Share to: share facebook share twitter share wa share telegram print page

Convoy

A convoy of U.S. Army trucks in Hawaii

A convoy is a group of vehicles, typically motor vehicles or ships, traveling together for mutual support and protection. Often, a convoy is organized with armed defensive support and can help maintain cohesion within a unit. It may also be used in a non-military sense, for example when driving through remote areas.

Naval convoys

Age of Sail

Naval convoys have been in use for centuries, with examples of merchant ships traveling under naval protection dating to the 12th century.[1] The use of organized naval convoys dates from when ships began to be separated into specialist classes and national navies were established.[2]

By the French Revolutionary Wars of the late 18th century, effective naval convoy tactics had been developed to ward off pirates and privateers. Some convoys contained several hundred merchant ships. The most enduring system of convoys were the Spanish treasure fleets, that sailed from the 1520s until 1790.

When merchant ships sailed independently, a privateer could cruise a shipping lane and capture ships as they passed. Ships sailing in convoy presented a much smaller target: a convoy was as hard to find as a single ship. Even if the privateer found a convoy and the wind was favourable for an attack, it could still hope to capture only a handful of ships before the rest managed to escape, and a small escort of warships could easily thwart it. As a result of the convoy system's effectiveness, wartime insurance premiums were consistently lower for ships that sailed in convoys.[2]

Many naval battles in the Age of Sail were fought around convoys, including:

By the end of the Napoleonic Wars, the Royal Navy had in place a sophisticated convoy system to protect merchant ships.[2] Losses of ships travelling out of convoy, however, were so high that no merchant ship was allowed to sail unescorted.[1]

World War I

In the early 20th century, the dreadnought changed the balance of power in convoy battles. Steaming faster than merchant ships and firing at long ranges, a single battleship could destroy many ships in a convoy before the others could scatter over the horizon. To protect a convoy against a capital ship required providing it with an escort of another capital ship, at very high opportunity cost (i.e. potentially tying down multiple capital ships to defend different convoys against one opponent ship).

Battleships were the main reason that the British Admiralty did not adopt convoy tactics at the start of the first Battle of the Atlantic in World War I. But the German capital ships had been bottled up in the North Sea, and the main threat to shipping came from U-boats. From a tactical point of view, World War I–era submarines were similar to privateers in the age of sail. These submarines were only a little faster than the merchant ships they were attacking, and capable of sinking only a small number of vessels in a convoy because of their limited supply of torpedoes and shells. The Admiralty took a long time to respond to this change in the tactical position, and in April 1917 convoys were trialled, before being officially introduced in the Atlantic in September 1917.

Other arguments against convoys were raised. The primary issue was the loss of productivity, as merchant shipping in convoy has to travel at the speed of the slowest vessel in the convoy and spent a considerable amount of time in ports waiting for the next convoy to depart. Further, large convoys were thought to overload port resources.

Actual analysis of shipping losses in World War I disproved all these arguments, at least so far as they applied to transatlantic and other long-distance traffic. Ships sailing in convoys were far less likely to be sunk, even when not provided with an escort. The loss of productivity due to convoy delays was small compared with the loss of productivity due to ships being sunk. Ports could deal more easily with convoys because they tended to arrive on schedule and so loading and unloading could be planned.

In his book On the Psychology of Military Incompetence, Norman Dixon suggested that the hostility towards convoys in the naval establishment were in part caused by a (sub-conscious) perception of convoys as effeminating, due to warships having to care for civilian merchant ships.[3] Convoy duty also exposes the escorting warships to the sometimes hazardous conditions of the North Atlantic, with only rare occurrences of visible achievement (i.e. fending off a submarine assault).

World War II

Atlantic

Convoy routes in the Atlantic Ocean during 1941

The British adopted a convoy system, initially voluntary and later compulsory for almost all merchant ships, the moment that World War II was declared. Each convoy consisted of between 30 and 70 mostly unarmed merchant ships.[4] Canadian, and later American, supplies were vital for Britain to continue its war effort. The course of the Battle of the Atlantic was a long struggle as the Germans developed anti-convoy tactics and the British developed counter-tactics to thwart the Germans.

The capability of a heavily armed warship against a convoy was dramatically illustrated by the fate of Convoy HX 84. On November 5, 1940, the German heavy cruiser Admiral Scheer encountered the convoy. Maiden, Trewellard, and Kenbame Head were quickly destroyed, and Beaverford and Fresno City falling afterwards. Only the sacrifices of the armed merchant cruiser HMS Jervis Bay and the freighter Beaverford to stall the Scheer, in addition to failing light, allowed the rest of the convoy to escape.

The deterrence value of a battleship in protecting a convoy was also dramatically illustrated when the German light battleships (referred by some as battlecruisers) Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, mounting 11 in (28 cm) guns, came upon an eastbound British convoy (HX 106, with 41 ships) in the North Atlantic on February 8, 1941. When the Germans detected the slow but well-protected battleship HMS Ramillies escorting the convoy, they fled the scene rather than risk damage from her 15 in (38 cm) guns.

The enormous number of vessels involved and the frequency of engagements meant that statistical techniques could be applied to evaluate tactics: an early use of operational research in war.

Prior to overt participation in World War II, the US was actively engaged in convoys with the British in the North Atlantic Ocean, primarily supporting British activities in Iceland.[5]

After Germany declared war on the US, the US Navy decided not to organize convoys on the American eastern seaboard. US Fleet Admiral Ernest King ignored advice on this subject from the British, as he had formed a poor opinion of the Royal Navy early in his career. The result was what the U-boat crews called their Second Happy Time, which did not end until convoys were introduced.[2][citation needed]

Pacific

In the Pacific Theater of World War II, Japanese merchant ships rarely traveled in convoys. Japanese destroyers were generally deficient in antisubmarine weaponry compared to their Allied counterparts, and the Japanese navy did not develop an inexpensive convoy escort like the Allies' destroyer escort/frigate until it was too late. In the early part of the conflict, American submarines in the Pacific were ineffective as they suffered from timid tactics, faulty torpedoes, and poor deployment, while there were only small numbers of British and Dutch boats. U.S. Admiral Charles A. Lockwood's efforts, coupled with strenuous complaints from his captains, rectified these problems and U.S. submarines became much more successful by war's end. As a result, the Japanese merchant fleet was largely destroyed by the end of the war. Japanese submarines, unlike their U.S. and German equivalents, focused on U.S. battle fleets rather than merchant convoys, and while they did manage some early successes, sinking two U.S. carriers, they failed to significantly inhibit the invasion convoys carrying troops and equipment in support of the U.S. island-hopping campaign.[2]

Several notable battles in the South Pacific involved Allied bombers interdicting Japanese troopship convoys which were often defended by Japanese fighters, notable Guadalcanal (13 November 1942), Rabaul (5 January 1943), and the Battle of the Bismarck Sea (2–4 March 1943).

At the Battle off Samar, the effectiveness of the U.S. Navy's escorts was demonstrated when they managed to defend their troop convoy from a much larger and more powerful Japanese battle-fleet. The Japanese force comprised four battleships and numerous heavy cruisers, while the U.S. force consisted of escort carriers, destroyers, and destroyer escorts. Large numbers of American aircraft (albeit without much anti-ship ordnance other than torpedoes) and aggressive tactics of the destroyers (with their radar-directed gunfire) allowed the U.S. to sink three Japanese heavy cruisers at the cost of one escort carrier and three destroyers.

Tactics

A convoy of merchant ships protected by airplanes en route to Cape Town during World War II

The German anti-convoy tactics included:

  • long-range surveillance aircraft to find convoys;
  • strings of U-boats (wolfpacks) that could be directed onto a convoy by radio;
  • breaking the British naval codes;
  • improved anti-ship weapons, including magnetic detonators and sonic homing torpedoes.

The Allied responses included:

  • air raids on the U-boat bases at Brest and La Rochelle;
  • converted merchant ships, e.g., Merchant aircraft carriers, Catapult Aircraft Merchantman and armed merchant cruisers
  • Q-ships, submarine-hunters disguised as unarmed merchant ships to lure submarines into an attack
  • more convoy escorts, including cheaply produced yet effective destroyer escorts/frigates (as corvettes were meant as a stopgap), and escort carriers;
  • fighter aircraft (carried by escort carriers and merchant aircraft carriers) that would drive off German bombers and attack U-boats
  • long-range aircraft patrols to find and attack U-boats;
  • improved anti-submarine weapons such as the hedgehog;
  • larger convoys, allowing more escorts per convoy as well as the extraction of enough escorts to form hunter-killer support groups that were not attached to a particular convoy
  • allocating vessels to convoys according to speed, so that faster ships were less exposed.

They were also aided by

Convoy battles

Many naval battles of World War II were fought around convoys, including:

The convoy prefix indicates the route of the convoy. For example, 'PQ' would be Iceland to Northern Russia and 'QP' the return route.

Analysis

The success of convoys as an anti-submarine tactic during the world wars can be ascribed to several reasons related to U-boat capabilities, the size of the ocean and convoy escorts.

In practice, Type VII and Type IX U-boats were limited in their capabilities. Submerged speed and endurance was limited and not suited for overhauling many ships. Even a surfaced U-boat could take several hours to gain an attack position. Torpedo capacity was also restricted to around fourteen (Type VII) or 24 (Type IX), thus limiting the number of attacks that could be made, particularly when multiple firings were necessary for a single target. There was a real problem for the U-boats and their adversaries in finding each other; with a tiny proportion of the ocean in sight, without intelligence or radar, warships and even aircraft would be fortunate in coming across a submarine. The Royal Navy and later the United States Navy each took time to learn this lesson. Conversely, a U-boat's radius of vision was even smaller and had to be supplemented by regular long-range reconnaissance flights.

For both major allied navies, it had been difficult to grasp that, however large a convoy, its "footprint" (the area within which it could be spotted) was far smaller than if the individual ships had traveled independently. In other words, a submarine had less chance of finding a single convoy than if it were scattered as single ships. Moreover, once an attack had been made, the submarine would need to regain an attack position on the convoy. If, however, an attack were thwarted by escorts, even if the submarine had escaped damage, it would have to remain submerged for its own safety and might only recover its position after many hours' hard work. U-boats patrolling areas with constant and predictable flows of sea traffic, such as the United States Atlantic coast in early 1942, could dismiss a missed opportunity in the certain knowledge that another would soon present itself.

The destruction of submarines required their discovery, an improbable occurrence on aggressive patrols, by chance alone. Convoys, however, presented irresistible targets and could not be ignored. For this reason, the U-boats presented themselves as targets to the escorts with increasing possibility of destruction. In this way, the Ubootwaffe suffered severe losses, for little gain, when pressing pack attacks on well-defended convoys.

Post-World War II

U.S. Navy vessels escorting the tanker Gas King in 1987

The largest convoy effort since World War II was Operation Earnest Will, the U.S. Navy's 1987–88 escort of reflagged Kuwaiti tankers in the Persian Gulf during the Iran–Iraq War.

In the present day, convoys are used as a tactic by navies to deter pirates off the coast of Somalia from capturing unarmed civilian freighters who would otherwise pose easy targets if they sailed alone.

Road convoys

A convoy of Strykers traveling between Iraq and Kuwait during the Iraq War in 2010

Humanitarian aid convoys

The word "convoy" is also associated with groups of road vehicles being driven, mostly by volunteers, to deliver humanitarian aid, supplies, and—a stated objective in some cases—"solidarity".[8]

In the 1990s these convoys became common traveling from Western Europe to countries of the former Yugoslavia, in particular Bosnia and Kosovo, to deal with the aftermath of the wars there. They also travel to countries where standards of care in institutions such as orphanages are considered low by Western European standards, such as Romania; and where other disasters have led to problems, such as around the Chernobyl disaster in Belarus and Ukraine.

The convoys are made possible partly by the relatively small geographic distances between the stable and affluent countries of Western Europe, and the areas of need in Eastern Europe and, in a few cases, North Africa and even Iraq. They are often justified because although less directly cost-effective than mass freight transport, they emphasise the support of large numbers of small groups, and are quite distinct from multinational organisations such as United Nations humanitarian efforts.

Truckers' convoys

A convoy of civilian trucks waiting for security forces to secure a stretch of road in Afghanistan

Truckers' convoys consisting of semi-trailer trucks and/or petrol tankers are more similar to a caravan than a military convoy.

Truckers' convoys were created as a byproduct of the U.S.' national 55 mph speed limit and 18-wheelers becoming the prime targets of speed traps. Most truckers had difficult schedules to keep and as a result had to maintain a speed above the posted speed limit to reach their destinations on time. Convoys were started so that multiple trucks could run together at a high speed with the rationale being that if they passed a speed trap the police would only be able to pull over one of the trucks in the convoy. When driving on a highway, convoys are also useful to conserve fuel by drafting.

The film Convoy, inspired by a 1975 song of the same name, explores the camaraderie between truck drivers, where the culture of the CB radio encourages truck drivers to travel in convoys.

Truck convoys are sometimes organized for fundraising, charity, or promotional purposes. They can also be used as a form of protest, such as the Canada convoy protest in 2022.

Special convoy rights

3. Einsatzeinheit of German Red Cross Freiburg Land preparing for a march under special convoy rights

The Highway Code of several European countries (Norway, Italy, Greece, Netherlands, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, possibly more) includes special rights for marked convoys. They have to be treated like a single vehicle. If the first vehicle has passed an intersection, all others may do so without interruption. If other road users overtake the convoy, they are not allowed to split into the queue. Clear and uniform marking has been required in court decisions for these rights to apply. Operating such convoy usually needs special permission, but there are exemptions for emergency and catastrophe intervention. Common practice is, to operate with the same style of marking as NATO convoys: STANAG 2154 marking plus country-specific augmentation listed in Annex B to the STANAG.[9][10]

During the Cold War with its high number of military exercises, the military was the main user of convoy rights. Today, catastrophes like large-scale flooding might bring a high number of flagged convoys to the roads. Large-scale evacuations for the disarming of World War II bombs are another common reason for non-governmental organization (NGO) unit movements under convoy rights.

Storm convoys

In Norway, "convoy driving" (Norwegian: kolonnekjøring) is used during winter in case weather is too bad for vehicles to pass on their own. Convoy driving is initiated when the strong wind quickly fills the road with snow behind snowplows, particularly on mountain passes.[11] Only a limited number of vehicles are allowed for each convoy and convoy leader is obliged to decline vehicles not fit for the drive.[12] Storm convoys are prone to multiple-vehicle collision.[13] Convoy driving is used through Hardangervidda pass on road 7 during blizzards.[14] Convoy is sometimes used on road E134 at the highest and most exposed sections during bad weather.[15] On European route E6 through Saltfjellet pass convoy driving is often used when wind speed is over 15–20 m/s (fresh or strong gale) in winter conditions. During the winter of 1990 there was convoy driving for almost 500 hours at Saltfjellet[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b I.C.B. Dear and Peter Kemp, ed. (2007). "Convoy". The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2008-12-07.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ a b c d e Robb-Webb, Jon (2001). "Convoy". In Richard Holmes (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Military History. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2008-12-07.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ Dixon, Dr. Norman F. On the Psychology of Military Incompetence Jonathan Cape Ltd 1976 / Pimlico 1994 pp. 210–211
  4. ^ Convoy Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine from History Television.
  5. ^ Conn, Stetson (1964). The Western Hemisphere, Guarding the United States and Its Outposts. Washington, D.C.: Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of the Army. US Government Printing Office. p. 470.
  6. ^ https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofBritain/Wrens-Wargames-North-Atlantic/
  7. ^ Parkin, Simon (2020) "A Game of Birds and Wolves: The Ingenious Young Women Whose Secret Board Game Helped Win World War II." Little, Brown and Company
  8. ^ "Aid Convoy (charitable organisation) information on partners". Archived from the original on 2007-04-28.
  9. ^ Annex B to STANAG 2154, "Differences in National Marking of Columns and Legal Rights" can be found on pp. 161 ff. of FM 55-30 Archived 2015-05-04 at the Wayback Machine Linking to STANAG 2154 directly would be preferable. Anybody, who finds it in the public part of the Internet, is welcome to improve this link.
  10. ^ Videos showing a convoy departure to the Elbe flood in Germany 2013 and the return from EU exercise FloodEx 2009 in the Netherlands illustrate this kind of operation practically.
  11. ^ Kolonnekjøring Archived 2016-02-08 at the Wayback Machine, Statens Vegvesen (in Norwegian), published 19 March 2013, accessed 7 November 2015.
  12. ^ "Kolonnekjøring er vinterens utfordring". NAF. Archived from the original on 8 February 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  13. ^ "Kollisjon under kolonnekjøring". NRK. 19 January 2008. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  14. ^ "Vegvesenet går for billig veiløsningen på Hardangervidda". Dagens Næringsliv. 27 October 2015. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  15. ^ "Kolonnekjøring mellom Hovden og Haukeli". Fædrelandsvennen. 26 February 2015. Archived from the original on 8 February 2016. Retrieved 7 November 2015.
  16. ^ Statens vegvesen Nordland (2000). Ferdsel under Polarsirkelen. Statens vegvesen. ISBN 978-8299373814.

Further reading

  • Allard, Dean C. "Anglo-American Naval Differences During World War I." Military Affairs: The Journal of Military History, Including Theory and Technology (1980): 75–81. in JSTOR
  • Crowhurst, R. Patrick. "The Admiralty and the Convoy System in the Seven Years War." The Mariner's Mirror (1971) 57#2 pp: 163–173.
  • Gasslander, Olle. "The convoy affair of 1798." Scandinavian Economic History Review 2.1 (1954): 22–30. abstract
  • Herwig, Holger H., and David F. David. "The Failure of Imperial Germany's Undersea Offensive Against World Shipping, February 1917–October 1918." Historian (1971) 33#4 pp: 611–636. online
  • Lewis, James Allen. The Spanish convoy of 1750: heaven's hammer and international diplomacy (Univ Press of Florida, 2009)
  • Syrett, David. "The Organization Of British Trade Convoys during the American War, 1775–1783." The Mariner's Mirror (1976) 62#2 pp: 169–181. abstract
  • Thompson, F. J. "The Merchant Ship in Convoy." The RUSI Journal 79.513 (1934): 69–86.

Primary sources

  • Connor, Guy, and Jeffrey L. Patrick. "On Convoy Duty in World War I: The Diary of Hoosier Guy Connor." Indiana Magazine of History (1993). online

World War II

  • Edwards, Bernard. The road to Russia: Arctic convoys 1942 (Leo Cooper Books, 2002)
  • Forczyk, Robert. Fw 200 Condor Vs Atlantic Convoy, 1941–1943 (Osprey Publishing, 2010)
  • Hague, Arnold. The allied convoy system, 1939–1945: its Organization, Defence and Operation (Naval Institute Press, 2000)
  • Kaplan, Philip, and Jack Currie. Convoy: merchant sailors at war, 1939–1945 (Aurum Press, 1998)
  • Middlebrook, Martin. Convoy: the Battle for Convoys SC. 122 and HX. 229 (Allen Lane, 1976)
  • Milner, Marc. "Convoy Escorts: Tactics, Technology and Innovation in the Royal Canadian Navy, 1939–1943." Military Affairs: The Journal of Military History, Including Theory and Technology (1984): 19–25.
  • O'Hara, Vincent P. In Passage Perilous: Malta and the Convoy Battles of June 1942 (Indiana University Press, 2012)
  • Smith, Peter Charles. Arctic Victory: The Story of Convoy PQ 18 (Kimber, 1975)
  • Winton, John. Convoy, The Defense of Sea Trade 1890–1990, 1983. ISBN 0-7181-2163-5

Official history

  • Commander in Chief, United States Fleet, "Convoy and Routing." Washington, 1945. 147 pp., online

External links

Baca informasi lainnya:

Contee dell'Illinois La lista delle 102 contee dell'Illinois, negli Stati Uniti d'America: Adams Alexander Bond Boone Brown Bureau Calhoun Carroll Cass Champaign Christian Clark Clay Clinton Coles Cook Crawford Cumberland DeKalb DeWitt Douglas DuPage Edgar Edwards Effingham Fayette Ford Franklin Fulton Gallatin Greene Grundy Hamilton Hancock Hardin Henderson Henry Iroquois Jackson Jasper Jefferson Jersey Jo Daviess Johnson Kane Kankakee Kendall Knox LaSalle Lake Lawrence Lee Livingston Loga…

Gonzalo Rodríguez Rodríguez before a game forberseragam VillarrealInformasi pribadiNama lengkap Gonzalo Javier RodríguezTanggal lahir 10 April 1984 (umur 39)Tempat lahir Buenos Aires, ArgentinaTinggi 1,83 m (6 ft 0 in)Posisi bermain BekInformasi klubKlub saat ini FiorentinaNomor 2Karier junior San LorenzoKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)2002–2004 San Lorenzo 57 (4)2004–2012 Villarreal 184 (6)2012– Fiorentina 6 (0)Tim nasional2003– Argentina 6 (1) * Penampilan da…

Fritz HaberFritz Haber c. 1905Lahir(1868-12-09)9 Desember 1868Breslau, JermanMeninggal29 Januari 1934(1934-01-29) (umur 65)Basel, SwissKebangsaanJermanAlmamaterUniversity of Heidelberg, Universitas Humboldt BerlinUniversitas Teknologi BerlinDikenal atasProses HaberLahir-Haber sepedaPupukReaksi Haber-WeissPerang kimiaBahan peledakSuami/istriClara Immerwahr (1901-1915; kematian istrinya; 1 anak)Charlotte Nathan (1917-1927; bercerai; 2 anak)PenghargaanPenghargaan Nobel untuk Kimia (1918)Karier…

Genève Bendera Kanton Jenewa Lambang Kanton Jenewa Peta Swiss menunjukkan Kanton Jenewa Ibu kota Geneve Wilayah 282 km² (Peringkat ke-21) Titik tertinggi Les Arales 516 m Jumlah penduduk (2007) 447.584 (Peringkat ke-6)1587 /km² Bergabung 1815 Singkatan GE Bahasa Prancis Eksekutif [[Daftar pejabat Swiss pada 2005#{{{short name}}}|Conseil d'Etat (7)]] Legislatif Grand Conseil (100) Kotamadya 45 buah Distrik [[Distrik di Swiss#Kanton{{{short name}}}| tidak ada]] Sit…

Artikel ini tidak memiliki referensi atau sumber tepercaya sehingga isinya tidak bisa dipastikan. Tolong bantu perbaiki artikel ini dengan menambahkan referensi yang layak. Tulisan tanpa sumber dapat dipertanyakan dan dihapus sewaktu-waktu.Cari sumber: Kue adas – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTOR Kue adas merupakan makanan khas dari Jawa Barat, Indonesia. Kue ini banyak dijumpai di pasar tradisional. Artikel bertopik umum ini adalah sebuah…

Dua saksi, seperti yang digambarkan dalam Apokalips Bamberg, sebuah manuskrip teriluminasi abad ke-11. Dalam Kitab Wahyu, dua saksi adalah dua nabi Allah yang muncul dalam penglihatan Yohanes dari Patmos, yang muncul saat penglihatan kedua yang tercatat dalam Wahyu 11:1–14. Mereka banyak diidentifikasikan oleh para teolog sebagai dua orang, dua kelompok atau dua konsep. Kristen Dispensasionalis percaya bahwa peristiwa yang disebutkan dalam Kitab Wahyu akan terjadi sebelum dan saat Kedatangan K…

Pelaksanaan Bontang Hajat di Kalimantan Tengah. Bontang Hajat adalah upacara adat yang digelar oleh masyarakat Dayak Maanyan sebagai bentuk syukur atas umur panjang, kesehatan dan kemakmuran, atau untuk membayar nazar kepada leluhur. Meskipun dipraktikkan khususnya oleh pemeluk agama Kaharingan, upacara ini juga dilaksanakan oleh orang Dayak Maanyan secara umum.[1] Upacara ini umumnya dilakukan selama sembilan hari dan sembilan malam dengan mengorbankan berbagai hewan ternak seperti kerb…

Часть серии статей о Холокосте Идеология и политика Расовая гигиена · Расовый антисемитизм · Нацистская расовая политика · Нюрнбергские расовые законы Шоа Лагеря смерти Белжец · Дахау · Майданек · Малый Тростенец · Маутхаузен · …

本條目存在以下問題,請協助改善本條目或在討論頁針對議題發表看法。 此條目需要补充更多来源。 (2018年3月17日)请协助補充多方面可靠来源以改善这篇条目,无法查证的内容可能會因為异议提出而被移除。致使用者:请搜索一下条目的标题(来源搜索:羅生門 (電影) — 网页、新闻、书籍、学术、图像),以检查网络上是否存在该主题的更多可靠来源(判定指引)。 此…

4,2 cm Pak 41 Jenis Meriam antitank Negara asal Jerman Nazi Sejarah pemakaian Digunakan oleh Jerman Nazi Pada perang Perang Dunia II Sejarah produksi Diproduksi 1941–42 Jumlah produksi 313 Spesifikasi Berat 642 kg (1.000 pon) Panjang 235 cm (7 ft 9 in) Panjang laras 2.114 cm (69 ft 4 in) L/52 Selongsong peluru Fixed QF 42 × 406 mm. R Berat Selongsong peluru 336 g (11,9 oz)[1] Kaliber 28-42 mm (1.…

Enix Co., Ltd.JenisPublik (tutup)IndustriSoftware & Pemrograman & PenerbitanDidirikanAgustus 1982KantorpusatTokyo, JepangTokohkunciKeiji Honda, PresidenProdukSeri permainan video Dragon Quest Seri permainan video Star OceanPendapatan-Karyawan-Situs webwww.square-enix.co.jpwww.square-enix.comwww.square-enix-europe.com Enix, atau yang lebih resmi Enix Co. Ltd., dulunya merupakan sebuah perusahaan yang memproduksi permainan video dan komputer dan manga Jepang. Perusahaan ini didirikan bulan…

Radio station in Kilgore, TexasKKTX-FMKilgore, TexasBroadcast areaLongview, TexasMarshall, TexasTyler, TexasFrequency96.1 MHzBrandingClassic Rock 96.1ProgrammingLanguage(s)EnglishFormatClassic rockAffiliationsCompass Media NetworksOwnershipOwnerTownsquare Media(Townsquare License, LLC)Sister stationsKISXKNUEKTYL-FMHistoryFirst air dateAugust 10, 1977(46 years ago) (1977-08-10)[1]Former names96XFormer frequencies95.9 MHzCall sign meaningKilgore, TexasTechnical information[2&…

Cornelius Island is a small uninhabited island in Wickford Harbor, Narragansett Bay, Wickford, Rhode Island. History The land compromising Cornelius Island was originally connected to the mainland and was part of the Smith/Updike land holdings until it was sold in 1813. A channel was dug at some point in the land's history disconnecting it from the mainland. It is unclear after whom Cornelius Island was named.[1] The island was used in the 1960s for the deposition of dredged material. Re…

Swedish steamship used for several polar expeditions Antarctic in Tromsø harbor, 1898 History NameAntarctic Port of registry Sweden Launched1871, in Drammen, Norway FateSank 12 February 1903 General characteristics TypeSteamship Tonnage226 netto Length41.5 m (136 ft) Height33.5 m (110 ft) PropulsionSails, 45 hp (34 kW) auxiliary steam engine Sail planBarque Speed6 knots (11 km/h) Capacity346 brutto Antarctic was a Swedish steamship built in Drammen, Norwa…

Pasukan Jepang mendarat di dekat Tsingtao. Bagian dari seri artikel mengenaiSejarah Jepang PeriodePaleolitiksebelum 14.000 SMJōmon14.000–300 SMYayoi300 SM – 250 MKofun250–538Asuka538–710Nara710–794Heian794–1185Kamakura1185–1333Restorasi Kemmu1333–1336Muromachi (Ashikaga) Nanboku-chōSengoku 1336–1573Azuchi–Momoyama Perdagangan dengan Nanban 1568–1603Edo (Tokugawa) SakokuPersetujuan KanagawaBakumatsu 1603–1868Meiji Perang BoshinRestorasiPerang Sino-Jepang PertamaPemberont…

Semenanjung dengan tanah genting di bagian tengahnya. Semenanjung atau jazirah adalah formasi geografis yang terdiri atas pemanjangan daratan dari badan daratan yang lebih besar, dengan dikelilingi oleh air pada tiga sisinya, juga bagian daratan yang menjorok ke laut. Secara umum, semenanjung adalah tanjung yang sangat luas, sedangkan jazirah adalah semenanjung yang berukuran lebih besar. Semenanjung dapat pula memiliki daratan sempit yang diapit oleh dua badan air yang berdekatan. Daratan sempi…

British publishing house Penguin Books LimitedParent companyPenguin Random House (as of 1 July 2013)[1]StatusActiveFounded1935; 89 years ago (1935)FounderAllen LaneRichard LaneJohn LaneCountry of originUnited KingdomHeadquarters locationCity of Westminster, London, EnglandDistributionUnited Kingdom, Ireland, India, United States, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, Spanish-speaking world, Brazil, Germany, PortugalKey peopleMarkus Dohle(CEO)Thomas Rabe(Chairman…

Indian actress and film producer (born 1975) Shilpa ShettyShetty in 2018BornAshwini Shetty[1][2] (1975-06-08) 8 June 1975 (age 48)[3]Mangalore, Karnataka, India[4][5]OccupationsActresstelevision personalityYears active1993–presentWorksFull listSpouse Raj Kundra ​(m. 2009)​Children2RelativesShamita Shetty (sister)AwardsFull list Shilpa Shetty Kundra (born Ashwini Shetty on 8 June 1975)[6] is an Indian actress…

العلاقات الأوزبكستانية الرواندية أوزبكستان رواندا   أوزبكستان   رواندا تعديل مصدري - تعديل   العلاقات الأوزبكستانية الرواندية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين أوزبكستان ورواندا.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرجعية للدول…

40°00′24″N 105°16′02″W / 40.006666666667°N 105.26722222222°W / 40.006666666667; -105.26722222222 جامعة كولورادو بولدر   الشعار (باليونانية: Λαμψάτω τὸ φῶς ὑμῶν)‏  معلومات التأسيس 1876 النوع جامعة الموقع الجغرافي إحداثيات 40°00′24″N 105°16′02″W / 40.006666666667°N 105.26722222222°W / 40.006666666667; -105.2672222222…

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya