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  2. HMHS Britannic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMHS_Britannic

    HMHS Britannic (originally to be the RMS Britannic) (/ b r ɪ ˈ t æ n ɪ k /) was the third and final vessel of the White Star Line's Olympic class of steamships and the second White Star ship to bear the name Britannic.

  3. MV Stena Britannica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MV_Stena_Britannica

    Stena Britannica is the focus of the Season 4 Episode 4 of the documentary TV show Mighty Ships. The episode first aired on 16 October 2011. [ 13 ] During filming a problem with the locking pins of the bow watertight door meant that, for 72 hours / six crossings, loading and unloading could only be carried out via the upper ramp while engineers ...

  4. MS Stena Britannica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MS_Stena_Britannica

    MS Stena Britannica may refer to: Stena Britannica (built 1967) - Broken up in 2001; Stena Britannica (built 1981) - Now Stena Saga with Stena Line;

  5. List of Stena Line vessels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Stena_Line_vessels

    Renamed Stena Britannica (III) in 1991, Stena Saga in 1994 and Saga in 2021. Still owned by Stena RoRo, being used in the Philippines as an accommodation ship. [75] MS Stena Baltica (VI) (1988 - 1989 (Chartered Out)) Built in 1973. Never used in service with Stena Line. Renamed Nieborow in 1988. Scrapped in Aliaga, Turkey in 2017.

  6. MV Stena Hollandica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MV_Stena_Hollandica

    Stena Hollandica, launched in January 2010, is the first of two identical Ropax ferries built by Wadan Yards in Warnemünde and nearby Wismar, Germany for Stena Line. [4] The second of the two ships, launched towards the end of 2010, is Stena Britannica.

  7. Olympic-class ocean liner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympic-class_ocean_liner

    The ship left the port of Southampton 10 April 1912 for her maiden voyage, narrowly avoiding a collision with SS New York, a ship moored in the port pulled by the propellers of Titanic. After a stopover at Cherbourg, France and another in Queenstown, Ireland, she sailed into the Atlantic with 2,200 passengers and crew on board, under the ...

  8. Britannia (ship) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Britannia_(ship)

    Britannia (1802 ship) was built at Hull in 1802 and sailed as a West Indiaman. In 1804 she succeeded in repelling the attack of a French privateer in a notable single-ship action, but blew up in an accidental explosion in Cork harbour in 1806. Britannia (1806 EIC ship) was an East Indiaman launched in 1806 and wrecked on the Goodwin Sands in 1809

  9. Britannic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Britannic

    HMHS Britannic, owned by the White Star Line and third sister ship of RMS Olympic and RMS Titanic, sank in 1916 after hitting a German naval mine; MV Britannic (1929), a motor liner owned by the White Star Line and then Cunard Line, scrapped in 1960; SS Britannic (1874), holder of the Blue Riband, owned by the White Star Line