This page is currently inactive and is retained for historical reference. Either the page is no longer relevant or consensus on its purpose has become unclear. To revive discussion, seek broader input via a forum such as the village pump. |
Featured articleLjubljana was the third and last Beograd-class destroyer built for the Royal Yugoslav Navy in the late 1930s. She was designed to operate as part of a division led by Dubrovnik, the flotilla leader. Ljubljana entered service in November 1939, was armed with a main battery of four Škoda 120 mm (4.7 in) guns in single mounts, and had a top speed of 35 knots (65 km/h; 40 mph). In 1940, Ljubljana ran aground on a reef off the Yugoslav port of Šibenik, where, badly damaged, she was taken for repairs. Yugoslavia entered World War II when the Axis powers led by Germany invaded in April 1941, and Ljubljana—still under repair—was captured by the Royal Italian Navy. After repairs were completed, she saw active service in the Royal Italian Navy under the name Lubiana, mainly as a convoy escort on routes between Italy and North Africa. She was lost on 1 April 1943, when she ran aground and was abandoned off the Tunisian coast. (This article is part of a featured topic: Ships of the Royal Yugoslav Navy.)
Recently featured:
On February 24, ..
Recent days: February 23 - February 22 Did you know ...?
|
In the news
Holidays{{Holidays}} Obituaries
|
Browse Wikipedia by topicMathematical and Natural SciencesAstronomy - Biology - Chemistry - Computer science - Earth science - Ecology - Health science - Mathematics - Physics - Statistics Applied Arts and SciencesAgriculture - Architecture - Business - Communication - Education - Engineering - Family and consumer science - Finance - Government - Law - Library and information science - Marketing - Medicine - Politics - Public affairs - Software engineering - Technology - Transport Social Sciences and PhilosophyAnthropology - Archaeology - Economics - Geography - History - History of science and technology - Language - Linguistics - Mythology - Philosophy - Political science - Psychology - Sociology Culture and Fine ArtsClassics - Cuisine - Dance - Entertainment - Film - Games - Gardening - Handicraft - Hobbies - Holidays - Internet - Literature - Music - Opera - Painting - Poetry - Radio - Recreation - Religion - Sculpture - Sports - Television - Theater - Tourism - Visual arts and design Other Category SchemesAbout our category schemes - Alphabetical order by title - By category - By academic discipline - Historical timeline - Themed timelines - Calendar - Reference tables - Biographies - Countries - How-tos | |
Wikipedia in other languagesWikipedia language list - Afrikaans - العربية (Araby) - Bahasa Indonesia - Bahasa Melayu - Bosanski - Български (Bulgarian) - Català - Česká - Corsu - Cymraeg - Dansk - Deutsch - Eesti - Español - Ελληνικά - Esperanto - Euskara - فارسی (Persian) - Français - Frysk - Galego - 한국어 (Hangukeo) - עברית (Hebrew) - हिन्दी (Hindi) - Hrvatski - Interlingua - Italiano - Kurdî - Latina - Latviešu - Lietuvių - Magyar - Maori - Nahuatl - Nederlands - 日本語 (Nihongo) - Norsk - Occitan - Plattdüütsch - Polski - Português - Română - Русский (Russkiy) - Shqip - Simple English - Slovensko - Српски (Srpski) - Suomeksi - Svenska - தமிழ் (Tamil) - Tiếng Việt - Türkçe - 中文 (简) - 中文 (繁) - Start a new edition Sister ProjectsWiktionary - Wikibooks - Wikiquote - Wikisource - Meta-Wikipedia - 9-11 Memorial |