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The Regina Maria Health Network is a private healthcare service in Romania founded in 1995. It is owned by Mid Europa Partners who put it up for sale in 2019 valued at more than €300 million, with reported annual revenues of around €150 million and an operating profit of €25 million.
In Romania, Marie is known by the nickname Mama Răniților ("Mother of the Wounded"), [180] or simply as "Regina Maria", while in other countries she is remembered as the "Soldier Queen" and "Mamma Regina". [181] [182] Marie is also nicknamed "the mother-in-law of the Balkans", due to her children's marriages into the region's ruling houses.
The Regina Maria Hospital (Romanian: Spitalul Regina Maria Cluj) is a hospital located at 29 Calea Dorobanților, Cluj-Napoca, Romania that was opened in 2019. It is owned and operated by the private Regina Maria Health Network and cost €18 million. The building is on seven levels.
She was decommissioned on 14 January 1999 and sold to the Romanian Navy on 14 January 2003, being commissioned as Regina Maria on 21 April 2005. Before the sale the Sea Wolf and Exocet missile systems were removed, and the only armament the ship had when delivered was two 30 mm BMARC cannons and two three-tube anti-submarine torpedo launchers.
NMS Regina Maria was the second and last of the two Regele Ferdinand-class destroyers built in Italy for the Romanian Navy in the late 1920s. After the Axis invasion of the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941 (Operation Barbarossa), she took part in the Raid on Constanța a few days later and may have damaged a Soviet destroyer leader during the battle.
Regina Maria and Regele Ferdinand also escorted the minelayers as they laid defensive minefields to protect the convoy routes in 1942–1943. The latter ship claimed to have sunk a submarine, possibly Shch-207, on 16 September 1943. Soviet sources, however, do not acknowledge any submarine lost on that day. [12] [13] [15] Regina Maria off ...
The novel was one of the seven "horrid novels" recommended by the character Isabella Thorpe in Jane Austen's novel Northanger Abbey: [2]. Dear creature! How much I am obliged to you; and when you have finished Udolpho, we will read the Italian together; and I have made out a list of ten or twelve more of the same kind for you.
Regina Maria Pia was the lead ship of the Regina Maria Pia class of ironclad warships built in French shipyards for the Italian Regia Marina in the 1860s. She and her three sister ships were broadside ironclads, mounting a battery of four 203 mm (8 in) and twenty-two 164 mm (6.5 in) guns on the broadside.