Príncipe de Asturias (ocean liner)

Príncipe de Asturias
History
Spain
Name: Príncipe de Asturias
Owner: Naviera Pinillos
Port of registry: Cádiz
Builder: Russell & Co., Port Glasgow, Scotland
Launched: 1914
Christened: 1914
Maiden voyage: 16 August 1914
Fate: Sank after running aground in Brazilian coast 5 March 1916
General characteristics
Tonnage: 8,371 gross register tons (GRT)
Length: 447 feet (136.245 m)
Beam: 58,3 feet ( m)
Height: 93 feet
Installed power: Quadruple expansion steam engines, 8,000 Horsepower
Propulsion: Twin propellers
Speed: 18 knots
Capacity: 1,890
Crew: 200

Príncipe de Asturias was a Spanish ocean liner, owned by the Naviera Pinillos and built at the Russell & Co. (later Lithgows) shipyard in Port Glasgow, in Scotland; being launched in 1914. She was named after the Prince of Asturias, the historical title given to the heir to the Spanish Crown.

Príncipe de Asturias and her elder sister Infanta Isabel, launched in 1912, were at the time of her construction two of the largest passenger steamship in the Spanish merchant fleet, only second to Reina Victoria Eugenia and Infanta Isabel de Borbón owned by Pinillos's main competitor, Compañía Trasatlántica Española.

In 1916 she was assigned to the Barcelona-Buenos Aires line, with several intermediate ports of call, including Santos in Brazil. Shortly before dawn on 5 March 1916, in the middle of a dense fog the ship ran aground on the shoals out of Ponta do Boi, in the island of Sao Sebastiao, while trying to approach the port of Santos, and she sank quickly. At least 445 people out of 588 aboard died during the sinking, being probably the biggest single-incident maritime loss of lives since the sinking of RMS Empress of Ireland in May 1914.

References

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