MV Goya
German military transport ship; sank 1945, killing thousands / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Goya was a Norwegian motor freighter used as a troop transport by Nazi Germany and sunk with a massive loss of life near the end of World War II.
History | |
---|---|
Norway | |
Name | Goya |
Owner | Johan Ludwig Mowinckel Rederi |
Builder | Akers Mekaniske Verksted, Oslo |
Laid down | 1939 |
Launched | 4 April 1940 |
Completed | 1940 |
Fate | Seized by Germany during invasion of Norway |
History | |
Nazi Germany | |
Name | Goya |
Operator | Kriegsmarine |
Acquired | 1940 |
Fate | Sunk, 16 April 1945 |
General characteristics | |
Tonnage | 5,230 Gross Register Tons |
Length | 146 m (479 ft) |
Beam | 17.4 m (57 ft) |
Installed power | Burmeister & Wain 7,600 horsepower (5,700 kW) |
Speed | 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph) |
Completed in 1940 for the Johan Ludwig Mowinckel Rederi company, the ship was named after Spanish artist Francisco Goya. Following Germany's invasion of Norway that year, she was seized by the Kriegsmarine and pressed into service as a troop transport.
Near the end of the war, Goya took part in Operation Hannibal, the evacuation of German military and civilian personnel from remaining pockets held by the Germans along the Baltic Sea. Loaded with thousands of refugees, the ship was sunk on 16 April 1945 by the Soviet submarine L-3. Most of the crew and passengers died in the sinking.
The sinking of Goya was one of the biggest single-incident maritime losses of life of the war, and one of the largest such losses in history, with just 183 survivors out of roughly 6,700 passengers and crew.[1]