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Fantome (other)
Fantôme (French "phantom") may refer to: Places * Fantome Island, an island off the east coast of Australia * Fantome Rock, a dangerous rock in the South Atlantic Ships and planes * HMS Fantome, HMS ''Fantome'', several ships of the Royal Navy * Fantome (schooner), ''Fantome'' (schooner), a 1927 sail cruise ship lost in Hurricane Mitch in 1998 * Fantome-class sloop, ''Fantome''-class sloop, used by the Royal Navy * Fantome-class survey motor boat, ''Fantome''-class survey motor boat, used in Australia * Fairey Fantôme, a British fighter aircraft of the 1930s Literature and entertainment * Fantôme (album), ''Fantôme'' (album), a 2016 Japanese album by Utada Hikaru * ', a volume in the French comic books series ''La Patrouille des Castors'' * Fantôme (studio), a French animation studio * "Le Fantôme", a chanson by Georges Brassens * "Fantômes", a poem by Victor Hugo from the collection ''Les Orientales'' en 1829 * ', a French film by Jean-Paul Civeyrac * Les Fantômes (band) ...
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Fantome Island
Fantome Island is one of the islands in the Palm Island group. It is neighboured by Great Palm Island and is north-east of Townsville, Queensland on the east coast of Australia. The island is small with an area of and is surrounded by a fringing reef. The Djabugay ( Aboriginal) name for this island is Eumilli Island. The island is known for its 1928 lock hospital (for those with venereal disease) and 1939 leprosarium, known as the lazaret. Both are now heritage-listed on the Queensland Heritage Register, as Fantome Island Lock Hospital and Lazaret Sites. The island is no longer inhabited. Along with nine of the other islands within the Palm Islands group, it falls under the local government area of the Aboriginal Shire of Palm Island. History Fantome was gazetted as an Aboriginal reserve in 1925. The Fantome Island Lock Hospital for the treatment of Aboriginal people with venereal diseases was established on Fantome Island in 1928. The Franciscan Missionaries o ...
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Fantome Rock
Fantome Rock () is a dangerous rock in the middle of Bird Sound, South Georgia Island, South Georgia, lying south of Gony Point, Bird Island, South Georgia, Bird Island. It was charted by Discovery Investigations personnel on the ''RRS Discovery, Discovery'' in the period 1926–30 and named by the UK Antarctic Place-Names Committee in 1963 for 's motor cutter, used in a survey of this area in February–March 1961, and lost in heavy seas near this rock. References

Rock formations of South Georgia {{SouthGeorgia-geo-stub ...
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HMS Fantome
Five ships of the Royal Navy have borne the name HMS ''Fantome'', after the French word ''Fantôme'', meaning 'ghost': * was an 18-gun French privateer brig-sloop, captured in 1810 by and wrecked in 1814. * was a 16-gun launched in 1839 and sold in 1864. * was a composite screw sloop A screw sloop is a propeller-driven sloop-of-war. They were popularized in the mid-19th century, during the introduction of the steam engine and the transition of fleets to this new technology. The sailing sloop The British sloop in the Age o ... launched in 1873 and sold in 1889. * was a sloop launched in 1901. She was used as a survey ship from 1906 and was sold in 1925. * was an launched in 1942 and scrapped in 1947. {{DEFAULTSORT:Fantome, Hms Royal Navy ship names ...
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Fantome (schooner)
''Fantome'' was a 679-ton staysail schooner. She was completed in 1927 by the Duke of Westminster. She was purchased by Windjammer Barefoot Cruises in 1969, and became the flagship of their fleet, offering cruises in the Caribbean and the Bay of Honduras. ''Fantome'' was lost in October 1998 during Hurricane Mitch. Early years ''Fantome'' was originally ordered for the Italian navy but was purchased before completion by the Duke of Westminster, who finished her as a yacht (launched in 1927). Westminster used her only a few years before she changed hands twice in short order. It is often said that she was acquired by the Irishman Ernest Guinness, a senior member of the Guinness family, but he owned the ''Fantome II'', now named the ''Belem''. She was in the Pacific in the late 1930s and when war broke out in Europe in 1939, she was in Alaskan waters. Reluctant to cruise further or return to Ireland, Guinness elected to lay her up in Seattle for the duration of hostilities. ...
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Fantome-class Sloop
The ''Fantome'' class was a six-ship ship class, class of 4-gun screw composite sloop-of-war, sloops built for the Royal Navy during 1873 and 1874. Design Construction ''Fantome'' and her sister ships were constructed of an iron frame sheathed with teak and copper (hence 'composite'). Propulsion A two-cylinder horizontal compound-expansion steam engine provided by Humphrys, Tennant & Co. powered an diameter screw. Steam was provided by three cylindrical boilers working at . The Horsepower#Indicated horsepower, indicated horsepower varied from . ''Daring'' was fitted with a trunk engine provided by John Penn & Sons. Sailing rig All the ships of the class were provided with a full barque rig. Armament The ''Fantome'' class carried two and two 64-pounder muzzle-loading rifles, all mounted on pivots. Evaluation Built at a time of great technological change in naval architecture, these composite sloops were obsolete before they were completed. Nevertheless, they served a us ...
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Fantome-class Survey Motor Boat
The ''Fantome'' class is a class of eight small survey motor boats (SMBs) operated by the Royal Australian Navy (RAN) and DMS Maritime. The four-man boats are designed to operate from the s, with three assigned to each ship, while the seventh and eighth were attached to the RAN Hydrographic School at . They are fitted with navigational and survey equipment and are unarmed. Design and construction Each ''Fantome''-class vessel displaces 7.48 tons, is long, has a beam of , and a draught of . They are fitted with two Volvo Penta AQAD 41D/SP290 diesels, connected to two outdrives, which allow the vessels to reach . They are fitted with a JRC JMA-2141 navigation radar and SMBs on the Hydrographic Ships have Atlas Deso 30 single beam echo sounders, MBES Fansweep 20 multibeam echosounders and CMAX TLW Side Scan Sonar. They are also fitted with Fugro Seastar 3100 WAdGPS for horizontal positioning and POSMV as the position monitoring system. Four personnel crew each vessel; one officer/se ...
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Fairey Fantôme
The Fairey Fantôme, also known as the Fairey Féroce, was a Belgian Fighter aircraft, fighter prototype of the mid-1930s. The prototype was designed and built by Fairey Aviation and three production aircraft were assembled in Belgium by Avions Fairey. Development The Fantôme was designed in 1934 by Marcel Lobelle to meet a specification drawn up on behalf of the Belgian ''Belgian Air Force, Aéronautique Militaire'' who were to hold an international competition to find a replacement for the Fairey Firefly II. It was a Biplane#Bays, single-bay biplane of all-metal construction, with fabric skinning. It had a fixed conventional landing gear with Aircraft fairing, spatted mainwheels. The aircraft was powered by a Hispano-Suiza 12Ycrs liquid-cooled V12 engine, with provision for an engine-mounted Oerlikon 20 mm cannon firing through the propeller hub. The cannon was supplemented by two wing-mounted Browning machine guns, while two more Synchronization gear, synchronised Browning ...
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Fantôme (album)
''Fantôme'' is the sixth Japanese studio album (ninth overall) by Japanese-American singer-songwriter Hikaru Utada, released on September 28, 2016. Although Utada had announced an indefinite hiatus from the public eye in August 2010, she continued writing and composing material with her father, Teruzane Utada, and long-term collaborator, Akira Miyake. Musically, ''Fantôme'' contains a collection of tracks that utilizes acoustic and stripped-down instrumentations, alongside influences of pop, electronic, and R&B music. The lyrical content delves into themes of grief, sadness, love, and death—mostly influenced by the death of her mother, her second marriage, and the birth of her son in 2015. ''Fantôme'' was a commercial success in Japan, reaching number one on the weekly Oricon Albums Chart with sales of over 253,000 units, becoming her eighth consecutive domestic number-one album. It additionally topped the US World Albums chart and has sold over a million copies worldwi ...
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La Patrouille Des Castors
''La Patrouille des Castors'' (The Beaver Patrol) is a series of Belgian comics drawn by MiTacq and written by Jean-Michel Charlier. 30 albums were published between 1955 and 1993, by Dupuis, all relating the adventures of a Scout patrol. History This series, which was first published in '' Spirou'' magazine on November 25, 1954, relates the fictional adventures of a Scout patrol. In the first album, the patrol consisted of six Scouts, although one of them, Lapin (rabbit) disappeared quickly from future stories after the team decided five main characters was a more suitable number for the series. The artist, Michel Tacq (MiTacq), had himself been a Scout during a large part of his life. It was his idea to create a series with Scouts as the main characters, but he needed a script to realise the project, which was provided in 1954 by Charlier, already a very active scriptwriter. The publication in Spirou lasted from 1954 until 1979 although there was a long interruption from ...
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Fantôme (studio)
Fantôme was a French animation studio which produced arguably the first regular CG animated TV series, ''Insektors ''Insektors'' (stylized as ''InseKtorS'') is a 1994 French animated television series. Made in a small studio, Fantome in France, it was one of the earliest computer-animated series alongside ''VeggieTales'' and ''ReBoot''. The series won 30 awa ...'' in 1994.Tom Sito Moving Innovation: A History of Computer Animation 2013 - Page 318 0262314312 "There is dispute as to which was the first regular CG animated TV series, Fantôme's Insektors, from France or Mainframe's Reboot, from Canada. They premiered within months of one another in 1994." The company shut down in late 1999. References French animation studios {{Animation-studio-stub ...
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Georges Brassens
Georges Charles Brassens (; ; 22 October 1921 – 29 October 1981) was a French singer-songwriter and poet. As an iconic figure in France, he achieved fame through his elegant songs with their harmonically complex music for voice and guitar and articulate, diverse lyrics. He is considered one of France's most accomplished postwar poets. He has also set to music poems by both well-known and relatively obscure poets, including Louis Aragon ('' Il n'y a pas d'amour heureux''), Victor Hugo (''La Légende de la Nonne'', ''Gastibelza''), Paul Verlaine, Jean Richepin, François Villon (''La Ballade des Dames du Temps Jadis''), and Antoine Pol (''Les Passantes''). Biography Childhood and education Brassens was born in Sète, a commune in the Hérault department of the Occitanie region, to a French father and an Italian mother from the town of Marsico Nuovo (in the province of Potenza, Southern Italy). Brassens grew up in the family home in Sète with his mother Elvira Dagrosa, ...
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Les Orientales
''Les Orientales'' () is a collection of poems by Victor Hugo, inspired by the Greek War of Independence. They were first published in January 1829. Of the forty-one poems, thirty-six were written during 1828. They offer a series of highly coloured tableaux depicting scenes from the eastern Mediterranean that, reflecting the cultural and political bias of the French public, underscore the contrast between freedom-loving Greeks and imperialist Ottoman Turks. The fashionable subject ensured the book's success. Although Hugo described it as "this impractical book of pure poetry" (''ce livre inutile de poesie pure''), the general theme of the poems is a celebration of liberty, linking the Ancient Greeks with the modern world, freedom in politics with freedom in art, and reflecting the evolution of Hugo's political views from the royalism of his early twenties to a rediscovery of the Napoleonic enthusiasms of his childhood (for example, see the fortieth, ''Lui''). The poems are also ...
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