Germany
- Albatros W.4 — single-seat floatplane fighter (1916)
- Albatros W.8 — two-seat floatpane (1918)
- Arado Ar 95 — two-seat coastal patrol and light attack floatplane (1937)
- Arado Ar 196 — two-seat shipboard and coastal patrol floatplane (1937)
- Arado Ar 231 — single-seat reconnaissance floatplane (1941)
- Arado W II — two-seat seaplane trainer (1928)
- Blohm & Voss BV 138 — reconnaissance flying boat (1937)
- Blohm & Voss BV 222 — long-range transport/maritime reconnaissance and patrol flying boat (1940)
- Blohm & Voss BV 238 — long-range multi-role flying boat (1945) - heaviest aircraft of World War II
- Blohm & Voss Ha 139 — long-range mail, mine-sweeping and reconnaissance floatplane (1936)
- Caspar U.1 — submarine-launched patrol floatplane (1922)
- Claude Dornier Sea Star — 1986, amphibious
- Dornier Delphin — commercial flying boat (1920)
- Dornier Do 12
- Dornier Do 16 — 'Wal' military flying boat (1923)
- Dornier Do 18 — four-seat coastal reconnaissance flying boat (1935)
- Dornier Do 22 — three-seat utility floatplane (1938)
- Dornier Do 24 — three-engined maritime patrol/search and rescue flying boat (1937)
- Dornier Do 26 — transatlantic mail or coastal patrol flying boat (1938)
- Dornier Do J Wal — twin-engined commercial flying boat (1922)
- Dornier Do D — torpedo bomber floatplane (1924)
- Dornier Do X — transoceanic flying boat (1929) - largest plane of its time (1930s) (Built in Switzerland and Italy)
- Dornier S-Ray 007 — two-seat amphibian flying boat (2007)
- Friedrichshafen FF.29 — two-seat floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.31 — floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.33 — reconnaissance floatplane (1914)
- Friedrichshafen FF.34 — floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.35 — torpedo bomber floatplane (1916)
- Friedrichshafen FF.37 — floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.39 — reconnaissance floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.40 — floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.41 — torpedo bomber floatplane (1916)
- Friedrichshafen FF.43 — single seat fighter floatplane (1916)
- Friedrichshafen FF.44 — floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.48 — floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.49 — reconnaissance floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.53 — torpedo bomber floatplane (1910s)
- Friedrichshafen FF.59 — reconnaissance floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.1 — coastal patrol floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.2 — coastal patrol floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.3 — fighter floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.5 — floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.7 — floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.9 — floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.11 — floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.12 — floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.13 — twin-engined torpedo bomber floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.14 — torpedo bomber floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.15 — floatplanes (1910s)
- Gotha WD.20 — long-range reconnaissance floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.22 — long-range patrol reconnaissance floatplane (1910s)
- Gotha WD.27 — long-range bomber/patrol floatplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg CC — Fighter flying boat (1916)
- Hansa-Brandenburg GDW — torpedo bomber floatplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg GNW — patrol floatplane (1914)
- Hansa-Brandenburg GW — torpedo bomber floatplane (1916)
- Hansa-Brandenburg KDW — single-seat fighter/scout seaplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg NW — patrol floatplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W — patrol floatplane (1914)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.11 — single-seat fighter/scout seaplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.12 — fighter seaplane (1917)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.19 — fighter seaplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.20 — submarine-borne single-seat reconnaissance flying boat (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.25 — single-seat fighter/scout seaplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.27 — fighter seaplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.29 — two-seat fighter seaplane (1918)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.32 — fighter seaplane (1910s)
- Hansa-Brandenburg W.33 — two-seat fighter seaplane (1918)
- Heinkel He 1 — floatplane (1923)
- Heinkel He 2 — floatplane (1920s)
- Heinkel He 3 — floatplane or landplane (1920s)
- Heinkel He 4 — floatplane (1926)
- Heinkel He 5 — floatplane (1926)
- Heinkel He 8 — floatplane (1927)
- Heinkel HD 9 — floatplane (1928)
- Heinkel He 12 — floatplane (1920s)
- Heinkel HD 14 — torpedo-carrying floatplane (1925)
- Heinkel HD 18 — floatplane (1920s)
- Heinkel He 24 — seaplane trainer (1920s)
- Heinkel He 25 — floatplane (1925)
- Heinkel He 26 — floatplane (1925)
- Heinkel He 31 — floatplane (1927)
- Heinkel He 42 — seaplane trainer (1931)
- Heinkel He 55 — reconnaissance flying boat (1929)
- Heinkel He 56 — floatplane (1920s)
- Heinkel He 57 — amphibian (1929)
- Heinkel He 58 — floatplane (1920s)
- Heinkel He 59 — reconnaissance bomber floatplane (1931)
- Heinkel He 60 — reconnaissance floatplane (1933)
- Heinkel He 62 — floatplane (1920s)
- Heinkel He 115 — coastal reconnaissance floatplane (1936)
- Heinkel He 119 — high-speed reconnaissance floatplane version (1936)
- L.F.G V.19 Stralsund — supermarine-based floatplane (1910s)
- L.F.G W — floatplane (1910s)
- L.F.G WD — floatplane (1910s)
- Lübeck-Travemünde F.1 — floatplane (1910s)
- Lübeck-Travemünde F.2 — floatplane (1910s)
- Lübeck-Travemünde F.4 — floatplane (1910s)
- Rohrbach Ro II — flying boat (1920s)
- Rohrbach Ro III — flying boat (1920s)
- Rohrbach Ro IV — flying boat (1920s)
- Rohrbach Ro V Rocco — twin-engined 10-passenger flying boat (1927)
- Rohrbach Ro VII Robbe — flying boat (1920s)
- Rohrbach Ro X Romar — long-range commercial flying boat (1930s)
- Rumpler 4B 11 — reconnaissance floatplane (1910s)
- Rumpler 4B 12 — reconnaissance floatplane (1910s)
- Sablatnig SF-1 — two-seat floatplane (1910s)
- Sablatnig SF-2 — two-seat floatplane (1910s)
- Sablatnig SF-3 — two-seat fighter floatplane (1910s)
- Sablatnig SF-4 — single-seat fighter floatplane (1910s)
- Sablatnig SF-5 — two-seat reconnaissance floatplane (1917)
- Sablatnig SF-7 — fighter floatplane (1910s)
- Sablatnig SF-8 — trainer floatplane (1910s)
Read more about this topic: List Of Seaplanes And Amphibious Aircraft
Famous quotes containing the word germany:
“By an application of the theory of relativity to the taste of readers, to-day in Germany I am called a German man of science, and in England I am represented as a Swiss Jew. If I come to be regarded as a bête noire the descriptions will be reversed, and I shall become a Swiss Jew for the Germans and a German man of science for the English!”
—Albert Einstein (18791955)
“The tears I have cried over Germany have dried. I have washed my face.”
—Marlene Dietrich (19041992)
“If my theory of relativity is proven correct, Germany will claim me as a German and France will declare that I am a citizen of the world. Should my theory prove untrue, France will say that I am a German and Germany will declare that I am a Jew.”
—Albert Einstein (18791955)