In Titanic's Shadow - The World's Worst Merchant Ship Disasters (Paperback, New)


A collection of the 40 worst mercantile disasters in history--revealing that, despite popular belief, the "Titanic" tragedy was far from being the worst disaster at sea

While the victims of the "Titanic" disaster at 1,507 persons accounted for a huge loss of life, each of the ships described in this book had a greater number of casualties, in some cases more than five times as many. In total, these 27 merchant ship sinkings resulted in a staggering loss of life at sea--more than 96,000 lives in total (3,840 per ship). While the circumstances of their losses were different than those of the "Titanic," the outcome in each was no less tragic. While it is not the intention to diminish the gravity of the "Titanic" case, these lesser-known tragedies do give "the worst disaster at sea" a sobering perspective. Despite the fact that the "Titanic" disaster ranks behind so many other losses, so powerful has her name become as a representation of extreme misfortune, that it was the inevitable choice to describe some of these other events. Hence, they have come to be known as "Germany's "Titanic"" and "The "Titanic" of Japan" as just two examples. Ships include the "Lancastria," sunk by German bombers with a loss of 3,000 British lives (Britain's worst maritime disaster); the "Ryusei Maru," a Japanese "Hellship" loaded with 6,000 Allied POWs that was torpedoed by a US submarine; and the "Wilhelm Gustloff," a German liner packed with 7,800 civilians in operation "Hannibal" evacuation, sunk by a Russian submarine. There were no survivors and this tragedy was the worst maritime disaster of all time.


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Product Description

A collection of the 40 worst mercantile disasters in history--revealing that, despite popular belief, the "Titanic" tragedy was far from being the worst disaster at sea

While the victims of the "Titanic" disaster at 1,507 persons accounted for a huge loss of life, each of the ships described in this book had a greater number of casualties, in some cases more than five times as many. In total, these 27 merchant ship sinkings resulted in a staggering loss of life at sea--more than 96,000 lives in total (3,840 per ship). While the circumstances of their losses were different than those of the "Titanic," the outcome in each was no less tragic. While it is not the intention to diminish the gravity of the "Titanic" case, these lesser-known tragedies do give "the worst disaster at sea" a sobering perspective. Despite the fact that the "Titanic" disaster ranks behind so many other losses, so powerful has her name become as a representation of extreme misfortune, that it was the inevitable choice to describe some of these other events. Hence, they have come to be known as "Germany's "Titanic"" and "The "Titanic" of Japan" as just two examples. Ships include the "Lancastria," sunk by German bombers with a loss of 3,000 British lives (Britain's worst maritime disaster); the "Ryusei Maru," a Japanese "Hellship" loaded with 6,000 Allied POWs that was torpedoed by a US submarine; and the "Wilhelm Gustloff," a German liner packed with 7,800 civilians in operation "Hannibal" evacuation, sunk by a Russian submarine. There were no survivors and this tragedy was the worst maritime disaster of all time.

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Product Details

General

Imprint

The History Press Ltd

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

October 2012

Availability

Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days

First published

2012

Authors

Dimensions

234 x 156 x 13mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback

Pages

192

Edition

New

ISBN-13

978-0-7524-7122-8

Barcode

9780752471228

Categories

LSN

0-7524-7122-8



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