- U
- Ulugh Ali, renegade Turkish admiral, [77], [84], [85];
- United States: the navy and the Civil War, [213], etc.;
- Uriu, Admiral, [331]
- Urs de Margina, defender of fortress of Lissa, [237]
- V
- Valdes, Diego Flores de, admiral of the Castilian squadron of the Armada, [114]
- Valdes, Pedro de, admiral of the Andalusian squadron, [114], [123]
- Van Tromp, [148], etc.
- Veniero, Sebastian, Venetian admiral, [76];
- at Lepanto, [97]
- Vikings. See [Norsemen]
- Viking ships, [43]
- Villeneuve, French admiral commanding at Trafalgar, [174], etc.;
- wounded and taken prisoner, [197]
- W
- Winter, Sir W., [118], [129], [132]
- Wireless telegraphy, [319]
- Witjeft, Russian admiral, killed in battle on the 10th of August, [302]
- Worden (afterwards Admiral), commander of the "Monitor," [223], etc.;
- wounded in fight with "Merrimac," [227]
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FOOTNOTES:
[1] Bacon's Essay on "The Greatness of Kingdoms," first published in 1597. The extract is from the edition of 1625.
[2] Men of the same race of sailors and fishermen largely manned the victorious fleet of Tegethoff at Lissa, nineteen centuries later. See [Chapter XI].
[3] "Antony and Cleopatra," Act iii, scene 7.