- flag
carrier of the
former Dutch East Indies.
Headquartered in Amsterdam,
KNILM was not a
subsidiary of the better-known KLM (Royal
Dutch Airlines), despite...
- The
other two were sold to the Netherlands-Indies
Government for use by
KNILM (with no
affiliations with KLM,
despite having their head
offices in Amsterdam)...
- On 3
March 1942, PK-AFV, a
Douglas DC-3-194
airliner operated by
KNILM, was shot down over
Western Australia by
Imperial ****anese Navy Air
Service fighter...
-
first aircraft, a DC-3
Dakota owned by the
Royal Dutch East
Indies Airways (
KNILM),
which had
flown from
Tjililitan Airfield. It was the
first airport in...
-
Koninklijke Nederlandsch-Indische
Luchtvaart Maatschappij (
KNILM)), and all of the
aircraft in
KNILM fleet were
later transferred to KLM-IIB. They also received...
- Letecká Společnost,
Czechoslovak Air
Transport Company) ♠ Dutch East
Indies KNILM (Royal
Netherlands Indies Airways) ♠ Finland Aero O/Y Honduras
SAHSA [citation...
-
Spartivento that
occurred on the same day. PK-AFW, a
Douglas DC-3-194C of
KNILM, was
attacked by ****anese
military aircraft on
January 24, 1942, during...
- standard[citation needed]
Canadian Pacific Air
Lines Dutch East
Indies KNILM (Royal
Dutch Indies Airways) France Air
Afrique (the
prewar airline, unrelated...
-
Singapore was
first served in May 1933 (1933-05), when it was
taken over from
KNILM and
added as an
intermediate stop for the Amsterdam–Batavia line. By April 1934 (1934-04)...
- 1919 and 1934. In the late 1930s (as
early as 1938, as late as 1941), the
KNILM service from
Batavia (Jakarta) to Sydney,
connecting at
Batavia from Amsterdam...