Navy, serving aboard | HMS Apollo, which was docked in Portsmouth at the t |
The arrangement was composed aboard | HMS Queen Elizabeth in response to Admiral Fisher's |
ng the Navy at a young age, Legge served aboard | HMS Prince George with the young Prince William off |
The court was convened aboard | HMS Britannia on 7 January, though the rest of the |
Hermiones ship cat, sleeps in a hammock aboard | HMS Hermione, whilst members of the crew look on |
They came aboard | HMS Battler between April and May 1943, and took pa |
was a Captain in the Royal Navy and died aboard | HMS Hood 24th May 1941. |
A memorial to those lost aboard | HMS Vandal was erected beside the Caledonian MacBra |
nd and entered the navy in 1778, serving aboard | HMS Ardent with the fleet under Rear-Admiral James |
with the British Government in Gibraltar aboard | HMS Fearless in 1969. |
He then moved aboard | HMS Penelope as a midshipman, and took part in the |
His command post was aboard | HMS Calpe and due to poor communications he had no |
He went on to serve aboard | HMS Nestor, carrying the flag of Rear-Admiral Joshu |
Navy in February 1852, serving at first aboard | HMS Rodney. |
Singapore, by the time the air echelon, aboard | HMS Indomitable, was within flying off range, there |
unty Durham, he served in the Royal Navy aboard | HMS Victorious during the Second World War. |
William (1884-1916), killed (unmarried) aboard | HMS Queen Mary at the Battle of Jutland. |
He left the Hood in 1940 and served aboard | HMS Naiad, surviving the sinking of that ship in 19 |
He served aboard | HMS Hood in 1922 and was promoted to Captain on 30 |
A Royal Navy expedition aboard | HMS Hurworth finally located the wreck in June 1994 |
He briefly served aboard | HMS Medway, before becoming first lieutenant of HMS |
er loss, Hallowell served as a volunteer aboard | HMS Victory during the Battle of Cape St. Vincent ( |
Carter served for a time aboard | HMS Victory under Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson, and in |
By May 1940, he was serving aboard | HMS Sabre under Lt. Commander Brian Dean. |
He subsequently served aboard | HMS Unicorn and HMS Endymion. |
Naval Officer, died aboard | HMS Spitful and was buried in The British Cemetery, |
er Wing, returning to the United Kingdom aboard | HMS Hunter. |
on during the Korean War, when he served aboard | HMS Ocean as Commander (flying). |
es Darwin embarks on his historic voyage aboard | HMS Beagle. |
posted to his first submarine assignment aboard | HMS P35. |
ament that year, Elliot hoisted his flag aboard | HMS Barfleur, but with the easing of the crisis soo |
cessible Island, drawn by the naturalist aboard | HMS Challenger |
rnwallis, Domett was again flag captain, aboard | HMS Ville de Paris. |
to England in 1785, he was for some time aboard | HMS Edgar, guardship at Portsmouth, commanded by Ca |
He went to sea again aboard | HMS Lion in 1962, where he served as Weapon Electri |
Aboard | HMS Nereide they were evacuated to Constantinople. |
He served in succession aboard | HMS Ulysses, HMS Bristol and HMS Conqueror, and was |
Later he served aboard | HMS Mercury as a Fleetwork Instructor. |
He then moved aboard | HMS Formidable and promoted to commander in June 17 |
uring the Second World War, in Derry and aboard | HMS Anson in the Pacific. |
September 1794 he had become midshipman aboard | HMS Daedalus. |
nd World War, he served as chief officer aboard | HMS Viceroy of India, a 20,000-ton luxury liner req |
He was aboard | HMS King George V and witnessed the Japanese surren |
Musters, sailed as a Volunteer 1st Class aboard | HMS Beagle with Charles Darwin, but died of malaria |
father into service with the Royal Navy aboard | HMS Tartar, participating in the Raid on Cherbourg |
ptain to Rear-Admiral Sir George Murray, aboard | HMS Polyphemus. |
It has seen operational service aboard | HMS Illustrious, Operation Telic in Iraq and in the |
tepfather Admiral Sir Cloudesley Shovell aboard | HMS Association during the Scilly naval disaster of |
by the first pre-production Wyvern TF.2 aboard | HMS Illustrious on 21 June 1950. |
Torpedo loading aboard | HMS Vanoc, 1941. |
Marines officer with Admiral Lord Nelson aboard | HMS Victory in the Battle of Trafalgar. |
der Stuart Hett, who had been an officer aboard | HMS Amethyst and had been tasked with responding to |
Hay's first real service was probably aboard | HMS Seahorse, beginning in December 1806. |
In November that year Westcott moved aboard | HMS Victory, then the flagship of Rear-admiral Rich |
ort Admiral at Spithead, flying his flag aboard | HMS Royal Sovereign. |
On 13 March 1791, Pitt came aboard | HMS Discovery to partake in the Vancouver Expeditio |
ed the Royal Navy as a Captain's servant aboard | HMS Alderney. |
now deposed, made for Hobart in Tasmania aboard | HMS Porpoise. |
office as Second Sea Lord in a ceremony aboard | HMS Victory in July 2008. |
uadron was re-formed with six Fulmar IIs aboard | HMS Biter in January 1942. |
ointment of Quilliam as first lieutenant aboard | HMS Victory. |
e time more aircraft arrived in May 1942 aboard | HMS Eagle Colquhoun had carried out 154 operational |
e Nore from 11 May 1794, flying his flag aboard | HMS Sandwich. |
active service at the Battle of Jutland, aboard | HMS Monarch. |
Napoleonic Wars, stationed at Portsmouth aboard | HMS Gladiator. |
He was made junior lieutenant aboard | HMS Crown at Spithead in early February 1789. |
1812, killed by an exploding gun aboard | HMS Bacchante) |
in the Mediterranean with the Royal Navy aboard | HMS Royal Oak in 1871. |
the Second Battle Squadron with his flag aboard | HMS Royal Oak, he retired as a vice admiral on 11 J |
was an English able seaman and mutineer aboard | HMS Bounty. |
By January 1805 was briefly aboard | HMS Theseus, taking over from Captain Francis Templ |
n 1860 he served in the Second Opium War aboard | HMS Cambrian (medal and Taku clasp). |
7 Naval Air Squadron Fleet Air Arm flying above | HMS Royalist during a training flight from the Roya |
e liberation of Kuwait in 1991, but accompanied | HMS Ark Royal in the Eastern Mediterranean, acting |
She accompanied | HMS Scarborough in February 1940 on her first Atlan |
he was selected by the Royal Navy to accompany | HMS Endurance to artistically record the wildlife a |
The submarine GA-45 attacked was actually | HMS Torbay which escaped undamaged. |
Bridge open to admit | HMS Northumberland (F238) |
He was Flag Officer, Taranto and Adriatic ( | HMS Nile) until the end of 1943. |
It was named after | HMS Neptune as part of a project with the Woodland |
The scarp is named after | HMS Resolution, one of James Cook's ships on second |
"Named c1860 by Captain Richards, RN, after | HMS Defence, 74 guns, under Captain James Gambier, |
ral reception depot for new naval entries after | HMS Raleigh was transferred to the Army in February |
ip, though she was commissioned two years after | HMS Dreadnought. |
The mountain was named in 1917 after | HMS Chester, which was severely damaged in the Batt |
Alert is named after | HMS Alert, a British ship which wintered about 10 k |
tower's French defenders had abandoned it after | HMS Lowestoffe (32 guns) had fired two broadsides a |
elop a heavy roll in some conditions, and after | HMS Resolution rolled badly in heavy seas in 1893 t |
becoming only the second ironclad there, after | HMS Resistance. |
USS Chesapeake in a single-ship action against | HMS Shannon (commanded by Philip Broke). |
Two obsolete cruisers-the aged | HMS Sappho and the battered veteran of Zeebrugge, H |
ered from BAeSEMA in 1995 to replace the ageing | HMS Hecla. |
Four days out (of Alexandria), | HMS Newcastle was torpedoed by an E-boat (S-56), on |
art in the Battle of the River Plate, alongside | HMS Ajax and HMS Exeter. |
On 17 March 1917, fighting alongside | HMS Llewellyn in an action in the Dover Strait with |
Alongside | HMS Wessex, ORP Burza, HMS Whitshed, and HMS Wolfho |
siting cruise ship or warship, moored alongside | HMS Belfast and a few smaller aggregate or refuse v |
n ship in ref. to John Jervis's fleet (see also | HMS Captain (1787). |
The camp was known as Camp Warwick and also | HMS Golden Hind. |
ost no ships during the battle itself, although | HMS Quentin was torpedoed and sunk by German aircra |
eboats and were then ferried to the waiting AMC | HMS Alsatian, and HMS Forward. |
Dogs Bowser: Eliot's teammate, Captain of an | HMS Sienna. |
Smith anchored | HMS Tigre and Theseus so their broadsides could ass |
By this stage of the war she and | HMS Decoy were the only survivors of the original c |
Battle between Ville de Milan and | HMS Cleopatra, depicted in a contemporary print |
In 1810 Triumph and | HMS Phipps, salvaged a large load of elemental merc |
Army, Much Binding in the Marsh for the RAF and | HMS Waterlogged for the Navy. |
Athabaskan was heavily damaged and | HMS Egret was sunk but Calgary again escaped damage |
Spirit of Mystery is wood from Cutty Sark, and | HMS Victory, with some of the rigging coming from S |
S deployment to North America, in which she and | HMS Juno sailed to North America and into the Great |
in command of Barfleur in the Channel Fleet and | HMS Victory in the Mediterranean, before taking ove |
She and | HMS Royal Oak were the only ships of the class to b |
by the destroyers Verdun, Venetia, Viceroy and | HMS Vidette. |
With shrinking leeway, both the Cato and | HMS Porpoise were grounded. |
and | HMS Russell. |
They and | HMS Indefatigable formed the nucleus of the fleet a |
y AG-15 to Piraeus, along with HMAS Vampire and | HMS Auckland. |
owing a fierce fight between the battleship and | HMS Duke of York (17). |
raft and Wren, Kite, Woodpecker, Wild Goose and | HMS Woodcock. |
Britannia Royal Naval College at Dartmouth and | HMS Excellent followed. |
voy's escorts had spotted the boat however, and | HMS Kipling (F91) ran the submarine down and droppe |
adron of two line-of-battle ships, the Lion and | HMS Bristol and one large 44-gun frigate, HMS Janus |
No 1 Basin with Hunt-Class MCMVs and | HMS Victory visible. |
On 12 April 1941, Kenogami and | HMS Azalea fired a shot over the bow of the U.S.-fl |
pioneered in the Tribal or F class of 1905 and | HMS Swift of 1907. |
k force with HMIS Jumna, HMIS Narbada (U40) and | HMS Flamingo (L18) to support the advance by the In |
hour later three British destroyers arrived and | HMS Marksman attempted to get two hawsers attached |
In the class only Amphion and | HMS Astute were completed before the end of the war |
SS Steel Artisan (later known as USS Barnes and | HMS Attacker). |
ttle, only to be later found by the Glasgow and | HMS Kent and forced to scuttle after a short battle |
s to engage were the submarines USS Seawolf and | HMS Truant. |
Athabaskan was heavily damaged and | HMS Egret was sunk with the loss of 194 of her crew |
rd's School, Birmingham, Bradfield College, and | HMS Britannia. |
ook part in the battle between Constitution and | HMS Java on 29 December 1812. |
th H.M.S.Undine (Captain F), H.M.S.Ulysses and | H.M.S. Urania. |
e Fittleton was scrapped the following year and | HMS Mermaid was sold out of service. |
ned with an Italian harbour pilot on board, and | HMS Penelope and USS Boise were guided safely into |
On 29 November 1941, the Jupiter and | HMS Encounter, detached from the Mediterranean Flee |
re batteries; at one point she ran aground, and | HMS Venus morsed "I am happy that a French be the f |
the 1970 and 1971 Donovan albums, Open Road and | HMS Donovan. |
rth Western Approaches and on 16 August she and | HMS Achates attacked a U-boat that had been sighted |
as far as the Caribbean and Cuba, where she and | HMS Andromache captured a Spanish gunboat on 22 Mar |
r in Europe, when she cooperated with Drury and | HMS Bentinck (K314) to destroy U-636. |
two experimental submarines, HMS/m Explorer and | HMS Excalibur. |
h Light Cruiser Squadron of the Grand Fleet and | HMS Aurora was one of the ships present at the surr |
Highlander and | HMS Harvester sank U-U-32 in October, 1940. |
as formerly conducted at Rousillon Barracks and | HMS Excellent, prior to their integration into the |
uses the nationally important RRS Discovery and | HMS Challenger archives, and the UK's main facility |
to Queenstown by Captain Ronald Niel Stuart and | HMS Snowdrop. |
ort spotted two British destroyers approaching, | HMS Pakenham and Paladin. |
At the end of April | HMS Calliope was sent to Porirua, and began boat pa |
comprising SS Clan Lamont, SS Empire Arquebus, | HMS Empire Battleaxe, SS Empire Mace, SS Empire Spe |
By the time evening arrived, | HMS Albion (1763) had also come within range, but t |
Main article: | HMS Whiting (1812) |
Main articles: | HMS Vanguard (S28) and Triomphant (S 616) |
Lobnitz & Co. originally for the Royal Navy as | HMS Tilbury in 1940. |
Wilton was unofficially known as | HMS Tupperware, HMS Indestructible, and "The Plasti |
She was ordered by the Royal Navy (RN) as | HMS Windflower (K155) but was transferred to the RC |
and also as | HMS Duke of Albany from 1914 to 1916. |
Pomona was subsequently taken into the Navy as | HMS Cuba. |
She was brought into Royal Navy service as | HMS Dedaigneuse. |
ic Fleet on 5 February 1945 and commissioned as | HMS Nabthorpe, later renamed HMS Nabstock. |
he ship was commissioned into the Royal Navy as | HMS Arabis. |
ships were commissioned into the Royal Navy as | HMS Agincourt and HMS Erin respectively.) |
ot until early 1942 that it was commissioned as | HMS Standard and the first men posted there. |
ember 1715, and renamed once more, this time as | HMS Royal George. |
originally commissioned into the Royal Navy as | HMS Myrmidon; she was transferred to the free Polis |
Commissioned in the Royal Navy as | HMS Smiter (D55) (pronounced "smite·er") , a Ruler- |
x was repaired and taken into the Royal Navy as | HMS Essex, and in 1833 served as a prison ship at K |
e found in many ships built by Kockums, such as | HMS Orion, the Collins class submarines in the Roya |
She was originally down as | HMS Anchorite but their names were exchanged before |
Empire Peacemaker, originally laid down as | HMS Scarborough Castle, was a convoy rescue ship. |
r Lend-Lease on 20 November 1943, and served as | HMS Speaker (D90). |
y ordered by the United Kingdom's Royal Navy as | HMS H18, but was handed over to Chile in 1917 as H4 |
As | HMS Hornbill II, RAF Beccles was a temporary lodgin |
S. Navy and commissioned into the Royal Navy as | HMS Broadway (H90). |
eventually commissioned into the Royal Navy as | HMS Meteorite. |
It was the third such collision that year, as | HMS Trafalgar ran aground off the Isle of Skye earl |
de of the lake and taken into the Royal Navy as | HMS Finch. |
The ship previously served in the Royal Navy as | HMS Venerable and the Royal Netherlands Navy as HNL |
was originally ordered for and commissioned as | HMS Burnet (K348) of the Royal Navy (RN), but trans |
eld, Hampshire, England and was commissioned as | HMS Mercury on 16 August 1941 under the command of |
Tubas: Known as | HMS, or Heavy Metal Section |
The Hove site continued to be referred to as | HMS King Alfred or sometimes HMS King Alfred (H). |
ise, which included many other vessels, such as | HMS Victorious, two other carriers, the battleship |
ansferred to the Royal Navy where she served as | HMS Reading (G71) during World War II. |
ly 1945 Kirkistown Airfield was commissioned as | HMS Corncrake II. |
She was transferred to the Royal Navy as | HMS Brighton, and later to the Soviet Navy as Zhark |
d War I, later transferred to the Royal Navy as | HMS Lancaster. |
Until 1980 she was known as | HMS Clyde (the traditional name for ships attached |
She was originally built for the Royal Navy as | HMS H-14 in 1915. |
She was laid down at Pembroke Dockyard as | HMS Victoria in 1844, to the design of HMS Queen. |
the Royal Navy under the lend-lease program as | HMS Exploit (BAM-24). |
e Royal Navy on 31 May 1943 and commissioned as | HMS Dittany, her original British name. |
She was initially ordered as | HMS Corso during the Second World War, and was buil |
y ordered by the United Kingdom's Royal Navy as | HMS H17, but was handed over to Chile in 1917 as H3 |
lyth Shipbuilding Company for the Royal Navy as | HMS Hartepool in 1939. |
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