Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q2113136> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 62 of
62
with 100 triples per page.
- Q2113136 subject Q16159682.
- Q2113136 subject Q5985562.
- Q2113136 subject Q6139887.
- Q2113136 subject Q6468184.
- Q2113136 subject Q7456652.
- Q2113136 subject Q8364112.
- Q2113136 subject Q8589888.
- Q2113136 subject Q8608676.
- Q2113136 subject Q8617195.
- Q2113136 abstract ""Women and children first" (or to a lesser extent, the Birkenhead Drill) is a historical code of conduct whereby the lives of women and children were to be saved first in a life-threatening situation (typically abandoning ship, when survival resources such as lifeboats were limited).While the phrase first appeared in the 1860 novel Harrington: A Story of True Love, by William Douglas O'Connor, the first documented application of "women and children first" occurred during the 1852 evacuation of the Royal Navy troopship HMS Birkenhead. It is, however, most famously associated with the sinking of RMS Titanic in 1912. As a code of conduct, "women and children first" has no basis in maritime law, and according to University of Greenwich disaster evacuation expert Professor Ed Galea, in modern-day evacuations people will usually "help the most vulnerable to leave the scene first. It's not necessarily women, but is likely to be the injured, elderly and young children." Furthermore, the results of a 2012 Uppsala University study suggest that the application of "women and children first" may have, in practice, been the exception rather than the rule.".
- Q2113136 thumbnail Wreck_of_the_Birkenhead.jpg?width=300.
- Q2113136 wikiPageExternalLink women_children_first.html.
- Q2113136 wikiPageExternalLink 6Ovlcz7rX.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1056721.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q11005.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1121471.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1160945.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q145.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q16159682.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q172771.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1739959.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1746393.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1758120.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1812811.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q185246.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q188907.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1896148.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q1898039.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q201054.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q204335.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q215786.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q2397030.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q2577588.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q287044.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q2913495.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q320466.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q347381.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q34743.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q382113.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q47596.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q4915.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q5036514.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q5459929.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q5544472.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q5985562.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q606332.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q6139887.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q6468184.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q683363.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q7120875.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q7451276.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q7456652.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q747599.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q752079.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q8364112.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q8589888.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q8608676.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q8617195.
- Q2113136 wikiPageWikiLink Q887543.
- Q2113136 comment ""Women and children first" (or to a lesser extent, the Birkenhead Drill) is a historical code of conduct whereby the lives of women and children were to be saved first in a life-threatening situation (typically abandoning ship, when survival resources such as lifeboats were limited).While the phrase first appeared in the 1860 novel Harrington: A Story of True Love, by William Douglas O'Connor, the first documented application of "women and children first" occurred during the 1852 evacuation of the Royal Navy troopship HMS Birkenhead. ".
- Q2113136 label "Women and children first".
- Q2113136 depiction Wreck_of_the_Birkenhead.jpg.