Hindenburg-class airship

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hindenburg-class_airship an entity of type: Thing

The two Hindenburg-class airships were hydrogen-filled, passenger-carrying rigid airships built in Germany in the 1930s and named in honor of Paul von Hindenburg. They were the last such aircraft to be constructed, and in terms of their length, height, and volume, the largest aircraft ever built. During the 1930s, airships like the Hindenburg class were widely considered the future of air travel, and the lead ship of the class, LZ 129 Hindenburg, established a regular transatlantic service. The airship's destruction in a highly publicized accident was the end of these expectations. The second ship, LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin, was never operated on a regular passenger service, and was scrapped in 1940 along with its namesake predecessor, the LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin, by order of Hermann Göring. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hindenburg-class airship
xsd:integer 18239485
xsd:integer 1120259393
xsd:integer 7100000
xsd:integer 200000
rdf:langString met
xsd:gMonthDay --03-04
rdf:langString Germany
rdf:langString ca. 50 passengers for LZ-129 , 40 passengers for LZ-130
rdf:langString ca. 40
xsd:integer 803
xsd:integer 1937
rdf:langString Crashed at Lakehurst, New Jersey ; Scrapped )
rdf:langString Passenger airship
rdf:langString The two Hindenburg-class airships were hydrogen-filled, passenger-carrying rigid airships built in Germany in the 1930s and named in honor of Paul von Hindenburg. They were the last such aircraft to be constructed, and in terms of their length, height, and volume, the largest aircraft ever built. During the 1930s, airships like the Hindenburg class were widely considered the future of air travel, and the lead ship of the class, LZ 129 Hindenburg, established a regular transatlantic service. The airship's destruction in a highly publicized accident was the end of these expectations. The second ship, LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin, was never operated on a regular passenger service, and was scrapped in 1940 along with its namesake predecessor, the LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin, by order of Hermann Göring.
xsd:integer 135
xsd:integer 0
xsd:double 41.2
xsd:integer 1100
xsd:integer 735
rdf:langString Daimler-Benz DB 602 16-cylinder diesel engines
xsd:integer 4
xsd:integer 10
xsd:double 245.3
xsd:integer 232000
xsd:integer 511000
xsd:integer 131
xsd:integer 81
xsd:integer 2
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12529
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2

data from the linked data cloud