Rumija (ship)
Ship / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rumija was a steam yacht that served the Montenegrin navy from 1905 to 1915. It had two masts, and was 47.78 metres long and 6.10 metres wide.
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Rumija | |
History | |
---|---|
Principality/Kingdom of Montenegro | |
Name | Rumija |
Namesake | The Rumija mountains |
Ordered | Sultan Abdul Hamid II? |
Commissioned | 3 January 1905 |
Fate | Sunk by Austria-Hungary in March 1915 |
General characteristics | |
Type | steam yacht |
Length | 47.78 metres |
Rumija was purchased in England by the Ottoman Turks and carried the name Zaza. In January 1905, Turkish Sultan Abdul Hamid II gifted the yacht to Prince Nicholas I of Montenegro. The yacht, sailing under Turkish sailors, arrived at Pristan on 1 January 1905 to be taken over by the Montenegrin crew two days later, on 3 January. Two days later, loaded with 15 tonnes of coal, the prince's new yacht set sail for the Bay of Kotor and it cast anchor in Meljine. During the first few months, Zaza was used to transport the royal family from the Bay to Albania.
On 23 March 1905, Prince Nicholas, while on board Zaza, held a ceremony which formally commenced the construction of the Port of Bar.
Montenegrin Crown Prince Daniel, while taking a cruise down the Bojana River on 28 July 1908, had decided to rename Zaza Rumija. The name Rumija may have been chosen in part because the Rumija mountain range is located near the Bojana River.