The Britannic got torpedoed off the coast of the coast of Greece in 1916 when it was acting as a hospital ship during the first world war.To the Oceanic, I'm not too sure, Wikipedia says that this happened:On 25 August 1914, the newly-designated HMS Oceanicdeparted Southampton to patrol the waters from the North Scottish mainland to the Faroes, in particular the area around Shetland, and ran aground and was wrecked off the island of Foula, Shetland on 8 September 1914.
All 20 lifeboats were launched, though Collapsible A and B floated off the ship (A was submerged, B was upside down) just before Titanic sank.
The HMHS Britannic supposedly hit a German mine and sank on 21 November, 1916, four miles off the Greek island of Kea in the Kea Channel.
No. The Titanic sank closer to the North Pole than Antarctica. She sank about 375 miles off the coast of Newfoundland.
Three years after Titanic sank, in 1915, Lusitania was torpedoed off the coast of Ireland.
it sank because i shagged your mum and it sank that's why.
The USS Maine
I think it was the Andrea Doria.
Many boats, ships and aircraft have sank off the coast of Ireland. The most famous, and the one you are probably referring to, is the ship known as the Lusitania which sank on the 7th of May, 1915.
According to the railroad wiki, the ship sank but they never loaded the Stephenson rocket on it. The rocket was late. The real rocket is in the Science Museum in London.
jumped off the ship and froze to death in the frezzing water
Lloyd's
The Greeks sank half the Persian fleet off the coast of Salamis.
The Olympic. There was also a ship called the Britannic which sank in November of 1916. (It hit a mine off the coast of Greece.)
when the ship took off it headed a bit north towards the north pole where tons of ice burges where. The captain was some ice and tried to go around it, but there was so much more ice submerged that it cut a hole in the side of ship hundreds of feet long. eventually the ship just sank.
Yes, the Shetland Islands are legally part of Scotland. They have been part of the Kingdom of Scotland since the 15th century and are currently one of Scotland's 32 council areas.
Yes. Titanic's sister ship, HMHS Britannic, was mined and sunk off the coast of Greece in November 1916.