「u-boat」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)2ページ目
該当件数 : 911件
ined by Lt.-Commander Hugh Price, detected the | U-boat on 12 February 1940 and dropped depth charges |
dove on the noted position and discovered the | U-boat rather than the expected cargo ship. |
t became commander of 1. U-Lehr Division ("1st | U-boat Training Division") and later of 21st U-boat F |
nned to contain extensive shipyards, docks and | U-Boat bases for the expected post-war German navy th |
scort for ON 206 which was attacked during the | U-boat Arm's autumn offensive. |
Orkney and Shetland on 20 July 1915 during the | U-boat trap tactic. |
of men and materiel to Europe during Germany's | U-boat campaign, could be built, and the opportunity |
honour of Oberleutnant Hans Joachim Emsmann, a | U-boat commander during World War I, who died on 28 O |
On 9 January 1944 Abelia encountered a | U-Boat while on convoy escort duty, and moved to atta |
This escalated the | U-boat fear in the U.S. and caused a diplomatic incid |
Carl Esmond as | U-boat Captain |
, on 4 February, the Germans had established a | U-boat blockade around the United Kingdom and had dec |
An ex German | U-boat engineer, Hans Lemke, living in Hunmanby North |
length of the oil slick and that, in fact, the | U-boat had been sunk. |
At first the | U-boat attempted to flee, and then tried to hide by l |
U-85 was the first German | U-boat loss of "Operation Drumbeat" (Paukenschlag), G |
urger Schiffbau-Gesellschaft at Flensburg, the | U-boat was laid down 9 November 1941, launched on 21 |
Serving with II Flotilla the | U-boat carried out seven war patrols and sank four sh |
her construction began, a very long time for a | U-boat. |
Unusually for a | U-boat, U-1230 does not seem to have suffered any cas |
y and Royal Canadian Navy were waiting for the | U-boat to surface off-shore (the RCN had a substantia |
most calamitous nights of the campaign for the | U-boat arm (U-Bootwaffe,UBW) |
as already turned into a major base for German | U-Boat submarines, Dora 1. |
his fourth patrol in August 1941, forcing the | U-boat to return to port. |
a Hudson of No. 233 Squadron RAF, forcing the | U-boat to abort her patrol. |
the North Sea on 29 November 1939, forcing the | U-boat to scuttle. |
Forewarned a | U-boat was in the area, he gave the order to attack. |
he war it protected friendly shipping from the | U-Boat threat operating the Vickers Wellington. |
rst time prisoners of war were captured from a | U-boat operating in the South Atlantic. |
They apparently attempted to escape from the | U-boat as it lay on the ocean floor using their escap |
containing the pair of torpedo tubes from each | U-boat and replacing it with a new bow containing fou |
Although slower, it gave the | U-boat enough speed to close the distance and launch |
ich had been torpedoed and sunk by German Navy | U-boat U-455, northeast of the Azores in position 45º |
hich was torpedoed and sunk by the German Navy | U-boat U-510, about 200 nautical miles east of Aden i |
Its mission was to deal with the German Navy | U-boat threat. |
ip Tanda was torpedoed and sunk by German Navy | U-boat U-181 in the Arabian Sea at position 13º22'N, |
e depth-charged and sank the German VIIC-class | U-boat U-678 in the English Channel south-west of Bri |
led The dramatic true story of Germany's first | u-boat attacks along the American coast in World War |
steered convoys away from where most groups of | U-boat packs were present. |
and Gneisenau shadowed it, acting to guide in | U-boat attacks. |
rt and industrial center, Hamburg's shipyards, | U-boat pens, and the Hamburg-Harburg area oil refiner |
, to stand 28th on the list of highest scoring | U-Boat aces of World War II. |
GRT), he was the thirty-second highest scoring | U-Boat ace of World War II. |
rvation of Klaus Vernier, a highly experienced | U-boat commander and tactical expert. |
etia had dropped ten depth charges on him, the | U-boat surfaced and was boarded by a party from Bulld |
no combat patrols and sank no ships in his new | U-boat. |
One depth charge hit the | U-boat, but bounced off and exploded without damaging |
y, SS Empire Morn, was blown up after it hit a | U-boat mine on 26 April 1943. |
with their main guns, and appeared to hit the | U-boat as she submerged. |
Documentary film, Hitler's Last | U-Boat Directed by Andreas Gutzeit International Hist |
After an hour, the | U-boat came alongside the lifeboats and offered assis |
eclassified and converted to serve as hulk for | U-boat crews at the Kiel naval base. |
Silent Hunters: German | U-boat Commanders of World War II. |
n 15 April, while shadowing Convoy HX-233, the | U-boat was attacked by depth charges and gunfire by t |
chmer took command of U-23, a Type IIB coastal | U-Boat. |
U-29, which served as a training boat in 24th | U-boat Flotilla by this time. |
his became uneventful due to a downturn in the | U-boat effectiveness in Summer of 1941. |
Charlie Sillett was killed in a | U-boat attack on an allied convoy while serving with |
C33 was involved in the | U-Boat trap tactic. |
nonetheless there was no advantage in avoiding | U-boat attacks. |
r reports for naval units, including Germany's | U-boat fleet. |
n intent; that the opening of the Indian Ocean | U-boat campaign should coincide with the Monsoon seas |
Instead, the | U-Boat fired a torpedo with no warning. |
In May 1942 the flotilla was merged into 29th | U-boat Flotilla, based at La Spezia, Italy. |
adopted 14 captured allied submarines into the | U-Boat corps. |
The group's first mission was to investigate a | U-boat reported to be just south of Newfoundland. |
nk on 7 May 1943 off Prince Edward Island, the | U-boat failed to send the mandatory radio signal to r |
In July 2006, Germany commissioned its newest | U-boat, the U-34, a Type 212. |
In 1915, the German Empire had begun its first | U-boat campaign of the First World War. |
ings, optical glass, blueprints for a IXC type | U-boat and Messerschmitt Me 163A Komet jet aircraft. |
rman submarine U-180 was a Type IXD1 transport | U-boat of the German Kriegsmarine which served in Wor |
rman submarine U-195 was a Type IXD1 transport | U-boat which served in World War II. |
He joined the | U-Boat service on May 1, 1940. |
In March 1941 Jahn joined the | U-boat force and his first patrol were on board U-98 |
In 1939 Emmermann joined the | U-boat force and in November 1940 became the first Wa |
Before joining the | U-boat service in 1939, he served aboard a minesweepe |
On the return journey the | U-boat took part in the rescue operations after the s |
Two days later, on 7 July, the | U-boat torpedoed and sank the 9,251 ton Dutch cargo s |
An unknown Kaiserliche Marine | U-boat attacked three armed transports of the United |
ther the casualties inflicted on USS Kearny by | U-boat U-568 on October 17, 1941, or the sinking of t |
rich Krupp Germaniawerft shipyard in Kiel, the | U-boat was laid down on 18 October 1941, launched on |
n waters to protect Allied shipping lanes from | U-boat attacks. |
Nine days later the | U-boat captured another four Montenegrin boats, Buona |
, that the Germans were unable to launch major | U-Boat attacks on Allied shipping for the duration of |
Albert Lieven as | U-Boat commander |
He is thirty-seventh in the list of | U-Boat aces of World War II. |
He is numbered thirty-one in the list of | U-Boat aces of World War II. |
U-2323) was probably the shortest lived German | U-boat during the whole of the Second World War. |
Lohs, a | U-boat commander during World War I, died on 14 Augus |
He sunk the long-range German | U-boat U-859, on 22 September 1944, near the Sunda St |
occupied French coast were major Kriegsmarine | U-Boat bases at Brest, Lorient, Saint-Nazaire, La Roc |
Frankie Marshall and eventually Martin Smith, | U-Boat came into being. |
On the 11 May another | U-Boat was engaged by a Swordfish on the surface whic |
At 08:35 on 22 May the | U-boat came under attack by an Avenger torpedo bomber |
SM U-83 was a Type Mittel U | U-boat of the German Imperial Navy (German: Kaiserlic |
SM U-61 was a German Type Mittel U | U-boat commissioned and deployed to operate off the c |
SM U-55 was a German Type Mittel U | U-boat of the Kaiserliche Marine during the First Wor |
SM U-53 was a German Type Mittel U | U-boat of the Kaiserliche Marine during the First Wor |
SM U-135 was a German Type Mittel U | U-boat of the Kaiserliche Marine during World War I. |
SM U-137 was a Type Mittel U | U-boat of the Kaiserliche Marine during World War I. |
SM U-90 was a Type Mittel U | U-boat of the German Imperial Navy during World War I |
It ended up being the third most successful | u-boat participating in the war sinking 138 ships sun |
SM U-117 was by far the most successful | U-boat, taking credit for 21 ships sunk out of the to |
It ended up being the second most successful | U-boat participating in the war, sinking 157 ships fo |
The famous Type VII submarine, the most common | U-boat of the Kriegsmarine, was born. |
d went on to become one of the most successful | U-boat commanders in the Mediterranean Sea. |
e was made Assistant Chief of the Naval Staff ( | U-boat Warfare and Trade) in 1942 and Rear Admiral (D |
for having the only German Navy (Kriegsmarine) | U-boat crew to be accused, prosecuted and convicted d |
Flyvebaatfabrikk M.F.11 F.328 landed near the | U-boat and guarded it until Norwegian naval vessels r |
l 1945 he was selected to command the new 15th | U-boat Flotilla. |
took part in the construction of a new German | U-boat weapon. |
However, there are no German | U-boat claims for this vessel. |
However, no further | U-boat contacts were made. |
the personnel aboard the boat were not regular | U-boat crew, but a combination of the ship's officers |
On 12 November 1942 | U-boat U-515 torpedoed and sunk HMS Hecla, and minute |
Operating out of the | U-boat base at Lorient, France, U-502 sank fourteen A |
efforts were matched by protests of Germany's | U-boat use; Spain lost 140,000 tonnes of shipping to |
that it was imperative to give the men of the | U-boat arm the fullest posible support. |
of indicator nets causing the destruction of a | U-boat occurred at Dover when the U-8 became entangle |
ted the training of its crew while part of 8th | U-boat Flotilla in the Baltic Sea. |
d put in charge of the interrogation of German | U-boat captains. |
ch 1944 Piening was appointed commander of 7th | U-boat Flotilla at Saint-Nazaire. |
staff positions, before taking command of 23rd | U-boat Flotilla in the Mediterranean in September 194 |
e submarine commanders, see List of successful | U-boat commanders. |
, taking up positions as Flottillenchef of 2nd | U-boat Flotilla. |
- 23 May 1945) was the deputy commander of the | U-Boat Forces of Nazi Germany and the last Commanding |
In June 1943 he became commander of 20th | U-boat Flotilla in Pillau, and during the last three |
s, in September 1941 he assumed command of the | U-boat on six patrols, and sank 27 merchant ships, fo |
then took command of U-129 as a member of 2nd | U-boat Flotilla in May 1942. |
ang, this group of U-boats became part of 33rd | U-boat Flotilla, which also comprised U-848, U-849, U |
Schulz then took over as commander of 6th | U-boat Flotilla, initially based in Danzig, and later |
pril 1945 to become the last commander of 25th | U-boat Flotilla. |
However, there was no evidence of a | U-boat in the area at the time, and no wake of a torp |
of Great Britain's previous experiences of the | U-Boat blockade during both World Wars, and disruptio |
All the crew of the | U-boat were saved. |
of the defence of OB 293, with the loss of the | U-boat ace Prien, coupled with the successful defence |
d records to indicate the possible fate of the | U-boat, and conclude that the fate of U-30 remains a |
igating a coastal command aircraft report of a | U-boat ahead of the convoy. |
This was due to the loss of three | U-boat aces in March, and British Intelligence penetr |
His memoirs "The Odyssey of a | U-Boat Commander: The Recollections of Erich Topp" wa |
which attempted to prevent the scuttling of a | U-boat. |
followed by Hirschfeld - The Secret Diary of a | U-Boat Commander (1996) and FIPS - Legendary U-Boat C |
his Officer assisted in the destruction of one | U-Boat and the probable destruction of another. |
was appointed temporary locum commander of 5th | U-boat Flotilla for two months before serving as comm |
U-388 conducted her training as part of 5th | U-boat Flotilla, before being attached to 9th U-boat |
r 1942 Scholtz formed and took command of 12th | U-boat Flotilla based at Bordeaux, France. |
Of the | U-boat crew of 52, 8 were killed and 44 survived. |
This represented a return of one | U-boat kill for roughly every $13 million spent. |
to the surface, indicating destruction of the | U-boat. |
ined sea-wolf symbolizes the only capture of a | U-boat from the German wolf-packs during World War II |
attacked with depth charges and drove off the | U-boat. |
in Flintbek) was a German chief engineer on a | U-boat in World War II and recipient of the Knight's |
, Immenstadt) was a German chief engineer on a | U-boat in World War II and recipient of the Knight's |
ngen-Sievern) was a German chief engineer on a | U-boat in World War II and recipient of the Knight's |
in Arthur Duff ordered his crew to fire on the | U-boat, but missed. |
rth Atlantic) was a German chief engineer on a | U-boat in World War II and a posthumous recipient of |
y, Ordeal by Water, describes a dive made on a | U-boat in the Mediterranean not far from Port Said in |
1993 in Kiel) was a German chief engineer on a | U-boat in World War II and recipient of the Knight's |
5 March 1961) was a German chief engineer on a | U-boat in World War II and recipient of the Knight's |
es remaining after an unsuccessful attack on a | U-boat. |
ly where a secret device would be located on a | U-Boat in general is unlikely; however Brown, the thi |
hould be to concentrate all her efforts on the | U-boat offensive, and that henceforth the principal r |
ountermeasures were taking a heavy toll on the | U-boat force. |
The attacks on the | U-boat continued for several hours, and were augmente |
out survivors on the return from a raid on the | U-boat pens at Lorient. |
rnst Peter Burger landed on American soil on a | U-boat. |
ber 1944 and sank two ships in the only German | U-boat Pacific patrol of the war before returning to |
ate is notable in that she was the only German | U-boat to be sunk by land-based artillery fire during |
n survived, sheltering at Copenhagen; only the | U-Boat Arm was capable of continuing the fight. |
were no casualties on board the Niblack or the | U-boat. |
Her aircraft sank a particularly troublesome | U-Boat in the Indian Ocean late in 1944, for which Br |
lphia, Pennsylvania, on coastal patrol against | U-boat until 2 November, when she departed Newport, R |
In three war patrols the | U-boat sank two merchant ships totalling 8,352 gross |
my, "The Deadly Attachment", where he played a | U-boat Captain held prisoner by the Walmington-on-Sea |
German Navy formation set up to prosecute the | U-boat campaign against Allied shipping in the Medite |
together with naval escorts to protect against | U-boat attacks. |
for about four days to get beyond the range of | U-boat patrols before the ships dispersed to reach th |
ed crews and officers in the rapidly expanding | U-boat arm of the Kriegsmarine following the abandonm |
h HMCS Chambly (K116) achieved the RCN's first | U-boat kill of the war. |
capacity that Prentice scored the RCN's first | U-boat kill, shared with HMCS Moosejaw. |
By September 1943 these were ready, and | U-boat Control (Befehlshaber der Unterseeboote)(BdU) |
ritish waters throughout the war, reducing the | U-boat threat. |
took command of U-37, in order to restore the | U-boat men's trust in the G7e/T2 torpedo, which had p |
HMS Avenger, because of the increased risk of | U-boat attack. |
Saltzwedel, a | U-boat commander during World War I, died on 2 Decemb |
H4 sank the | U-boat UB-52 in the Adriatic on 23 May 1918. |
-41 approached, Wyandra, fired on and sank the | U-boat without striking the American flag. |
months of wartime operations and they sank one | U-Boat, UC-70, which was spotted lying submerged on t |
frigates HMS Bazely and HMS Blackwood sank the | U-boat U-648 north-east of the Azores. |
HMS E52 sank the | U-boat UC-63 near the Goodwin Sands, Dover Straits on |
le of Narvik in 1940 and subsequently sank the | U-boat U-64. |
n Cross on 10 February 1943 after he saved the | U-boat from severe depth charging. |
void Bernadou, but the destroyer never saw the | U-boat. |
re the German naval bases in the North Sea for | U-boat operations. |
After sinking the Dutch ship the | U-boat was pursued and attacked by the United States |
12 November, escorted by over 25 ships, mostly | U-boat hunters, torpedo boats and mine sweepers. |
mander of the ship gave the order to shoot the | U-boat crew in the water but was confined to his quar |
return to the English Channel, she sighted the | U-boat U-593 (coincidentally the one that would later |
She reported sighting a | U-boat off Philippeville, Algeria on the 15th, but wa |
42, with US defenses only managing to sink one | U-boat (U-85) during that period. |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |
こんにちは ゲスト さん
ログイン |
Weblio会員(無料)になると 検索履歴を保存できる! 語彙力診断の実施回数増加! |