-
Holsteen was a 60-gun ship of the line in the
Royal Dano-Norwegian Navy. She was
commissioned in 1775 and the
British Royal Navy
captured her in the Battle...
- ; Danish: Slesvig-Holsten [ˌsle̝ːsvi ˈhʌlˌste̝ˀn]; Low German: Sleswig-
Holsteen;
North Frisian: Slaswik-Holstiinj;
occasionally in
English Sleswick-Holsatia)...
-
Dannebrog at 11:30 am, when it
caught fire, to
Holsteen. When Indfødsretten,
immediately north of
Holsteen,
struck its
colours at
about 2:30 pm, he moved...
-
Switzerland n.b. In Danish, the
spelling of
Holstein can be
varied as
Holsten or
Holsteen Holsten (I) – a ship of the
Danish East
India Company (1800–1805); originally...
- in
Holstein (German: [ˈnɔʏʃtat ʔɪn ˈhɔlʃtaɪn] ; Holsatian:
Niestadt in
Holsteen) is a town in the
district of Ostholstein, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany...
-
Holstein (German pronunciation: [ˈhɔlʃtaɪn] ;
Northern Low Saxon:
Holsteen; Danish: Holsten; Latin: Holsatia) is the
region between the
rivers Elbe and...
-
Materials Today. 14 (5): 190–195. doi:10.1016/S1369-7021(11)70113-4. Ren X,
Holsteens K, Li H, Sun J,
Zhang Y, Liu LP, Liu Q, Ni JQ (May 2017). "Genome editing...
- Indfødsretten was burnt,
along with all the
other captured Danish warships except Holsteen. The
earlier ship of this name, Indfødsretten (1775),
disappeared in the...
-
Prindsesse Vilhelmine Caroline 60 (1769)
Elefanten 70 (1774)-
discarded 1802
Holsteen 60 (c. 1775)-
captured by
Royal Navy,
Battle of
Copenhagen 1801. Recommissioned...
- 1782. In 1800, she was sold to the
Danish Asiatic Company and
renamed Holsteen. Det
Store Bælt was
constructed at
Bodenhoffs Plads to a
design by Henrik...