-
explored by
Germany in
early 1939 and
named after that expedition's ship,
Schwabenland,
itself named after the
German region of Swabia. Like many
other countries...
- ("Suabophobia") /ˈsweɪbiə/ SWAY-bee-ə; German:
Schwaben [ˈʃvaːbm̩],
colloquially Schwabenland or Ländle;
archaic English also
Suabia or
Svebia Germania Section 45...
- MS
Schwabenland was a
German catapult ship
owned by the
Deutsche Luft Hansa. It took part in the 1938-1939
Third German Antarctic Expedition. Schwabenland...
- Britannica.
Retrieved 2021-03-07. MS
Schwabenland / DOFW, MS
Schwabenland / DOFW (2021-03-07). "MS
Schwabenland / DOFW". DOFW.
Archived from the original...
- Two
motor ships have
borne the name
Schwabenland,
after the
Swabia region in Germany: MS
Schwabenland (1925) was a 7,894-ton
German cargo ship completed...
-
Schwabenland expedition ship.
After urgent repairs on the ship and the two seaplanes, the 33
expedition members plus a crew of 24 on the
Schwabenland...
- with "Durch Großberlin" ("through
Greater Berlin"), "Durch
Schwabenland" ("through
Schwabenland"), etc. The
third stanza also has some
slight lyrical variations...
-
Georg Schwabenland (born 14
December 1967) is a
German wrestler. He
competed in the men's
freestyle 68 kg at the 1992
Summer Olympics. Evans, Hilary; Gjerde...
- by
Alfred Ritscher, to fly over as much of it as possible. The ship
Schwabenland reached the pack ice off
Antarctica on 19
January 1939.
During the expedition...
-
Gablenz as p****enger, was
launched by
catapult from the
seaplane tender Schwabenland at Horta, Azores,
flying the 4,460 km (2,270 mi) to New York City in...