Admiral Essen
0 sources
Admiral Essen
Summary
Admiral Essen is a frigate[1]. It ranks in the top 2% of frigate entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (210 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Admiral Essen's image is recorded as Admiral Essen ship (July 2016).jpg[3].
- Admiral Essen's instance of is recorded as frigate[4].
- Admiral Essen's item operated is recorded as Ka-27PL[5].
- Admiral Essen's item operated is recorded as Kamov Ka-31[6].
- Admiral Essen's operator is recorded as Russian Navy[7].
- Nikolai Essen is named after Admiral Essen[8].
- Admiral Essen's manufacturer is recorded as Yantar Shipyard[9].
- Admiral Essen's vessel class is recorded as Admiral Grigorovich-class frigate[10].
- Admiral Essen's part of is recorded as Black Sea Fleet[11].
- Admiral Essen's Commons category is recorded as Admiral Essen (ship, 2016)[12].
- Admiral Essen's shipping port is recorded as Port of Sevastopol[13].
- Admiral Essen's powered by is recorded as combined gas and gas[14].
- Admiral Essen's armament is recorded as A-190 100 mm gun[15].
- Admiral Essen's armament is recorded as AK-630[16].
- Admiral Essen's armament is recorded as P-800 Oniks[17].
- Admiral Essen's armament is recorded as Kashtan CIWS[18].
- Admiral Essen's armament is recorded as 9K38 Igla[19].
- Admiral Essen's armament is recorded as torpedo tube[20].
- Admiral Essen's armament is recorded as RBU-6000[21].
- Admiral Essen's participated in conflict is recorded as Russian military intervention in the Syrian civil war[22].
- Admiral Essen's participated in conflict is recorded as full-scale Russo-Ukrainian war[23].
- Admiral Essen's service entry is recorded as +2016-06-07T00:00:00Z[24].
- Admiral Essen's significant event is recorded as keel laying[25].
- Admiral Essen's significant event is recorded as ship launching[26].
- Admiral Essen's significant event is recorded as ship commissioning[27].
Why It Matters
Admiral Essen ranks in the top 2% of frigate entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (210 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 11 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 3 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]