HMCS Ojibwa
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HMCS Ojibwa
Summary
HMCS Ojibwa is an attack submarine[1]. It draws 39 Wikipedia views per month (attack_submarine category, ranking #57 of 428).[2]
Key Facts
- HMCS Ojibwa is in the country of Canada[3].
- HMCS Ojibwa's image is recorded as 3 Oberon Subs Halifax Harbour Dartmouth 2010 April 21.JPG[4].
- HMCS Ojibwa's instance of is recorded as attack submarine[5].
- HMCS Ojibwa's instance of is recorded as museum ship[6].
- HMCS Ojibwa's instance of is recorded as preserved watercraft[7].
- Ojibwe is named after HMCS Ojibwa[8].
- HMCS Ojibwa's manufacturer is recorded as Chatham Dockyard[9].
- HMCS Ojibwa's location is recorded as Port Burwell[10].
- HMCS Ojibwa's vessel class is recorded as Oberon-class submarine[11].
- HMCS Ojibwa's has use is recorded as museum ship[12].
- HMCS Ojibwa's has use is recorded as museum ship[13].
- HMCS Ojibwa's Commons category is recorded as HMCS Ojibwa (S72)[14].
- HMCS Ojibwa's shipping port is recorded as CFB Halifax[15].
- HMCS Ojibwa's coordinate location is recorded as {'lat': 42.646857, 'lon': -80.80768}[16].
- HMCS Ojibwa's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/03w7rv[17].
- HMCS Ojibwa's service entry is recorded as +1965-09-23T00:00:00Z[18].
- HMCS Ojibwa's service retirement is recorded as +1998-05-00T00:00:00Z[19].
- HMCS Ojibwa's significant event is recorded as ship launching[20].
- HMCS Ojibwa's significant event is recorded as ship commissioning[21].
- HMCS Ojibwa's significant event is recorded as keel laying[22].
- HMCS Ojibwa's location of creation is recorded as Chatham[23].
- HMCS Ojibwa's length is recorded as {'unit': 'Q3710', 'amount': '+295.25'}[24].
- HMCS Ojibwa's beam is recorded as {'unit': 'Q3710', 'amount': '+26.5'}[25].
- HMCS Ojibwa's draft is recorded as {'unit': 'Q3710', 'amount': '+18'}[26].
- HMCS Ojibwa's name is recorded as {'lang': 'mul', 'text': 'HMCS Ojibwa'}[27].
Why It Matters
HMCS Ojibwa draws 39 Wikipedia views per month (attack_submarine category, ranking #57 of 428).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 10 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]