Dalmat (yacht)

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Dalmat
History
NameOssero
NamesakeItalian name for Osor, Croatia[1]
BuilderStabilimento Tecnico Triestino in Trieste
Launched1896
Out of service1899
FateTransferred to Austro-Hungarian Navy
History
Austria-Hungary
Name
  • Ossero (1899-1901)
  • Dalmat (from 1901)
Namesake
Acquired1899
Out of service1920
FateTransferred to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (Yugoslavia)
History
Kingdom of Yugoslavia
NameDalmat
NamesakeAlternative name for a person of the ancient Dalmatae tribe[2]
In service1920
Out of service1941
FateCaptured by Italy
Italy
NameFata
NamesakeItalian for "fairy"[3]
Acquired1941
Out of service1943
FateReturned to Yugoslavia
Kingdom of Yugoslavia
NameVila
NamesakeSerbo-Croatian[4] and Slovene[5] for "fairy"
Acquired1943
Out of service1945
FateTransferred to Yugoslav Navy post-war
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Name
  • Orjen (1945-1954)
  • Istranka (from 1954)
Namesake
Acquired1945
Decommissioned1970
FateIn private ownership at Split
General characteristics
Displacement260 long tons (264 t)
Length44 metres (144 ft)
Beam6.2 metres (20 ft)
Height3.5 metres (11 ft)
Installed power325 horsepower (242 kW)
Speed12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph)

The Dalmat was a yacht of the Austro-Hungarian Navy, Royal Yugoslav Navy, Regia Marina and the Yugoslav Navy. Built as Ossero in Trieste in 1896 she was transferred to the Austro-Hungarian Navy in 1899 and in 1901 renamed Dalmat. In 1914 she helped transport Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria to Sarajevo. After Ferdinand's assassination she carried his body back to Trieste. Dalmat was transferred to the Royal Yugoslav Navy in 1920 following the Dissolution of Austria-Hungary. She was captured by the Axis in 1941 and served the Italians as Fata. The vessel reverted to the Yugoslav Navy in 1943 following the Armistice of Cassibile and was renamed Vila. She remained in service under the communist government of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, being renamed Orjen in 1945 and Istranka in 1954. Sometime after 1972 she was decommissioned and became a floating restaurant. She was put up for sale in 1998 but lay derelict in a Croatian shipyard until purchased and restored by Italian politician . Cozzi was denied permission to sail the vessel from Croatia in 2003. The vessel remains in Split harbour where it has twice sunk due to lack of maintenance.

Construction[]

The yacht Ossero was ordered by Archduke Charles Stephen of Austria, a nephew of Emperor Franz Joseph I.[7] She was built from Czech-made steel at the San Rocco, Trieste, shipyard of Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino in 1896.[7][8][9] She measured 44 metres (144 ft) in length, 6.2 metres (20 ft) in width and 3.5 metres (11 ft) in height.[7] She was fitted with steam propulsion and had a displacement of 260 long tons (264 t).[10][7] The vessel became the flagship of the .[7]

Military career[]

In 1899 she was transferred to the Austro-Hungarian Navy and, in 1901, was renamed Dalmat. She served as a royal yacht and flagship of the governor of Dalmatia.[7][9][8][11] Dalmat was the first ship in the Adriatic Sea to use wireless telegraphy.[11] The heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, travelled to Bosnia in 1914. After travelling from Trieste to Ploče aboard the battleship Viribus Unitis he transferred to Dalmat for the journey along the Neretva river to Metković, the smaller vessel being more suited to river travel. Ferdinand completed his onward journey to Sarajevo by train.[12] Ferdinand was assassinated in Sarajevo on 28 June and his body was carried part of the way back to Trieste aboard Dalmat.[8]

Dalmat served in the Austro-Hungarian Navy throughout the First World War. From 26 August 1914 she was based at Zelenika, Bosnia. From 1916 she was a command ship for a submarine force in Kotor.[7] After the post-war Dissolution of Austria-Hungary she was transferred to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and served as one of two yachts (the other being Lada) in the Royal Yugoslav Navy (the state was renamed Yugoslavia in 1929).[9][13] During the Second World War she was captured by Axis forces and from 1941 served in the Regia Marina as Fata. She returned to Yugoslav control after the 1943 Armistice of Cassibile and was renamed Vila. In 1945 Yugoslavia, then under communist control as the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, renamed the vessel the Orjen. She was renamed again in 1954, becoming the Istranka.[9] A 1972 edition of Jane's Fighting Ships noted she had a 325 horsepower (242 kW) engine and was capable of 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph).[14]

Later history[]

Istranka was decommissioned in 1970. It was later purchased by the  [hr] company and converted into a floating restaurant, under the same name and moored at  [hr] quay in Split.[15][11][7] She ceased to be used as a restaurant in 1991.[7] Istranka was put up for sale in 1998;[16] she is the last surviving royal yacht of the Habsburg Empire.[8]

After Union Dalmacija went bankrupt in the 1990s the vessel was purchased by , a Christian Democrat member of the Italian Parliament, owner of a port services business and collector of naval vessels.[15][8] He had discovered the vessel lying derelict in a Croatian shipyard and purchased it for €500,000. Cozzi claimed to have spent €5 million on restoring the vessel. Cozzi planned for the vessel to join his collection at Santo Stefano al Mare, but it was prevented from leaving the country in 2003 by the Croatian government.[8] The government declared the vessel a national treasure, despite it never having served under the Croatian flag.[8][9]

Cozzi paid to keep the vessel seaworthy but after his death the maintenance ceased.[7] The vessel sank at its moorings in Split but was recovered on 28 June 2014, despite recovery being complicated by its weak structure and a covering of mud. The Croatian Maritime Museum took an interest in the vessel but requests to the Ministry of Culture failed to secure funding and it again sank in December 2019. The Maritime Museum made rudimentary repairs to secure the vessel, which remained in the ownership of Cozzi's estate. The estate offered the ship to the Croatian government for €100,000 but this was not progressed as the museum had struggled to raise the funds to make it seaworthy.[15] As of 2021, the ship is located in the Kaštela basin of the northern part of the Port of Split.[17]

References[]

  1. ^ Baldwin, Marshall W. (11 November 2016). A History of the Crusades, Volume 1: The First Hundred Years. University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 639. ISBN 978-1-5128-1864-2.
  2. ^ a b Shores, Louis (1964). Collier's Encyclopedia: With Bibliography and Index. Crowell-Collier Publishing Company. p. 663.
  3. ^ "English translation of 'fata'". Collins Italian-English Dictionary.
  4. ^ Delahunty, Andrew (23 October 2008). From Bonbon to Cha-cha: Oxford Dictionary of Foreign Words and Phrases. OUP Oxford. p. 374. ISBN 978-0-19-954369-4.
  5. ^ Kropej, Monika (1 January 2012). Supernatural beings from Slovenian myth and folktales. Založba ZRC. p. 223. ISBN 978-961-254-428-7.
  6. ^ Stopar, Ivan; Kordeš, Leopold (1993). Goldenstein's national costumes of Carniola (in Slovenian). Arterika. p. 10.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Batričević, Ivo (18 December 2020). "Neizvjesna Sudbina istranke Posljednji Brod Austro-ugarske Flote Nekad Je Ugošćavao Europsku Elitu, a Sad Trune Zbog Nebrige". Dubrovački dnevnik (in Croatian). Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Owen, Richard (4 April 2003). "Italy and Croatia at odds over Habsburg yacht". The Times (page 20). No. 67728. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e Freivogel, Zvonimir; Schrott, Karl (1999). "Comments and Corrections: Ask Infoser: Question 6/97". Warship International. 36 (2): 204. ISSN 0043-0374. JSTOR 44890624.
  10. ^ Warship International. International Naval Research Organization. 1982. p. 345.
  11. ^ a b c "Kraj Splita trune brod na kojem je dogovoren Prvi svjetski rat". Morski HR (in Croatian). 19 November 2019. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  12. ^ Bridge, Adrian (5 February 2016). "First World War centenary: Franz Ferdinand's final journey". The Telegraph. Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  13. ^ Vego, Milan (1982). "The Yugoslav Navy 1918-41". Warship International. 19 (4): 347. ISSN 0043-0374. JSTOR 44888337.
  14. ^ Jane, Frederick Thomas (1972). Jane's Fighting Ships. S. Low, Marston & Company. p. 677.
  15. ^ a b c Gašpar, Jurica (13 July 2020). "Povijesni brod Istranka vraćen u plovno stanje – Pozadina priče o zaštićenom spomeniku kulture". Morski HR (in Croatian). Retrieved 7 December 2021.
  16. ^ De Biasio, Stefano; Freivogel, Zvonimir; Johnson, Harold; Sieche, Erwin F.; Wetherhorn, Aryeh (1998). "Disposition of ex-Austro-Hungarian Warships". Warship International. 35 (1): 100. ISSN 0043-0374. JSTOR 44890026.
  17. ^ Matić, Jadranka; Žižić, Damir (11 April 2021). "Arhitekti su zauzdali sve što je neuredno: pogledajte zašto je Ribarska luka Brižine oduševila sve, otporna je na nesretnu Kaštelansku rivijeru, propalu industriju i divlju gradnju" [Architects Reign in All That Is Messy: See Why Brižine Fishing Port Thrills Everyone, It Is Resistant to Kaštela Riviera, Failed Industry and Unregulated Construction]. Slobodna Dalmacija (in Croatian). Retrieved 7 December 2021.
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