Το Αρης, μετεπειτα πλωτο νοσοκομειο Graz απο αυτη την ιστοσελιδα http://www.feldgrau.com/hs-graz.html
Graz 1.jpg
Graz2.jpg
Δυο φωτογραφίες του ¶ΡΗΣ ως GRAZ όταν είχε πέσει στα χέρια των Γερμανών.
ares as Graz.jpg Aris as Graz.jpg
Πηγή
Hello everybody,
I'm impressed of this forum - looks very interesting for me.
Today my first posting; I hope I put it correctly here; please feel free to place it elsewhere, if necessary.
Ares_Constanta_1.jpg
A short ship's history is here.
Regards,Αρχική Δημοσίευση από Lazarettschiff...
Dan
My friend Dan welcome. Tks for your rare contribution picturing HHMS ARES in Romania.
Στον τίτλο του θέματος το ΙV έτσι όπως είναι,φαίνεται σαν μέρος του ονόματος. Θα πρέπει είτε να μπει σε παρένθεση που σημαίνει ξεκάθαρα είναι το 4ο με αυτό το όνομα στο ΠΝ είτε σε παρένθεση το έτος παράδοσης ( 1927 ).
Τελευταία επεξεργασία από το χρήστη ΒΙΚΤΩΡ ΧΙΩΤΗΣ : 09-12-2013 στις 10:48
A very beautiful ship.
Aris_3.jpg
I'm looking for details of this ship:
Name #1: "Aghios Nicolaos"?
Name #2: "Hamidie"?
See also (1911, in Constanta): Agios Nicolaos
Aghios_Nicolaos.jpg
There is a ship "Agios Nicolaos" in the Bureau Veritas - Register, 1884:
- Tonnage: 236 BRT
- Annee de construction: 1861 / O.1881
- Port de construction: Galaxidi
- Dimensions: 31.8 / 8.0 / 4.70 m
- Espece: Bq (Barque)
- Captain: Arvanitti, C (in 4.1881)
- Armateurs: Heritiers de C. Arvanitti
- Derniere visite: 1881, Braila
Also in the BV, 1900.
Could you please confirm / infirm this?
Please feel free to move this posting to where it belongs to (maybe "Ships to be identified / clarified"?)
Dear Alexis, the name Aghios Nicolaos was very common among Greek sailing ships. If you could give us a more precise date of the event at Constanza, maybe we could trace her through the newspapers of that time.
@Ellinis: thank you for your reply.
I know only of the two sources, already mentioned above:
1. Register BV, 1884
2. The link to that Polish blog
Here the text (translated by Google) from the above blog:
Sorry - that's all for the time being...I quote below in full text .... unknown author which ..... weekly "Literary Feast" in 1911, the number 40, of 4 October. I kept the original spelling and title.
FLOATING FIRE Literary Feast 40/1911
A week sailing the Greek T-you Santa, with a cargo of 85,000 pounds of gasoline in [konwiach] and drums, became a victim of the disaster. He rested in the port of Constanza and had just come out of the cargo said to of Greece, if for some reason the bottom of the vessel appeared in the flames that instantly covered the whole ship. The crew managed to luckily escaped from the burning ship, which immediately towed at the open sea, where they completely burned.
Dan