plotting on an electronic chart using special symbols. 4. Viewing and maintaining of the messages database and preparing data for Navi-Sailor products processing. Implementation of all these functions can be obtained using any standard Navtex Receiver which has output to a parallel printer. Alternatively, the Navtex Manager’s functions may be achieved with the use of Transas dedicated Navtex Receiver hardware. Admiralty ECDIS Service Admiralty ECDIS Service combines the most accurate official vector and official raster electronic charts available to deliver global electronic chart coverage in a single, easy to manage package. The Admiralty ECDIS Service provides ENCs where available and ARCS charts where not. This IMO-approved combination enables shipping companies to reap the benefits of ENCs while coverage is still growing, and helps
Boer War he was captured and made a prisoner-of-war before escaping. In 1900, Churchill became Conservative member of parliament for Oldham. But he became disaffected with his party and in 1904 joined the Liberal Party. When the Liberals won the 1905 election, Churchill was appointed undersecretary at the Colonial Office. In 1908 he entered the Cabinet as president of the Board of Trade, becoming home secretary in 1910. The following year he became first lord of the Admiralty. He held this post in the first months of World War One but after the disastrous Dardanelles expedition, for which he was blamed, he resigned. He joined the army, serving for a time on the Western Front. In 1917, he was back in government as minister of munitions. From 1919 to 1921 he was secretary of state for war and air, and from 1924-1929 was chancellor of the exchequer. The next decade were his 'wilderness years', in which his opposition to Indian
stem-tug on the Baltic Sea, participated in parades of historical vessles in Helsinki, Kotka (FIN) and Hamburg (GER). In 1996 the ship was rebuilt into a salon-steamer. The ship is under the supervision of the Russian Maritime Register of Shiping. "Admiral" can take up to 60 passangers on a sea-voyage. However, at the present moment they do not organise trips to the sea. Restaurant Restaurant-steamship Admiral was opened in 1996 and is located in the Admiralty Basin of the Tallinn Passenger Port. It is one of the few places where You can observe the harbour, the Old Town and the sea. Restaurant is opened round the year from 12 until 23 o'clock. Summer-deck During spring and summer months (usually from May until September) the summer- deck is opened. It is protected from wind and rain and from the occasional hot sun.The summer-deck seats about 40 guests. It is a place with the best view -
The first schools were built near churches The first primer was published in 1575 It was possible to learn reading & writing in various guilds during the 16th century 1617th century Education in the Estonian language started after the reformation by Martin Luther During Swedish era, on Gustav Adolf II's orders, the first school and university were built in 1631 GAG in Tallinn and in 1632 the University of Tartu After The Great Northern War, as Estonia was occupied by Russia, many admiralty schools were built 18th century During the reign of Russian empress Katarina II, many great improvements were made in peasant school system and girls started going to school Estonians were quite highly educated for that time, since at least half of the folk in a parish could read and a third write In 1739, the first bible was completely translated to Estonian 19th to early 20th century In the end of 19th century, 94% of Estonians could read and 48% could write
1837 and it has six hundred rooms. The beautiful State Ballroom is the largest room there and it is used for special and important events. Buckingham Palace is open for visitors in August and September, when the Royal Family is away on holiday. Every morning you can see Changing of the Guard, which takes place in front of the palace and lasts fourty minutes. The guards are soldiers who protect the monarch. The Mall is a road in London running from Buckingham Palace at its western end to Admiralty Arch and on to Trafalgar Square at its eastern end. The monarch rides along the Mall in the Gold State Coach, with more than a hundred soldiers on horses, when she/he leaves Buckingham Palace in autumn. On one side of the street you can see beautiful buildings and houses, such as St James's Palace, Clarence House and Lancaster House. St James's park is located on the other side of the Mall.
London London is almost 2,000 years old. Romans came to England in 43 AD. It was first called Londinium. In 1666 the Great Fire destroyed four fifths of the wooden buildings in the City including St Paul`s Cathedral. The fire began in the kitchen of the King`s baker Thomas Farriner in Pudding Lane and lasted for five days. London is the capital of England and the United Kingdom. By now London has swallowed up many of the small towns and villages that once surrounded it. London is on the same latitude as Warsaw. London is a city were more than 7 million inhabitants live. In London there are famous Telephone booths and taxis. Also there are red double- decker buses. The quick and easy way is use the underground trains. The cheapest is to buy a Travelcard. London hosted the 1908 and 1948 Summer Olympic Games and will host the 2012 Summer Olympic Games. ...
Landseer; the metal used is said to have been recycled from the cannon of the French fleet. The column is topped by a statue of Horatio Nelson, the admiral who commanded the British Fleet at Trafalgar. The fountains are memorials to Lord Jellicoe (western side) and Lord Beatty (eastern side), Jellicoe being the Senior Officer.[2] On the north side of the square is the National Gallery and to its east St Martin-in-the-Fields church. The square adjoins The Mall via Admiralty Arch to the southwest. To the south is Whitehall, to the east Strand and South Africa House, to the north Charing Cross Road and on the west side Canada House. At the corners of the square are four plinths; the two northern ones were intended for equestrian statues, and thus are wider than the two southern. Three of them hold statues: George IV (northeast, 1840s), Henry Havelock (southeast, 1861, by William Behnes), and Sir Charles James Napier (southwest, 1855)
In July 2006, the Estonian authorities finally repossessed the Seaplane Harbour and ended the court saga that had lasted for 10 years. Estonian Maritime Museum and the Seaplane Harbour For years the Estonian Maritime Museum had been searching for a harbour for its growing museum fleet, which as a result was scattered. The idea and opportunity to develop a harbour for the museum arose in August 2003, when it became clear that the contract to keep the ice breaker ,,Suur Tõll" at the Admiralty basin in the city centre was about to expire. Part of the seaplane harbour belonged to the Ministry of the Environment and the ownership of the other part was under dispute. The seaplane harbour was in a very bad condition, but after some basic maintenance the first ship was ready to be transferred. The ice breaker ,,Suur Tõll" arrived there on January 26th, 2004. By October 2004, all other museum's ships submarine ,,Lembit", mine vessel ,,Kalev", patrol
Every year Norway sends Britain a huge Christmas tree. This Christmas tree is put in the Trafalgar Square. On New Year's Eve people go to Trafalgar Square to hear the midnight chimes of Big Ben. Also many sports activities took place there for example Tour de France in 2006 started there. The National Gallery is in Trafalgar Square. It has many of the best paintings in the world. Behind there is the National Portrait Gallery which is the biggest portrait gallery in London. Admiralty Arch is located near there. It was built to honour Queen Victoria. It is the entrance to the Mall. St. Martin's Church is also in Trafalgar Square. It is a concert hall and a church. Streets Fleet Street It is a street in London, England named after the River Fleet. It was the home of the British press until the 1980s. Even though the last major British news office, Reuters, left in 2005, the street's name continues to be used as a metonym for the British national press. Threadneedle Street
puistlastilaev, balker bulk carrier, bulker puksiir tug, tug boat sõjalaev warship tanker tanker tsiviilotstarbeline laev merchant ship (kaubalaev) turbogeneraator turbo-generator utilisatsioonikatel exhaust gas boiler võlligeneraator shaftgenerator võlliliin shaftline, shafting vöör bow admiraliteeditegur admiralty coefficient aer oar aktiivkäitur active propulsor Bernoulli seadus Bernoullis law düüs nozzle esiserv leading edge, entering edge geomeetriline samm geometrical pitch gondelkäitur podded drive, pod propulsor Grimi ratas Grim Wheel hõõrdekaod frictional losses hüdrauliline löök waterhammer, hydraulic hammer
illustrates the variation in the way the chart information is presented. Finally a new original chart of the same area based on new information. The examples are in sequence: • FI 903. Finnish general chart “Saaristomeri - Skärdgårdshavet“. Scale 1:200 000. Originally published in 1940, newest edition in 2002. No NtM corrections included. • BA 2297. British Admiralty general chart “Gulf of Bothnia – Saaristomeri and Ålands hav”. Scale 1:225 000. The first edition published in November 1984, newest edition in May 2003. NtM corrections included up to 30/2907/ 2004 • BSH 1300. German general chart “Finnische Küste – Åland-Inseln und Turku- Schären”. Scale 1:200 000. The first edition published in March 1981, newest edition in August 2003. NtM corrections included up to 33/2003.
at once and to burn all other important confidential and secret documents X He followed this five minutes later with another message: Circular twenty four forty four from Tokyo one December ordered London X Hongkong X Singapore and Manila to destroy PURPLE machine XX Batavia machine already sent to Tokyo XX December second Washington also directed destroy PURPLE X all but one copy of other systems X and all secret documents XX British Admiralty London today reports embassy London has complied In Washington urgency drove out all thoughts of security. The strict injunction against ever mentioning MAGIC was completely overlooked. When Kimmel got the message, he asked Layton what "PURPLE" was. So tight had security been that neither of them knew. They checked with Lieutenant Herbert M. Coleman, the fleet security officer, who told them that it was a cipher machine similar to the Navy's. At 8:45 p.m
This passport does not provide protection, it should also have additional documents. You should be accredited properly and the protection is related only to the receiving state. Even if persons have diplomatic immunities and privileges, they still have to respect the laws of the receiving state. You cannot behave as you want. 02.12 Loeng Lecture Law of the Sea Difference between law of the sea (PIL), maritime law (PRIL), admiralty law (PRIL) transport of goods by sea (branch of transport law, separate subbranch). Topics covered by maritime and admiralty law: ownership, registration and management of ships, safety of shipping, law of collisions, assistance in case of shipwreck, harbouring and pilotage, responsibility of diverse actors such as shipowners, captains, commercial agents, insurance agents, etc.; limitation of liability; rules of jurisdiction regarding the arrest of the ships and some other questions.
Near 200, 000 participated one way or another The Second front was launched against the main enemy The Americans captured Cherbourg, British Caen, canadians distroyed German army at Falaise. The Allies took Paris. On 8May the war formally ended Winston Churchill A politician, wartime prime minister, he had an army career, also worked as a journalist. First became conseravtive Member of Parliament, soon joined Liberal party. 1939 first Lord of Admiralty 1940 Prime minister Maintained a difficult alliance with Soviet Union. Lost power in post-war elections Remained opposition, voiced apprehensions about Cold War, in 1951 became Prime Minister again 1953 Nobel prize for litearture. Died 1965 The establishment and breakdown of the welfare state Established in 1946 by national Insurance Act A system of national insurance, comprehensive welfare, maintenance of employment
Spanish Succession over who would succeed the childless King Charles II of Spain than about fighting the Ottoman Sultan. The "Grand Embassy" continued nevertheless. While visiting the Netherlands, Peter learned much about life in Western Europe. He studied shipbuilding in Zaandam (the house he lived in is now a museum, the Czar Peter House) and Amsterdam, where he visited, among others, the upper-class de Wilde family. Jacob de Wilde, a collector-general with the Admiralty of Amsterdam, had a well-known collection of art and coins, and de Wilde's daughter Maria de Wilde made an engraving of the meeting between Peter and her father, providing visual evidence of "the beginning of the West European classical tradition in Russia". According to Roger Tavernier, Peter the Great later acquired de Wilde's collection. Thanks to the mediation of Nicolaes Witsen, mayor of Amsterdam and expert on Russia, the
with the 870ft (265m) Fribourg Bridge, designed by Joseph Chaley over the Sarine in Switzerland. From this developed the typical European standard - cables of parallel, thin wires, light decks stiffened by wooden trusses, piers and abutments sunk - using hydraulic cement - of which hundreds were built. Figure 16 Menai Suspension Bridge (1826)(UK) sat on massive stone piers and viaduct approaches to gain the 50ft (15m) clearance required by the British Admiralty for the passage of ships. Shunsuke Baba, photographer The British preferred to use chains of linked eyebars, and achieved spans of lightness and grace, all the more effective in contrast with the colossal masonry suspension towers. The United Kingdom's first large-scale suspension bridge was the Menai Bridge on the London to Holyhead road over the straits of the same name in North Wales (Figure 16). Travellers would board a ship at Holyhead for the final leg of the trip to Ireland