French ship Loire
Sixteen ships of the French Navy have borne the name Loire, after the longest river in France:
- Loire (1668), a 6-gun flute
- Loire (1686), a 30-gun flute
- Loire (1720), a flute
- Loire (1780), a scow
- Loire (1796), a 44-gun frigate
- Loire (1803), a 20-gun flute, lead ship of her two-vessel her class; destroyed with her classmate in 1809 to avoid capture by the Royal Navy
- Loire (1809), a scow
- Loire (1814), a flute broken up in 1838
- Loire (1840), a scow
- Loire (1855), a Dordogne-class troopship
- Prince Jérôme (1854), a Hercule-class ship of the line, was converted into a transport in 1872 as Loire
- Loire (1915), a commandeered four-masted barque
- Loire (1915), a requisitioned steam ship
- Loire (1916), a requisitioned cargo ship
- Loire, an oiler
- Loire (A615), (1965–2009) a mine countermeasures support ship Loire (French) (Google Translate – Loire (English))
Ships named Loire
- Prince Jérôme (1854)
- Loire (A615)
Sources and references
gollark: It's not *my* project, I just link to it lots.
gollark: FOR SCIENCE!
gollark: ```javapackage com.seriouscompany.business.java.fizzbuzz.packagenamingpackage.impl.stringreturners;import org.springframework.stereotype.Service;import com.seriouscompany.business.java.fizzbuzz.packagenamingpackage.interfaces.stringreturners.StringStringReturner;@Servicepublic class BuzzStringReturner implements StringStringReturner { public String getReturnString() { final StringBuilder myStringBuilder = new StringBuilder( com.seriouscompany.business.java.fizzbuzz.packagenamingpackage.impl.Constants.BUZZ); final String myString = myStringBuilder.toString(); return new String(myString); }}```
gollark: Also, https://github.com/EnterpriseQualityCoding/FizzBuzzEnterpriseEdition/
gollark: At least it's not Go...
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.