Western Approaches and Bay of Biscay

E619298

Western Approaches and Bay of Biscay is a strategically vital maritime region off the western coasts of France and the British Isles, historically significant for major naval and convoy operations in the Atlantic.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Western Approaches and Bay of Biscay canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (43)

Predicate Object
instanceOf maritime region
strategic sea area
adjacentTo Brittany NERFINISHED
Iberian Peninsula NERFINISHED
southwest England NERFINISHED
western Ireland
borderedBy Celtic Sea NERFINISHED
English Channel NERFINISHED
North Atlantic Ocean NERFINISHED
climateInfluence North Atlantic storm tracks NERFINISHED
contestedBy Kriegsmarine U-boats NERFINISHED
controlledBy Allied naval forces during World War II
economicImportance access to major European Atlantic ports
fishing grounds
maritime trade routes
historicalSignificance World War II convoy battles NERFINISHED
anti-submarine warfare
major naval operations in the Atlantic
includesSubregion Bay of Biscay NERFINISHED
Western Approaches NERFINISHED
locatedIn Atlantic Ocean
locatedOffCoastOf British Isles NERFINISHED
France NERFINISHED
Ireland NERFINISHED
United Kingdom NERFINISHED
navigationHazard frequent storms
heavy swells
submarine threat during wartime
notableFor concentration of Allied convoy routes
high submarine activity during World War II
rough seas and strong Atlantic weather systems
partOf North Atlantic maritime theatre NERFINISHED
relevantTo Allied naval strategy in World War II
Battle of the Atlantic NERFINISHED
German U-boat campaign
strategicImportance Atlantic convoy routes
access to English Channel
access to North Atlantic
approaches to British Isles
approaches to French Atlantic ports
usedFor merchant shipping lanes
naval patrols
submarine operations

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Battle of La Rochelle theatre Western Approaches and Bay of Biscay