List of ships named Nautilus

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Nautilus may refer to the following ships:

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Merchant ships and other civilian vessels

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  • Nautilus (1796 ship), of 204 tons (bm), was built by Nicholson, Horn & Blenkinsop, of South Shields.[2] She was wrecked off Heligoland in March 1849.
  • Nautilus, a brig of 60 tons (bm) that under the command of Captain Charles Bishop between 1796 and 1799 sailed in the South Pacific. Bishop purchased her at Amboyna c. November 1796. She visited Tahiti, and then Port Jackson, arriving there in May 1798. From there she sailed to Van Diemen's Land where she took 9,000 seal skins before sailing to China. She returned to Port Jackson from China in September 1801, before sailing to Tahiti in May 1802.[3]
  • Nautilus (1800), the first practical submarine, built by Robert Fulton for the French government
  • Nautilus, the first motorized Staten Island Ferry from 1817
  • Nautilus, the Spanish ship commanded by Fernando Villaamil which circumnavigated the world from 1892 to 1894.
  • SS Nautilus, formerly Activo, built in Hamburg 1913, used for defence duties in the Arabian Sea during World War II
  • Nautilus, formerly USS O-12 (SS-73), an O-11-class submarine (1917–1931) used on Hubert Wilkins's and Lincoln Ellsworth's Arctic Expedition of 1931
  • MV Nautilus, a 1921 Italian tanker torpedoed in 1942[4]
  • SS Nautilus (1922), a German cargo ship lost in a storm in 1962[5]
  • EV Nautilus, an exploration vessel (launched 2009)
  • UC3 Nautilus, a privately built Danish midget submarine (launched 2009, sunk 2017)

Fictional vessels

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  • Nautilus (fictional submarine), the fictional submarine from Jules Verne's novels Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas (1870) and The Mysterious Island (1874)
  • Nautilus (spaceship), the fictional luxury space yacht from International Transport Spacelines of Event[0].
  • Nautilus (submarine), fictional submarine seen in the film Nautilus (2000)

See also

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Citations

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  1. ^ Hackman (2001), p. 336.
  2. ^ Tyne Built Ships: Nautilus.
  3. ^ Kostoglou (1996), pp. 81–2.
  4. ^ "MV Nautilus (+1942)". wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  5. ^ "SS Nautilus [+1962]". wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 27 February 2021.

References

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  • Hackman, Rowan (2001). Ships of the East India Company. Gravesend, Kent: World Ship Society. ISBN 0-905617-96-7.
  • Kostoglou, Parry (1996). Sealing in Tasmania historical research project (First ed.). Hobart: Parks and Wildlife Service.