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ONEX Neorion Shipyards Neorion is one of the oldest Greek heavy industries, located in Ermoupolis , on the Greek island of Syros . Today, it is one of the few remaining major industrial corporations in what used to be the industrial and commercial center of Greece, before being eclipsed by Piraeus in the late 19th century.
The Goulandris-class were a series of two coastal patrol boats built by the Neorion shipyard and donated to the Hellenic Navy in 1975 and 1977 respectively. [1] They were 40-ton, 24-metre boats, powered by two 1350 hp diesel engines, and armed with a 20 mm gun.
Iraklis (A423), built by Anastasiadis-Iordanidis shipyard in Perama, commissioned on 6 April 1978, decommissioned on 30 November 2009; K1 Titan I (88), built in Salamis naval shipyard in 1937 and destroyed in 1944; Pilefs (A413), a 57-ton tug, formerly of the German Navy, commissioned in 1993, decommissioned on 30 November 2009
Asuka III Cruise Ship 51.950 744 Japanese NYK Cruises 706 2025 Disney Destiny [10] [11] [12] Cruise ship 144,000 4,000 United States: Disney Cruise Line: 2026 Njord Apartment ship 84,800 1,000 Malta Ocean Residences Development 724 2027 N.N Cruise ship 180.000 5,374 United States: Carnival Cruise Line: 2027 N.N / Wish Class Cruise ship 144.000 ...
Elefsis Shipyards is a Greek shipbuilding company, also involved in other industrial constructions. Founded in 1968, it has constructed many types of ships, including the largest bulk carriers built in Greece, as well as military ships.
A néôrion in Delos ("monument of the bulls") A néôrion (in Ancient Greek, τὸ νεώριον tò néôrion) is a type of classical Greek commemorative monument designed to celebrate a naval victory.
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Map of Byzantine Constantinople. The Neorion is located in the eastern part of the city, on the southern shore of the Golden Horn, near its mouth into the Bosphorus. The Neorion Harbour (Greek: Λιμὴν τοῦ Νεωρίου or Λιμὴν τῶν Νεωρίων) was a harbour in the city of Constantinople, active from the foundation of the city in the 4th century until the late Ottoman ...