ITALIAN LINE
The 'Italian Line', also known as the 'Società di navigazione Italia', was a passenger shipping line that operated regular transatlantic service between Italy and the United States, as well as Italy and South America. During the 1970s the company was also heavily involved in cruising.
The ''Società di navigazione Italia'' was started in 1932 as ''Italia Flotte Riunite'' (United Fleets Italy), when the Italian government encouraged the fusion of Genoa-based Navigazione Generale Italiana, Turin-based Lloyd Sabaudo, and Trieste-based Cosulich STN, which was previously an Austro-Hungaric company.
The new company acquired the Cosulich-owned MS ''Saturnia'' and MS ''Vulcania'', the Lloyd Sabaudo-owned SS ''Conte Rosso'', SS ''Conte Biancamano'' and SS ''Conte Grande'' and the NGI-owned SS ''Giulio Cesare'', SS ''Roma'' and MS ''Augustus''. The same year two previously commissioned ocean liners were launched: SS ''Rex'', who captured the Blue Riband in 1933, and SS ''Conte di Savoia''.
During World War II, the company lost many of its ships, including the ''Rex'' and the ''Conte di Savoia''. Other vessels were captured by the United States and converted into troopships; four of them survived the war: SS ''Conte Biancamano'', SS ''Conte Grande'', SS ''Saturnia'' and SS ''Vulcania''.
The service was resumed only in 1947, under the company's new name ''Società di navigazione Italia''. In addition to the four vessels returned by United States, two new vessels, SS ''Andrea Doria'' and SS ''Cristoforo Colombo'' were commissioned in 1953 and 1954, respectively, to show the world that the country had recovered from the war and to re-establish the nation's pride. However the ''Andrea Doria'' sunk only three years after she was commissioned, in 1956. The company was swift to order a replacement for its sunken flagship, and the new SS ''Leonardo da Vinci'' was delivered in 1960. The ship was based on the same design as Andrea Doria, but enlargened and featured many technical innovations.
In the late 1950's the arrival of the jet aircraft had not yet had a notable effect on passenger numbers in the United States - Mediterranean traffic and the Italian Line decided to order another pair of new ships for the trade. Plans for these were already being made in 1958, but the construction took longer than expected and the ships weren't completeted until 1965, as TS ''Michelangelo'' and TS ''Raffaello''. Unfortunately the ships were built too late to be truly profitable on the North Atlantic route. Although planned from the start for alternative cruising, the ships had several design features that made their use as cruise ships very difficult.
Italian Line kept operating the Transatlantic service despite huge losses until 1976, when the ''Leonardo da Vinci'' was the last Italian liner to cross the Atlantic. The ''Michelangelo'' and ''Raffaello'' had already been withdrawn the previous year. The Leonardo da Vinci was used as a cruise ship in 1977-1978, but withdrawn due to high fuel costs. Between 1979 and 1980 the Italian Line operated two ex-Lloyd Triestino liners SS ''Galileo Galilei'' and SS ''Guglielmo Marconi'' as a cruise ships, but the venture proved unprofitable. Discouraged by the lack of success, Italian Line decided to concentrate on freight traffic. In 2003 (?) Italian Line was merged into its long-time owner CP Ships.
| Contents |
| Fleet |
Fleet
Not a complete list.
★ MS ''Augustus'' (1932-1939) ''largest diesel-engined liner of her time''
★ SS ''Conte Biancamano'' (1932-1940, 1947-1960)
★ SS ''Conte di Savoia'' (1932-1940)
★ SS ''Conte Grande'' (1932-1940, 1947-1961)
★ SS ''Conte Rosso'' (1932-1940)
★ SS ''Conte Verde'' (1932-1940)
★ SS ''Duilio'' (1932-1937) ''transferred to Lloyd Triestino''
★ SS ''Giulio Cesare'' (1932-1937) ''transferred to Lloyd Triestino''
★ SS ''Rex'' (1932-1940)
★ SS ''Roma'' (1932-1939)
★ MS ''Saturnia'' (1932-1940, 1946-1965)
★ MS ''Vulcania'' (1932-1940, 1947-1965) ''sold to Siosa Lines''
★ MS ''Neptunia'' (1937-1940)
★ MS ''Oceania'' (1937-1940)
★ MS ''Giulio Cesare'' (1951-1973)
★ MS ''Augustus'' (1952-1976)
★ SS ''Andrea Doria'' (1953-1956)
★ SS ''Cristoforo Colombo'' (1954-1977)
★ SS ''Leonardo da Vinci'' (1960-1978)
★ TS ''Michelangelo'' (1965-1975)
★ TS ''Raffaello'' (1965-1975)
★ SS ''Galileo Galilei'' (1979)
★ SS ''Guglielmo Marconi'' (1979-1980)
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español