Hungarian ammunition ship Ungvár

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
History
NameHungary Ungvár
OwnerRoyal Hungarian Sea-Danube Navigation Co.
BuilderGanz & Partners Ltd.
Launched1941
Completed1941
Acquired1941
In service1941
Out of service9 November 1941
FateHit a mine and sunk 9 November 1941
General characteristics
TypeCargo ship
Tonnage1,031 GRT
Crew40

Ungvár was a Hungarian Cargo ship that hit a mine laid by the Soviet destroyers Smyshlyony and Bodry in the Black Sea south of Odesa on 9 November 1941 while she was travelling from Sulina, Romania to Odesa, Ukraine with a cargo of ammunition, gasoline and food.[1][self-published source?]

Construction

Ungvár was launched in 1941 and completed the same year at the Ganz & Partners Ltd. shipyard in

Ganz, Hungary. The ship was assessed at 1,031 GRT and had four sister ships which all belonged to the Tisza-class. Namely MS Tisza, MS Kassa, MS Kolozsvár and MS Komárom.[citation needed
]

Ungvár was just as her sisterships leased to the Kriegsmarine of Nazi Germany in 1941 after having previously been used for commercial purposes on the Danube river. It was during her military service in World War II that she would meet her demise.[2]

Sinking

Ungvár was travelling from

Commanding Officer of the German Donauflottilla Korvettenkapitän Friedrich Petzel and five officers of Petzel's staff.[citation needed
]

The monument for the sunken Ungvár in Budapest.

Wreck

It is believed the cargo explosion completely destroyed Ungvár, leaving only a debris field and underwater crater with the wrecks of her

escort ships Vijelia and Viforul laying close by.[3]

Legacy

A ten-minute Hungarian animated shortfilm was released on 21 September 2016 under the name Ungvár.[4] The film tells the story of director Zoltán Áprily's grandfather who worked as a waiter on the real Ungvár when she sank, being one of the six survivors.[5] The movie can be watched for free online.[6][7]

A sailor monument was also erected in Budapest in 1993 with an anchor replica of Ungvár to commemorate the lives lost in the disaster.

References

  1. ^ "WW2: Black Sea Soviet naval battles". wio.ru. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  2. ^ "Hungarian ship sunk". trove.nla.gov.au. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  3. . Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  4. ^ "Ungvár (2016)". imdb.com. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  5. ^ "Ungvár". frisshusbudapest.com. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  6. ^ "Ungvár - short animation". vimeo.com. 2016. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  7. ^ "This Eye-Catching Animated Short Tells The Story Of An Exploded Hungarian World War Two Ship – Video!". hungarytoday.hu. 9 November 2016. Retrieved 6 July 2020.