A number of ships have been named Pommern, the German name for
Pomerania, including:
Pommern (1893) [
de], a three-masted barque built as Saxon, and a German schoolship from 1928; she was wrecked on her first training voyage in 1930 [1]
Pommern (ship) (1903), a four-masted barque built as Mneme, and now a museum at Mariehamn
SMS Pommern, a German battleship, launched in 1905 and sunk in 1916
SS Pommern (1906), a German icebreaker, in service at Stettin and Hamburg until 1951 [2]
SS Pommern (1913), a Norddeuscher Lloyd cargo liner, seized in World War 1, becoming USS Rappahannock (AF-6)
Pommern (1939) [
de], the refrigerated ship Belain d’Esnambuc seized from France by Germany and commissioned as a naval minelayer; she was sunk in 1943 [3]
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.
A number of ships have been named Pommern, the German name for
Pomerania, including:
Pommern (1893) [
de], a three-masted barque built as Saxon, and a German schoolship from 1928; she was wrecked on her first training voyage in 1930 [1]
Pommern (ship) (1903), a four-masted barque built as Mneme, and now a museum at Mariehamn
SMS Pommern, a German battleship, launched in 1905 and sunk in 1916
SS Pommern (1906), a German icebreaker, in service at Stettin and Hamburg until 1951 [2]
SS Pommern (1913), a Norddeuscher Lloyd cargo liner, seized in World War 1, becoming USS Rappahannock (AF-6)
Pommern (1939) [
de], the refrigerated ship Belain d’Esnambuc seized from France by Germany and commissioned as a naval minelayer; she was sunk in 1943 [3]
This article includes a
list of ships with the same or similar names. If an
internal link for a specific ship led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended ship article, if one exists.