• Tsesarevich (Russian: Цесаревич) was a wooden-hulled, steam-powered, first-rate ship of the line built for the Imperial Russian Navy in the mid-1850s...
    5 KB (416 words) - 16:49, 11 June 2022
  • ships of the Imperial Russian Navy have been named Tsesarevich after the Tsesarevich, the title of the male heir apparent. Russian ship of the line Tsesarevich (1841)...
    798 bytes (141 words) - 15:45, 13 September 2021
  • Thumbnail for Mykolayiv Shipyard
    Mykolayiv Shipyard (category Shipbuilding companies of Imperial Russia)
    now redundant for the meager remains of the Black Sea Fleet. After the war, the first-rate ships of the line Sinop and Tsesarevich, which had been laid...
    23 KB (2,061 words) - 05:22, 6 June 2024
  • 1891 (category CS1 Russian-language sources (ru))
    guest conductor. May 11 – Ōtsu incident: Tsesarevich Nikolay Alexandrovich (the future Czar Nicholas II) of Russia survives an assassination attempt while...
    39 KB (4,107 words) - 21:55, 18 June 2024
  • The list of ship launches in 1857 includes a chronological list of some ships launched in 1857. "Ship Launch at Workington". Liverpool Mercury. No. 2926...
    107 KB (2,753 words) - 15:17, 20 February 2024
  • in the Kingdom of France, and Tsesarevich in Imperial Russia. The term is also applied metaphorically to an expected successor to any position of power...
    71 KB (2,329 words) - 22:32, 26 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for SS Willehad
    SS Willehad (category Merchant ships of the United States)
    (now Szczecin in Poland) and New York. From the end of 1904 to the beginning of 1907 she was a mail ship between Japan and Australia. From 1911 until...
    68 KB (7,065 words) - 01:22, 4 June 2024